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(Popularity Rate: 11 ) Can I purchase any sex toys for a male and a female in Amroha?
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(Popularity Rate: 42 ) Would a narcissist be prone to own a sex doll?
ged to get me to have sex with him on day 2, without a condom, that’s how much I thought I trusted him after only 48hrs. Usually first time sex is awkward, even slightly so, but with him it was simply amazing. I said to him âwow, we have great chemistryâ? to which he said âthis isn’t chemistry, it’s pure alchemyâ?
From day 1 he was sex-obsessed, I started noticing inappropriate language and jokes in his messages that would make me feel uncomfortable. Example: âI’m gonna fuck you like a whore at the partyâ?
He would make me feel guilty and punish me for not wanting to have sex with him when I didn’t feel like it. He could easily have done it 10 or so times a day, whereas I’m good with twice a day. He would tell me I didn’t love him, that we don’t have that much sex – etc.
In the beginning, instead of going to work like he should have, he would stay in bed with me until late afternoon, we would make love over and over, laughing and eating in between, leaving love bites all over each others bodies. We became each otherâs drug.
Many times I felt he didn’t care about my well-being. I have a bad back and sometimes he would fuck me (I’m sorry for the vulgar language but that’s the word I use I fit the situation I’m describing) so hard that my back would get so sore after, and I would ask him to take it easy. But he couldn’t help himself, in fact, sometimes I’m sure he could hear my sexual nags and cries sounded painful, because I was in fact in pain, which he seemed to enjoy (I feel sick writing this). Sometimes I would cry out from pain, and he would push himself then even harder into and against me. This happened the minority of the time, mostly our âlove-makingâ?was sensual and passionate, with him telling me about 100 times over during each session âI love you, I love you my beautifulâ? but the fact is this should never happen even once if you’re in a loving relationship.
The good times were off the chart. I’m a sexual person and I do believe we brought out each otherâs âweirdnessâ?and sexuality. I felt totally safe to explore new things with him. I remember once we’d ordered a delivery and started having sex shortly after. It got passionate and we accidentally knocked over a glass full of red wine on his wooden floor. He didn’t even care. We laughed and carried on making love. I loved that about him. We were lost in each other. We had sex in many public places and in many exciting ways.
During the last months of our relationship, I sometimes noticed him acting very weird during sex. If he was taking me from behind and thought I couldn’t see him, I’d look back and see him either looking at an inanimate object, as though he was simply getting a job done (it was so fucking strange to see that, having seen him thousands of times before literally getting lost in our sex). Sometimes his eyes would roll back. Either way, the rare moments I caught these looks gave me the absolute creeps.
He would often finish inside me, even though I wasn’t on any contraceptive nor did we use condoms, even though he told me over and over he didn’t want a child at this point (neither did I), but like with all narcs they contradict themselves constantly.
After I accused him of using me for sex, he even outrightly said: ânow I won’t give you any sex, because I don’t want to hear that ever againâ?
He complained that I didn’t give him enough bj’s, even though the reason I want giving him many is because he was acting like a complete jerk most of the time, leaving me feeling sad and bad, yet his sense of entitlement demanded this from me.
I don’t think sex was all about him, and sorry again for the details but I struggle to cum from intercourse alone. Of course, this was a blow to his ego. He often complained that âhe wasn’t good 100cm Sex Dollenoughâ?or said things like âfind yourself a guy with a bigger dick that can satisfy you properlyâ? Yet at the same time (Jeckyl & Hyde), he always did try to please me, he would practice his technique and I could tell he definitely had more pleasure when I was having pleasure, too. Probably not because I was having pleasure, but more because it was a reflection of his own abilities.
Once we were sitting outside and heard his neighbours having loud sex, the woman was especially loud. To me it sounded gross – over the top, over acted and fake. He asked if it was turning me on, and I returned the question at him, to which he replied: âit makes me feel weak, like a loser, it makes me feel like I should be the cause of the noiseâ?
No matter how angry or annoyed he was at me, he always worshipped my body. Sex often became a way for us to neutralise fights. He said I was âa witchâ? and that no matter how hard he tried not to be, he was under my spell.
He didn’t think of sex like a normal person does. Example: he finds a condom wrapper outside his door in the street and asks me if I had anything to with that; thinking I’d gone and had sex with another man out of spite and then gone and left it there purposefully – wtf?!
Many times he would punish me by making love to me during the night, by telling me the sweetest most romantic things, only for him to wake up the next morning and be demanding and cold, which would lead to an argument, I was always the one feeling hurt and confused.
He would always get very aroused by me telling him during sex âI love your dickâ? âI am yoursâ? âyou were made for meâ?and even âI want to have your babiesâ? Sometimes during sleep, as happens with any normal human being, my hand would wonder down to my private area – the next morning I would be confronted with argument after argument being accused of being nothing short of a sexual fiend, having inappropriate dreams and desires of other menâ?Etc.
I feel strange going into so much detail about this (even though there are actually so many more things I
(Popularity Rate: 72 ) Would you mind if your partner purchased a realistic AI sex doll?
Well I might question the price, and the ethics if it was true AI, but if super fat sex doll its just a sex doll programmed to give a few reactions why should my partners choice of sex toy bother me? If they want to use a doll to masturbate with thatâs up to them same as what sort of toy I masturbate with is up to me.
(Popularity Rate: 92 ) What are some of the coolest sex toys?
olest:
Toys For Boy:
Ultraskyn pussy pocket
Androextender
Autoblow sleeve
Pennis sleeve with flexible testicle ring
Kitty sleeve open at both sides
Bathmate hydro 7 pennis pump
Toys For Girls
Clit ma
(Popularity Rate: 90 ) Love dolls look like real women, so what is the solution to the philosophical issue named by TV Tropes as “what measure is a humanâ?
ruths. I will only speak to tropes involving women and LGBT folks as I am a member of these communities, and donât feel as though I should speak on behalf of other minority groups. Some of these will be official trope names, while others will simply be descriptions as they are recurring themes that I have noticed through the years.
I will try to name an example for each one, as well as a show that inverted the trope where possible. I want to be clear that I do not think the shows included in the examples are bad shows, in fact, they are some of my favourite shows of all time. But unfortunately at times, they play into negative tropes, as all shows do.
Nagging wife
This trope has been around forever. You have a male lead with a nagging wife who is mostly universally hated. It often makes female characters one-dimensional, and promotes hatred toward women. All marriages are going to have problems, but this trip comes down to how it is played – if the woman is objectively in the right, does the narrative support that?
Example: Skyler White in Breaking Bad.
One of the most hated female characters of all time, the actress herself had to write an article defending the character
, and received many death threats. Although in the first couple of seasons Skyler is actively trying to keep Walt alive and healthy (think of the soy bacon), and later is trying to keep him from participating in his illegal activities (he is a drug manufacturer), she is portrayed as antagonizing our hero.
Inversion: Beth Pearson in This Is Us.
To be fair, I had to pick another character who was introduced to us as a wife (ie. didnât exist as a character before the marriage) and was firmly seen as a supporting character. Beth is married to a man with some issues, but is generally seen as good, successful, and respectful. Despite this, Randall often makes some poor decisions in terms of his health, career, and family. Beth is consistently the person who has to set him back onto the right path, but the show portrays it in a supporting way, rather than domineering.
Stupid female love interest
Oftentimes women are portrayed as being unintelligent and malleable in the face of a conniving and manipulative love interest. Hollywood, women are not this blind to every single red flag, especially when we have to be on guard constantly because – men can be dangerous!
Example: Guinevere Beck in You.
Beck is a Masterâs student, and yet, canât see any warning signs in Joe, her love interest. Joe stalked her until he eventually caught her in his web, and consistently lets on that heâs dangerous. Somehow, she doesnât realize this until he literally has her locked in a cage.
Inversion: Delilah Alves in You.
Same show, different season. You is able to right their wrongs in season 2, introducing a character and brief love interest for Joe who doesnât consistently fall for his manipulations and is skeptical from the start. She is intelligent, a self-starter, and one of the best characters to come from the show.
Female transformation
You all know this trope. A female is not the epitome of Western Hollywood beauty – she may be fat, have a big nose, not white, frizzy hair, acne, glasses, whatever. Usually they are still attractive, they just donât look like supermodels. Then they are somehow reinvented and made over, and they are stunning. All the men want them, all the women want to be them, and their life improves significantly. Ladies – you donât have to look like a playboy bunny to be beautiful, and being hot and skinny will not solve all of your problems. This ruins self-esteem for girls and women, and needs to stop.
Example: Patty Bladell in Insatiable.
I only watched the first episode of this show because thatâs how bad it is, but the main gist is an overweight teenager breaks her jaw, has it wired shut for the summer, loses a ton of weight because she canât eat, and comes back to school as a bombshell. This show literally had a petition going to get it off Netflix before it even aired
, thatâs how bad this trope is. Please stop.
Inversion: Deb Dobkins/Jane Bingum in Drop Dead Diva.
Itâs been years since Iâve watched this show so sorry for any mistakes, but the idea is a gorgeous model named Deb gets in a car accident and dies at the same time as an overweight lawyer named Jane. Due to plot, Debâs soul ends up in Janeâs body, and she has to live her life. Deb struggles with her new appearance, used to being conventionally attractive and longing for that life back, but comes to discover that she loves her life as Jane and embraces her body.
Cheating husband = fine, cheating wife = death penalty
This one is pretty simple. Due to misogyny, in television men cheating is seen as par for the course, while women cheating is cause for crucifixion. This is because people take âman and wifeâ?too literally. A man is seen as someone with primal needs and urges, so having them fulfilled outside the marriage is okay, whereas women are wives and should be 100% faithful to their husbands.
Example: Skyler White in Breaking Bad vs. Don Draper in Mad Men.
This is the only example I will reuse. Apologies, but one of the reasons Skylar is so vehemently despised is because she had sex with another man, while separated from her husband. Make sense? Didnât think so. Meanwhile, on the same channel, Mad Men is airing which more or less features a man cheating on his wife every single episode. Iâve lost count of the amount of women Don Draper had cheated with inside of multiple marriages, and heâs seen as an âalpha maleâ?to these simple viewers.
No trope inversion for this one as I legitimately cannot think of a show on television I personally have watched where a woman cheating was the norm and the fans genuinely thought it was okay.
Closeted homophobe
Often in television, gay characters are forced into the closet because of the narrative. Usually this is so later, after some character development, they can come out. Sometimes they donât come out, but they still go about their lives. However, once in a while, you get a character who is clearly gay, but also violently homophobic to try and hide this fact. This trope makes gay people look like their own oppressors, and frames the community negatively.
Example: Marshall Langman in Parks and Recreation.
Marshall is a clearly gay man in a straight marriage. His wife heads the communityâs family committee, and they are both devout Christians, popping up to fight against sex education, gay marriage (between penguins), and nudity.
I canât think of a time this trope was inverted in the sense of a straight person pretending to be gay. I highly doubt this has ever happened on television.
Bury Your Gays
This is the trope that simply sees gay people die more often than their straight counterparts, generally after achieving some level of happiness within their queer relationships. It contributes to the overall trope that gay people must suffer.
Example: Lexa in The 100.
This was a huge one a few years ago
, where a lesbian woman was killed off, literally minutes after consummating her relationship with the bisexual protagonist, Clarke. If that doesnât look like âdivine interventionâ?against LGBT relationships, I donât know what does.
The inversion would be any LGBT character who gets to live.
No queer happy ending without suffering
Contrarily to Bury Your Gays, sometimes queer characters do get to have a happy ending, but usually they have to fight for it and overcome a massive amount of hardship. Unlike straight couples who just get to exist and no one bats an eye, LGBT relationships have to justify their eventual happiness.
Example: Santana Lopez and Dave Karofsky in Glee.
These two characters went through many similar experiences throughout the show. Both were closeted, both were outed, both faced social ostracization, and both redeemed themselves and got a happy ending. They were also each others beards for a period of time.
Karofsky is first portrayed as a closeted homophobe, bullying the gay student Kurt, eventually kissing him, then threatening him to keep quiet. He transfers schools where he is outed, then bullied to the point of attempting suicide. He reappears in a healthy relationship and is comfortable in his own skin.
Santanaâs journey was less dramatic, but still, she has to fight for her ending. She is outed, bullied, rejected by her grandmother, and eventually does get to marry her best friend. But it is not without massive hurdles, and desperate measures to justify her existence.
Inversion: David Rose and Patrick Brewer in Schittâs Creek.
Schittâs Creek exists in a universe that is without homophobia. David is pansexual, and this is never seen as an issue to any character on the show. He meets a presumably straight man named Patrick, who eventually comes to the realization that he is gay, and they enter a relationship without any major issues. He comes out to his parents, who accept him without a second thought, and David and Patrick get married in the series finale, with no one ever questioning their sexualities or making a big deal of it. The show makes a statement without having to make a statement.
Promiscuous bisexual
Bisexual people are often portrayed as being indecisive and promiscuous in the media. They are shown to be sex craved, and insatiable. Bisexual people are just like anyone else, some may be promiscuous, some may be monogamous, or anywhere in between. But the media would have us all believe bisexuals are all about partying and threesomes, leading to an awful real life phenomenon called âunicorn huntingâ?. This is when a straight couple seeks out a bisexual woman for a threesome. The reason the bisexual is referred to as a unicorn is because a bisexual woman who wants to have sex with a heterosexual couple is just as rare as the mythical creature.
Example: Brittany S. Pearce in Glee.
Another Glee example, but to be fair, this show hits almost every single trope on the list. Brittany is Santanaâs eventual wife, but before that, she makes a goal to have kissed every single person in the school. She bounces around from relationship to relationship with men and women like nobodyâs business. She is a prime example of the promiscuous bisexual.
Inversion: Delphine Cormier in Orphan Black.
Delphine had never been a relationship with a woman before she met Cosima, and she is only mentioned to have had a relationship with one man previously. She and Cosima manage to stick their relationship out for the duration of the series., without Delphine ever flitting around, flirting or sleeping with other people.
Lesbianism for the male gaze
Lesbianism is often portrayed as sexy, and men love to watch it. âLesbianâ?is almost always the top search on any porn website, and this leads to real life incidents of men trying to force women to perform lesbianism in front of them, sometimes leading to violence or sexual assault.
Example: Betty Cooper and Veronica Lodge in Riverdale.
Even in the show, this is done performatively in front of a group of people. They kiss solely to be edgy and sexy, and both women are in strictly heterosexual relationships, showing no interest in women beyond this scene. If you look up the names of these women who have starred in 4 seasons together and kissed for about 7 seconds of the showâs run time, âVeronica and Betty kissâ?is the first result on Google.
Inverted: Stef Adams-Foster and Lena Adams-Foster in The Fosters.
Stef and Lena are a married, lesbian couple with a gaggle of children. They often kiss, engage in intercourse, and are affectionate with each other, however, it is never shown as being âsexyâ? Itâs not a clip men are looking up on YouTube and watching on repeat. It is two women who are in love, and not performing for anyone.
LGBT, but doesnât say it
Sometimes characters may get paired up with someone of the same gender, but they never actually say the words because that would be crossing the line in the eyes of the writers, the fictional universe, and/or society. This one is especially prominent in bisexuals, as their identities are often erased and they are considered straight or gay, depending on their gender of their partner at any given time, making people believe that bisexuals are just gay people who havenât committed the whole way yet.
Example: Piper Chapman in Orange is the New Black.
Piper is a woman in a heterosexual relationship, who has had lesbian relationships in the past, and again ends up in a lesbian relationship by the end of the show. She demonstrates attraction to men and women throughout the series, yet manages to go seven seasons without saying the word âbisexualâ?
Inversion: Darryl Whitefeather in Crazy Ex-Girlfriend.
If this seems like the most aggressive way to invert a trope throughout television history, thatâs probably because it is. Darryl is a man who has just divorced his wife, meets a gay man, and comes to the realization he is bisexual. As this is a musical show, his âcoming outâ?scene is portrayed through a musical number performed in front of a massive bisexual pride flag literally called âGettinâ?Biâ?. When the writers decided on this storyline, they worked with multiple LGBT organizations and learned about the harmful tropes surrounding bisexual people with the intention of inverting every single one. Some examples from the song lyrics include:
Addressing the stereotype that being bisexual is a choice:
âI don’t know how / I don’t know why / But I like ladies / And I like guys / I realize it’s a surprise / But now I see that that’s just me / It’s not like I even tryâ?Addressing the stereotype that bisexuals are gay men and women who havenât completely come to terms with their sexualities:
âNow some may say / “Oh, you’re just gay / Why don’t you just go gay all the way?” / But that’s not it / ‘Cause bi’s legit / Whether you’re a he or a she / We might be a perfect fitâ?Addressing the stereotype that bisexuals are promiscuous:
âI tell you what / Being bi does not imply that you’re a player or a slut / Sure, I like sex / But I’m no ho / I take things slowâ?Addressing the stereotype the bisexuals are indecisive:
âIt’s not a phase / I’m not confused / Not indecisive / I don’t have the “gotta choose” bluesâ?No representation
Although I could go on, the last trope I am going to mention is the lack of representation, or âtokenâ?character trope. It is often the case that non-family centred television shows will have a main cast consisting of mostly straight, white men, with maybe one woman, a LGBT person, or a POC in there. This is harmful as it shows that straight, white male is the default, and any deviation is something to note.
Example: the main cast of The Office.
According to IMDB and Wikipedia, this is the main cast of The Office. Through the seasons, some straight, white men come (Andy Bernard), and some straight, white men go (Michael Scott). But this is the main cast, everyone else is considered a supporting character. Although the show does have some diversity in the secondary characters (ie. Kelly and Oscar), the main cast is completely heterosexual and white, and consists of only men, with Pam as the token woman.
Inversion: the main cast of Brooklyn 99.
Brooklyn 99 is one of the few shows where the diversity in the main cast outweighs the lack thereof. Of the main seven characters, 2 are (confirmed) queer, 3 are women, and 4 are POC. There is two black men, one of whom is openly gay, two Latina women, one of whom is bisexual. It is a sho
(Popularity Rate: 82 ) Can minors buy sex toys?
In the U.S. you need to be 18 to buy them.
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