Show it off. Love it. In 10 years or so, it will be gone so get the pictures while you can.
And speaking of can, hers is nice.
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Show it off. Love it. In 10 years or so, it will be gone so get the pictures while you can.
And speaking of can, hers is nice.
I saw Pamela Anderson on TV the other night. I realize that she isn't a school teacher, but she does presumably have parents somewhere... and somehow she manages to go about her business even though many of us have seen much more than her business in her sex video.
I admit that I am a prude. It's amazing to me that everyday people have nude pictures of themselves floating around on the internet, and yet I can imagine that that is somehow liberating. Allegedly, when Warren Curricullo heard that a magazine was about to publish some nude photos they had bought, presumably the telescope lens variety, he called up another magazine and gave them a nude photo shoot in his house. I guess that once you are out there for the world to see, you might feel invincible.
Sure, if you self-edit your imaginary audience to include only the appreciative or the jealous. In real life, every naked pic is instantly compared to thousands of other much, much hotter (younger, taller, skinnier, more muscled, less flabby) naked people. Your personal bumps, bulges, and stray hairs are the stuff of laughter and ridicule for a very large number of viewers.
It's not prudish to safe-guard your own skin. We're fast becoming a society where every passing urge and fleeting thought is shared indiscriminately with millions. Increasingly this includes nude pics and sex scenes. When you reflexively share everything with everyone I expect you become too empty inside to actually give anything intimate to anyone.
What's with the black boxes? :mad:
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