Most people are timid about openly discussing anything involving intimate bodily functions. It's just natural body shyness that stems from social taboos and what we're taught should and shouldn't be considered private or appropriate for casual discussion.
Sis, you're literally the closest you can be to a person with your tongue down their throat or vice versa. You have them inside you or vice versa, and you say things and do things that seem like and sound like a good idea in that moment, but when it's all done and you come down from that high, you have to look each other in the face.
I love that thing Carrie Fisher once said, about how sex is where you stick someone's genitals in your mouth and then 12 hours later you walk around in public like nothing ever happened.
I read in my Modern American History class that Native Americans weren't ashamed of sex & had amazing sex. And it was the europeans that brought the idea that it was something to keep private.
I read in my Modern American History class that Native Americans weren't ashamed of sex & had amazing sex. And it was the europeans that brought the idea that it was something to keep private.
Is it? People of our generation are extremely open about it. Sure, it's not as easy to talk about as your taste in music / movies and other generic topics, because it's supposed to be personal, but for most people, it's far from a taboo subject
Sis, you're literally the closest you can be to a person with your tongue down their throat or vice versa. You have them inside you or vice versa, and you say things and do things that seem like and sound like a good idea in that moment, but when it's all done and you come down from that high, you have to look each other in the face.
Sis, you're literally the closest you can be to a person with your tongue down their throat or vice versa. You have them inside you or vice versa, and you say things and do things that seem like and sound like a good idea in that moment, but when it's all done and you come down from that high, you have to look each other in the face.