Jim & Pam the hard on-line sex chat with hottest babes with a Live HD

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Jim & Pam, y.o.

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16 thoughts on “Jim & Pam the hard on-line sex chat with hottest babes with a Live HD

  1. You're not the problem. It seems quite clear he's been dealing with some sort of issue.

    Is he aromantic? Was he SAed? Is it erectile dysfunction?

    You need to talk to him. Otherwise you won't know what's going on.

  2. Yup, you got a glimpse of the real him and how it would be like when you're married with kids…him doing bare minimum while you're stuck taking care of two babies (him being the other baby).

    Get out. It's only been 3 years and it being long distance you really didnt get to know how he really is until now.

  3. $200?! I can’t even afford $200 to buy something for myself. It’s definitely very weird no matter what.

    But it’s something that your bf and his brother need to talk about, not you. You can’t be stuck between a tense and weird relationship between them.

  4. I have an advise for future fathers. Only marry if you're actually happy and stable and if you have a girl please stay in their lives and give them love or else they'll turn out as spoiled and entitled as the OP. Save your girls from having daddy issues please.

    Lilly and Lilliana are 2 separate things, it's a nickname. My neighbours were sisters and they had almost the same name and they used the exact nickname and didn't have any issues with it. Your father probably wanted to have both you and your SISTER, closer names so that you can have things in common and feel more close.

    The fact you're calling her half-sister instead of sister goes to show that you're creating a gap between you two, meaning you have a personal issue that he's having a girl. And even if you don't realize it i can tell you have a fear of being supplanted and probably unresolved daddy issues, on top that you're starting to generate a jealousy that your father will be present in another girl's life when he wasn't in yours.

  5. Oh jfc, people talk. You did! It doesn’t matter if you don’t hang out in the same circles. One person just needs to make one comment, it can get around. Stop sharing personal intimate info. Your friends are right, it’s rude.

  6. Because he wants to keep stringing you along until he finds someone “better”. Stop engaging with him. Who cares what he wants??? Do what is best for you (which in my opinion would be cutting him off).

  7. I'm very much an ectomorph man as well and since I turned 25 If I eat only junk, don't workout I can get breasts and a belly while my arms stay skinny, so when I say there is no shame in not finding him attractive I say it with an understanding on his feelings.

    Open up that you don't like his body, it's not ok for him to get out of shape when he has a SO because you did not pick him as he is now.

    Just have a calm, straight to the point (we do not get hints) discussion with ways on how he can improve, ask for a time frame as well.

  8. No kidding! He calls himself out as a sociopath in it, and obviously he really is just completely, ruthlessly evil and self-absorbed. I was unfortunately involved with someone like this for 10 years, and he ruined my life.

  9. It's possible that this is the case but I think it's also very common for people who have been violated like that to be in shock and not react in an expected way. Stuff like this tends to be way more complicated than we assume it to be and people can handle situations very differently dependent on the person.

    We have no other information about her as a person, some people grow up in environments where behaviour like this is so normalised that they react weirdly to people who recognise it's not normal behaviour.

    My mom firmly believes that when a stranger grabs your ass or feels you up that it's a compliment and women who get offended by it are just victimising themselves because that was the attitude she grew up with.

    If this reaction aligns with her personality and behaviour in similar situations or conversations, then it's cause for concern, but if she's normally a sweep it under the rug and avoid confrontation person then maybe a conversation about it might be a better approach

  10. I feel for her. But maybe she don't have strong feeling s like that for me. Sorry it's new to me. Iv never delta with this.

  11. Or- get this – he can stay in HIS house, change the locks, get a Ring camera, and not have to uproot his life. ?

  12. You’re right. I think when it boils down to it, I’m scared. I’m scared next time I won’t be able to recover. Im afraid I won’t be able to pull myself outta the abyss. I’m broken now but I can’t imagine being more broken than I currently am. So I may do that. But like I said, I’m just scared.

  13. It is the person who says “I didn't do my best” that has the biggest scar of regret on their soul.

    You are a person that struggles with decisions and certainty. That's okay. That means your best may look a little different from someone else's best. That's fine.

    As long as it's your best, that's all that matters. The individual therapy will likely help with your decision-making overall, not just this particular choice. It's a process and a skill that can be learned and practiced, and a therapist is a great resource for learning techniques. Be sure to say to your therapist “I have a hot time making decisions, what techniques can I learn that will help?”

    All in all I think 'techniques' is one of the best things to try to get from a therapist. They're solid concrete evidence that the therapy is helping and you're getting something out of it you didn't have without it.

  14. = she is only 50% sure if the new guy wants to be with her. You are Plan B. If you need an answer sooner, ask the new Plan A guy if he wants her and if he says no, then you can wait for her to come back to you after she gets rejected by him. I am sorry to put it this brutally.

  15. I really want to just support and help him create better habits to succeed in his goals with school.

    These are two different things and I think it would help a lot if you separated them. Support– great. Helping him create better habits– not helpful for your relationship.

    I would suggest you keep your conversations about this focused on the emotional, and don't touch on the practical. He fails a class? “I'm sorry, babe. Do you want to talk about it?” Not “You should do this.” I'm sure you do the emotional stuff already, so just drop the practical stuff and tips.

    It's totally understandable that you want to help him in more tangible ways. Obviously you don't want to see him struggle! But 1) this is such a fraught topic between the two of you already, and any time this comes up, you're poking that bruise 2) however well-intentioned your advice, if he doesn't want it, he doesn't want it 3) if you cross the wires between a romantic relationship and a mom/teacher relationship, as you mentioned, it will degrade the romantic relationship 4) whenever you bring up stuff that worked for you, you're inviting the comparison between the two of you, which you mention makes him feel worse. If he asks for advice, give it. But otherwise, stick to the emotional support.

    Since then, I’ve backed off and just want him to do ok enough to pass and move on as he just wants it over with and to be working in his field.

    Hold on to this. I know it's hot to watch him fail and be down on himself. Especially when you feel like the answer is so simple– use your planner, do better time management, etc. And especially when the issue keeps recurring. But this is his journey and right now, you're in the passenger seat. Don't try to grab the wheel.

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