For the love of

@}-}rebecca---- said:
Hey................

Ummn Fu did you fall nekkid into your sewing box again or something ?
sure did... gota stop sewing drinking and watch porn movies all at the same time....

ouchy ouchy :eek: :eek: :eek:



:D



that top needle caught a small vain and I had a bruise on the top on my wee wee for about two weeks :p
 
it's the C thread sheeesh................

Shankara20 said:
that top needle caught a small vain and I had a bruise on the top on my cock for about two weeks :p

Fixed your post :) :rose:
 
I hate cooter and cunt - there are no good words for female genitals! Cock sounds hot. But pussy? Ew.
 
intothewoods said:
I hate cooter and cunt - there are no good words for female genitals! Cock sounds hot. But pussy? Ew.

I agree, that's why my Dom named mine. :)
 
Geek Attack!

I adore the word cunt. The word to me is strong, vibrant, in-your-face secure with sexuality. I have never particularly liked the word "pussy" as mine is much too fierce to be a mere pet :catroar: (although am becoming more comfortable with it as ~D prefers the word). I also love the world vulva (sexy, specific & inclusive, rolls off the tongue) and yoni. The primary Japanese slang for vagina translates as "dew pot" and I have also heard the word "honey pot" which I like. My ex used to refer to hers as "tiny" which I always found sweet (I once wrote and illustrated a "tiny tale" about "tinies" in a tiny little journal book for her as a birthday present).

----- warning: geek attack----- !> The etymology of the word cunt is controversial, but quite wonderful. In "Cunt, a History of the C-Word," Matthew Hunt traces the CU in the word to an ancient word CU (pronounced coo, another word for vagina, from which the term cooter and hootchie-kootchie probably also derive). The prefix was a word base expressing 'feminine', 'fecund' and associated notions.

He also points out the link between cunt and ancient words meaning "knowledge." 'Can' and 'ken' (both 'to know') evolved from the 'cu'/'ku' prefix.

Indeed, there is a significant linguistic connection between sex and knowledge: one can 'conceive' both an idea and a baby, and 'ken' means both 'know' and 'give birth'. 'Ken' shares a genealogical meaning with 'kin' and 'kind', from the Old English 'cyn' and the Gothic 'kuni'. It also has vaginal connotations: "['kin'] meant not only matrilineal blood relations but also a cleft or crevice, the Goddess's genital opening" (Barbara G Walker, 1983).

According to Gurl (online zine), cunt wasn't considered obscene until the 17th Century. The earliest known reference in English is to a street frequented by prostitutes called "Gropecuntlane." According to some etymologists, "cunt" was not used as a term of abuse for a woman until the 20th century. Before that it only referred to a part of the body.

<!------- end geek attack ------

Anyway, while I don't enjoy being called a cunt, I certainly enjoy having one... :D

~ Neon
 
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