Spike's Bitches 45: That sure as hell wasn't in the brochure.
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
I still maintain he's the most attractive Patrick EVAH.
Okay, so this I will never be able to judge.
I just went and image googled patrick coupling
to see how soon Colin came up, and the answer is #5. It's his only appearance on page 1, but I am surprised. They got cancelled after, what, 4 eps? Of which the only one I liked was the one that wasn't adapted from the British script. Apparently the rest that didn't air were better too.
They're also more likely to spread than plain uterine cancer.
So less "Two different cancers, OMG!" and more "nastily complex and clever cancer." I found cancer.net, and it had a good explanation, and it answered why she's had lung and gut complications as well. (Why is it the healthy one of us who's getting this? My family goes over from bad hearts, not cancer.)
My mom once, casually, said, "You know, I never gave you the talk. Do you want it?" "NO MOM!" And then I met the guy I would marry at 16. So.
Shortly after I got married at 18 she was also all, "You know, I intended to teach you to cook. I just thought I had more time!"
My mother never gave me the sex talk. I was left to pretty much figure it out on my own.
And Shir ... maybe you could share the Scary Sex Toy Friday links with people. If nothing else, it might shut them up.
My mom bought a complete set of body encyclopedias for us when we were about 8; I can't remember ever having the talk, but I remember asking a few questions.
Mostly, they knew I was reading all kinds of informative stuff, so they just kinda grooved on that.
Course, I never thought I'd have to give the talk to an actual kid-shaped person of my own, but I was The Teacher Who Gave Out Condoms and answered the sex questions, so I am cool with it.
But at what age should the sex talk begin? I mean, it would be logical to say ""When they start asking questions" but some kids never do.
9? 10?
But at what age should the sex talk begin? I mean, it would be logical to say ""When they start asking questions" but some kids never do.
Yeah, I never asked my parents about sex. I always figured I'd learn that stuff when I was an adult.
Except when I was about 7, I noticed us three kids (at the time) were all three years apart, but there was no kid three years after my younger sister. So I asked my mom about that and she told me there was an egg but she and my dad didn't fertilize it. Which led me to imagine them going to a hardware store to get fertilizer - and then I wondered how people fertilized eggs back in cavemen days. (I didn't ask about that though.)
My mom was a little like Erin's folks; I never got The Talk (though both my brothers did, right before leaving for college), but she bought us some very cool, picture-filled "this is your body, this is how it works, and this is the fun you can have with it and with other people's bodies as long as you follow these guidelines for staying smart and safe" books, left them around, and made sure we knew she was available for follow-up questions. I don't know about my brothers, but I never had any follow-up questions because the books were seriously really really good. If she'd picked crappier books we might have had more to talk about!
I was the sex ed go-to girl at my college paper. I'm unsure if it was because I had the office with a door, or because they thought I was a slut.
We had sex-ed in 8th grade of the Lutheran school I went to. It was all "Premarital sex is bad, homosexuality is bad, m-kay."
I'm pretty sure that's the kind my staffers got, because they were all "UTI! WTF!?!"