Twink Amateur Lexas Michael Jacks Off
Views: 5934
Rating: 75
Duration: 481
"Twink Amateur Lexas Michael Jacks Off" Added: 2019-11-05, Duration: 481, Rating: 75, Views: 5934
They say they want to spice things up in the bedroom, but they’re both too shy
A gay man in his 30s says he and his boyfriend have hit a roadblock in their sex life and they haven’t figured out how to get over it, so he’s seeking advice from sex columnist Stoya over at Slate.
“My boyfriend and I have been together through most of our 20s and now into our 30s,” the man’s letter begins, “and our sex life has been solid and satisfying for the most part.”
The couple recently began talking about opening up their relationship, but they have yet to actually act on it.
“I think we are both just not hugely sex-driven,” he continues. “However, over the years, we have obliquely realized that we both get the most enjoyment (and best orgasms) from masturbation, usually with the aid of porn.”
“Recently, I started to think about him masturbating while I do, and watching videos of couples masturbating together, and that’s made me want to try it with him. I told him and he was down to try. I realize this sounds silly for two people who have been together almost a decade, but we did try, and found that we couldn’t really do it—we were both embarrassed to turn on the porn we like, and he couldn’t even get hard at first.”
So, he says, they “ended up just having sex instead to cut the awkwardness.” But watching porn together is still an activity he would like to try, despite their first failed attempt.
“I think it might take our sex life to a new level,” he says. But, he wonders, “How do we push past our shyness, both about the physical act and about sharing the porn we like?”
In her response, Stoya suggests the guys do an assessment of their sex life together up until now.
“What was the last thing that felt comfortable? Was it talking about masturbation with your boyfriend? Was it thinking about talking with him? Whatever that point is, go back to it and hang out for a while.”
Once they are back in that familiar place, Stoya’s next piece of advice: advance things slowly.
“Try texting from separate rooms or speaking verbally with the lights off. Send each other links to what you like when you’re apart. Progress to the point where you’re both comfortable sharing verbally while maintaining eye contact.”
#babysteps.
She continues, “Keep that relaxed and steady pace as things get more physical. Take your clothes off slowly; touch yourselves slowly; give yourself permission to orgasm and to stay at the plateau phase. Take your time. Be gentle with each other.”
What do you think of Stoya’s advice? What would you suggest the guys try instead? Sound off in the comments section below…
EXCLUSIVE: Ellen DeGeneres, “Queer Eye” and “Orange Is The New Black” get the Dr. Seuss treatment for Netflix’s “Green Eggs & Ham”
In honor of its new Ellen DeGeneres-produced series Green Eggs and Ham (based on the 1960 Dr. Seuss book by the same name), Netflix is releasing a set of LGBTQ-themed parody art for the series, with references to iconic LGBTQ celebrities and shows including Queer Eye, Orange is the New Black, and Ellen DeGeneres herself…and GLAAD has your first look!
The story of Green Eggs and Ham is like a postmodern Planes, Trains and Automobiles through the whimsical world of Dr. Seuss. Sam rescues the rare Chickeraffe from the Glurfsburg Zoo, hides it in a briefcase, and attempts to make his way to Meepville where he can charter a cold air balloon to take the Chickeraffe to his island home.
Green Eggs and Ham premieres November 8th on @netflix, so this week:
@TheEllenShow is now Eggen
@QueerEye is now Queer Egg
@OITNB is now Green is the New Black pic.twitter.com/4A7PD1UzVp— GLAAD (@glaad) November 5, 2019
Check out the new trailer for the series below:
The series is executive produced by Ellen DeGeneres, with characters voiced by stars including Adam Devine, Michael Douglas, Ilana Glazer, Diane Keaton, Keegan-Michael Key, Eddie Izzard, Jeffrey Wright, Jillian Bell, John Turturro, Tracy Morgan and Daveed Diggs.
Green Eggs and Ham will be available for streaming worldwide on Netflix on November 8.
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Openly Gay Killer, Charlies Rhines, Has Been Executed for 1993 Murder
Jurors in 1993 allegedly asserted Charles Rhines should be executed because he might enjoy prison sex during a life sentence.
www.advocate.com/news/2019/11/05/openly-gay-killer-charlies-rhines-has-been-executed-1993-murder
Minority stress is real. 5 self-care tips to help you survive and thrive.
I’ll be the first to tell you that I think everyone should make time for self-care.
When I say “self-care,” though, I don’t just mean self-care that’s tied to consumerism or that’s all sheet masks and bath bombs. I mean self-care as a collection of tools—from coping mechanisms to healthful habits to feel-good activities—that get us through the day. Or the week, or the month, or the year. Everyone, I believe, can make existing in this world just a little easier by curating their own personal collection of self-care tools.
That said, I would be lying if I told you I didn’t have a special place in my heart for just how important self-care can be for people in the LGBTQ+ community. Of course, no single member of the community will have the same experience. But for me, and for so many queer and trans people I know, self-care isn’t just a good thing; it can be a matter of survival.
It wasn’t until recently that I had words to describe what I was feeling. While reporting for a completely different story on self-care for my day job, an expert told me about the concept of minority stress, a framework to help us understand how stigma, prejudice, and discrimination create a stressful social environment that fosters the very mental health problems. Minority stress accounts in part for why we are more than twice as likely as heterosexual adults to experience a mental health condition and why LGBTQ+ people are at a higher risk for suicidal thoughts and suicide attempts.
Simply put, existing in the world as a queer or trans person can wear down our minds and bodies. When this specific systemic and targeted stress is part of our lives, it becomes important to take care of ourselves in any way we can. And so, I’ve developed my own stress toolkit in order to exist in the world as a queer woman.
Here are a few of those tips from my book, The More or Less Definitive Guide to Self-Care, adapted exclusively for Queerty.
1. Set your boundaries
You’ve probably heard about the importance of setting boundaries, but the idea is such a broad and nebulous one that it can be hard to know where to start. We’re not talking about building fences to keep out annoying neighbors here. Boundaries are essentially ground rules you put in place—both by communicating them to others and committing to them yourself—to protect your time, values, mood, emotional well-being, comfort, and even safety. They can be big or small, emotional or physical. Without healthy boundaries, it’s really difficult to create a safe space for you and your relationships to flourish.
For many LGTBQ+ people, the most important boundaries you can set are to protect yourself from toxicity in your life—conservative and close-minded family members, the never-ending deluge of headlines about the trash fire that is 2019, or even exes if you’re unlucky enough to live in a place where the queer community feels this big. That might mean dropping them cold turkey, or something a little less drastic if you’re not able to cut the cord. Anyone else have a no-politics rule at the Thanksgiving dinner table?
2. Get creative
Creative outlets like journaling, writing, and drawing have always been the first place I go to feel safe in a world that seems committed to misunderstanding me and parts of my identity. If you’re a creative person—whatever that means to you—nourishing that creative energy is a huge part of taking care of your spirit. Otherwise, I don’t think it’s an exaggeration to say that you’re neglecting an important part of you, and that neglect could have a profound effect on your well-being. Poet Mary Oliver once wrote in Blue Pastures, a collection of prose pieces, “The most regretful people on earth are those who felt the call to creative work, who felt their own creative power restive and uprising, and gave to it neither power nor time.” If these words speak to you, don’t forget them.
3. Make some internet friends
I know I’m not the only one who made her very first queer and trans friends on the internet. When I was younger and my bisexuality was a secret, it wasn’t exactly easy to find other people. And even now that I’m older and out, the internet—from Twitter to Tumblr to RPG forums—remains a portal that streamlines the search for humans you would never otherwise meet IRL. At this point, everyone should have internet friends—we spend too much time online not to.
4. Find an LGBTQ+ affirming therapist
The very act of allowing yourself a space to focus on you and only you is one of the most compassionate things you can do for yourself—but it feels weird. We’re all used to relationships being reciprocal, a balance between talking and listening, venting and helping. Which is what makes having a therapist so magical. Yes, it’s a professional relationship, but it’s also a weird, wonderful, intimate one, probably unlike any other connection you have. Here’s this person in your corner whose job it is to be an expert at supporting you. Where else can you get that?
5. Ditch the brave face
Do you know how exhausting it is to pretend to be OK? When we’re in pain, emotional or physical, it’s wild how much energy we put into making our experiences palatable and easier to digest for others. For example, we push through pain to avoid canceling plans, we smile and say we’re doing well when people ask, we sanitize our crises and episodes so they don’t sound like a big deal. We’ve been taught that it’s admirable and noble to be unwavering and strong in the face of adversity, but whom does that help? Not us. In fact, it might hurt us. We don’t have to expend energy on making other people comfortable with our pain.
The people who are worth our time will be supportive if we occasionally need to let it out.
Anna Borges is Senior Health Editor at Self magazine and a mental health advocate. Previously, Borges was a health and wellness staff writer at BuzzFeed, where she helped build its mental health platform from the ground up.
Her writing has appeared in Glamour, Women’s Health, Cosmopolitan, Bustle, and The Outline. She lives in Brooklyn and this is her first book.
Elizabeth Warren Says She’ll Reverse Trump’s Transgender Military Ban on Day One
Elizabeth Warren on Tuesday released a detailed plan on the rights of service members, veterans, and military families, which includes a vow to reverse Trump’s ban on transgender troops at the opening of her presidency.
Tweeted Warren: “A Warren administration will protect the rights of LGBTQ+, women, Black, and Latinx service members. I’ll reverse Trump’s shameful ban on trans service members on Day One. My administration will protect veterans and family members of serving military personnel from deportation.”
Politico adds: ‘”I’ll reverse it on the first day of my presidency,” she says in the plan, insisting “the only thing that should matter when it comes to allowing military personnel to serve is whether or not they can handle the job.” That also means “providing all medically necessary care related to the health of transgender people” such as transition-related surgery, according her “Keeping Our Promises to Our Service Members, Veterans, and Military Families,” which is being released ahead of Veterans Day.’
The post Elizabeth Warren Says She’ll Reverse Trump’s Transgender Military Ban on Day One appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.
Elizabeth Warren Says She’ll Reverse Trump’s Transgender Military Ban on Day One
#AM_Equality Tipsheet: November 5, 2019
IT’S ELECTION DAY — AND HRC PRESIDENT ALPHONSO DAVID (@AlphonsoDavid) HIT THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL FOR VA LEGISLATIVE CANDIDATES: David joined EMILY’s List President Stephanie Schriock, Congresswoman Jennifer Wexton, Delegate Danica Roem and other pro-equality candidates on the trail over the weekend. If you have elections in your state, get the 411 on your polling place, ID needs and more from hrc.org/vote.
⏰ ��:���� ���� ������ ���������� ������ ��������
Virginia residents, wake up! Today is the day to elect a pro-equality majority to your state legislature. #VALeg t.co/qylBC7pPYk
— Human Rights Campaign (@HRC) November 5, 2019
ICE IGNORES FEDERAL COURT RULING, CONTINUES HOLDING GAY ASYLUM SEEKER “INDEFINITELY”: Garcia Portillo was separated from his partner when he entered the U.S., and is being denied parole — despite a federal court ruling that ICE must stop issuing such denials. More from Advocate.
TUESDAY TWEET, EVERYONE’S FAVORITE SAME-SEX PENGUIN COUPLE ADOPT SECOND EGG: After Sphen and Magic of the Sea Life Sydney Aquarium hatched their beautiful daughter Sphengic, the aquarium announced that the happy couple has adopted a second egg! More from Pink News.
Gay penguin ‘power couple’ have adopted another egg together after successfully hatching their first chick t.co/FFiDutj57i
— PinkNews (@PinkNews) November 4, 2019
SUPREME COURT JUSTICES MEET WITH ANTI-LGBTQ HATE GROUP WHILE DECIDING IF LGBTQ PEOPLE CAN BE DISCRIMINATED AGAINST IN THE WORKPLACE: Justices Brett Kavanaugh and Samuel Alito met with Brian Brown, a notorious hate leader who cofounded the National Organization for (unequal) Marriage and who now spreads his brand of anti-LGBTQ bigotry abroad as president of the World Congress of (straight and cisgender) Families. More from Pink News.
KENTUCKY WOMAN SPEAKS OUT ABOUT ANTI-LGBTQ BULLYING, SUICIDE AFTER HER TRANSGENDER HUSBAND’S DEATH: More from WPSD.
GET CULTURED – Entertainment, arts and sports news!
DAYTIME EMMYS ISSUE NEW POLICIES REGARDING GENDERED CATEGORIES: They encourage performers to choose award categories that best fit their gender identity and expression, and remove gender from the youth categories — a major step toward making award shows more inclusive for ALL actors. More from Los Angeles Blade.
SCULPTURE DEDICATED TO TRANSGENDER COMMUNITY UNVEILED IN TRIBECA PARK IN MANHATTAN: The sculpture, named “Dandara,” after a trans woman who was murdered in Brazil, will be on display until May 24, 2020. More from ABC 7 NY.
#Repost @fomofeed with @get_repost ・・・ WHAT: DREAM MACHINE-DANDARA, 2017. “This is a monument to the dreamers, the ones who live and die making the impossible happen.”-Rubem Robierb �� :@v_andthecity . WHO: Rubem Robierb (@rubemrobierbart) . WHERE: Tribeca Park, 8 Beach Street, New York, NY . FEED INSPIRATION: #rubemrobierb #dreammachineart . . . . #FOMOfeed #NYC #NewYorkCity #immersive #immersiveart #nycart #publicart #art #wings #tribecapark @taglialatellagalleries
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GLOBAL EQUALITY NEWS
IRELAND HEALTH MINISTER ANNOUNCES SOME LGBTQ PARENTS CAN REGISTER BOTH NAMES ON CHILD’S BIRTH CERTIFICATE STARTING IN MAY: More from Pink News.
GERMAN HEALTH MINISTER UNVEILS DRAFT LAW TO PROTECT LGBTQ YOUTH FROM SO-CALLED “CONVERSION THERAPY”: More from DW.
FELIZ ORGULLO! PRIDE MARCH IN BUENOS AIRES CELEBRATES COMMUNITY, CALLS FOR AN END TO HATE CRIMES: More from Buenos Aires Times.
READING RAINBOW – Bookmark now to read on your lunch break!
Law 360 profiles David Brown, legal director for the Transgender Legal Defense and Education Fund (@TLDEF)
Have news? Send us your news and tips at [email protected]. Click here to subscribe to #AM_Equality and follow @HRC for all the latest news. Thanks for reading!
www.hrc.org/blog/am-equality-tipsheet-november-5-2019?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed
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