The security of marriage is liberating | Harriet Baber
Marriage frees us from the stressful, exhausting business of courtship. Why spend your life selling yourself? The question: What is marriage for? The purpose of marriage is, of course, security â" and the freedom that comes with security. Marriage liberates us from the meat market. For married people sex is readily available so we can relax and enjoy our free time doing what we please: we don't ...
would, Better, give, Children, Their, Parents, Education, TEENAGE, Christianity, wasnât by Wm Jas
Question by Desiree: If it wasnât for Christianity, would parents give their teenage children a better sex education?
Most parents are quite reluctant to talk about sex with their children. Itâs not an easy subject to talk about for most people. Is this because Christianity has made sex a taboo subject? Without Christianity, would people be more open about sex and would this enable them to better prepare their teenage children for the consequences and ramifications of unprotected sex?
Best answer:
Answer by *June Bug* (MC) Christianity teaches nothing about sex ed.
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hair, Having, Long, Very, Super, gets, annoying by mercurialn
Question by 010101: Does super long hair gets very annoying when having sex?
I want to know if really long hair, like butt length hair or longer, gets super annoying when having sex, especially if the girl is on top. Does it get in the way too much or gets stuck in places? Could it really be that bad? I mean, what kind of problems do you run into? Thanks!
Best answer:
Answer by Charity* Guys like long hair to hold onto during the process! (:
Alec Baldwin is Martin, the wealthy, clueless stepfather of Mini (played by Nikki Reed). She's clever and has a healthy libido. And she's on a mission to stir up as much trouble as she can before her high school graduation. It's pretty clear where Mini got her conniving streak from-her mom (Carrie-Anne Moss) who spends more time partying than with her husband. Diana quickly becomes the third wheel
Alec Baldwin is Martin, the wealthy, clueless stepfather of Mini (played by Nikki Reed). She's clever and has a healthy libido. And she's on a mission to stir up as much trouble as she can before her high school graduation. It's pretty clear where Mini got her conniving streak from-her mom (Carrie-Anne Moss) who spends more time partying than with her husband. Diana quickly becomes the third wheel when Martin and Mini's relationship escalates. A series of disturbing events at their posh modern house finally prompts the arrival of John (Luke Wilson) as a nosey detective on the case. Jeff Goldblum delivers another shot of star quality playing the cheesy TV show host who lives next door. Part Heather and part Lolita, Mini's a girl to watch out for in this delightfully warped comedy.A nymphet with a grudge is usually a promising combination for a thriller, and Mini's First Time lays on the Lolita complex in the capable person of Thirteen star Nikki Reed. Having been a bad girl at a tender age in that one, Reed plays a slightly older but even more dangerous teen in Mini, as the lethal daughter of a wannabe Hollywood actress (Carrie-Anne Moss) who never was. Joining the ranks of professional escorts while still in high school, Mini has an unsavory "meet cute" with her future partner in crime: answering a call at a hotel, she sleeps with her surprised stepfather (Alec Baldwin). Pretty soon the odd couple is cooking up ways of getting the mother out of the picture--first by psychological war, then by, well, more extreme measures. Director Nick Guthe tries to draw out the Hollywood satire as well as the modern-noir elements, but the tone is too glib for the mix to sit well, and there isn't quite enough happening on either front for the movie to gain real traction. However, this HBO-produced picture does present a handful of delicious performances, led by Baldwin's marvelous portrait of a self-disgusted middle-aged man who might actually have fallen in love... the poor sap. Moss is a revelation in a comic role (she does an expert drunk act) and Jeff Goldblum contributes his uniquely discursive muttering to a few scenes. Luke Wilson plays a police detective so droll and laid-back he seems to have wandered in from a Wes Anderson film, or possibly an old episode of Columbo. --Robert Horton