Erotic Incest Letters

Erotic Incest Letters




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Erotic Incest Letters
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When I was a little girl, my grandfather (my mother’s father) would take me with him while he went grocery shopping for his wife. We would walk down a small road in Dombivili, past the teenage boys playing cricket, past Kamath uncle’s snacks store and uphill towards the flour mill. But first, we would go to the vegetable vendors where he would pick out…
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6/30/17



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For almost 30 years, incest dad Robin Price thought he had got away with starting a family with his own sister.
But one day, in early 2015, that all changed, as his past finally caught up with him in the most devastating manner, with a knock on the door from the police.
Price learned that his own daughter had reported him to the authorities in disgust after learning that the people she called mom and dad were half-brother and sister.
Speaking to The Sun Online, the 62-year-old admitted he never thought that day would come.
Price said: “I can’t understand why it’s all being brought up now.”
“We separated and moved on, I thought everything was fine.”
Daughter Donna Price told The Sun how the revelation ruined her memories of her childhood – and to add insult to injury she learned in the course of the court case that Robin wasn’t even her biological father.
But Donna’s two sisters and brother, who tragically died when he was just 7 years old, were all the products of the incestuous pairing.
Robin today claimed he didn’t know Donna’s mother, who we are choosing not to identify to protect her young children from a subsequent relationship, was his sister when they met.
Having grown up not knowing his mother, or even that he had a sister, he said he was raised by his father.
But his life changed when he met a young woman in a pub in the 1980s, saying the pair just “hit it off.”
He said: “When we met, we just fell in love and it snowballed from there.”
“How can you not fall in love with someone, if you meet someone and get along, you’re going to fall for them.”
“Looking at it now, then yes, it was wrong.”
“At the time, to us, that was it, we were happy, we didn’t give a monkey about what anybody else thought.”
As he spoke about the past relationship with his sister, Price’s confession of the sordid relationship came tumbling out.
Bowing his head as he tried to remember details about the sordid relationship, he said: “We met one of my aunties and she kept looking at both of us.
“She said, ‘you know something? You two are brother and sister.’
“I said, ‘oh yeah of course we are.’
Shaking his head, he added: “I felt like somebody stabbed me.
“I just couldn’t believe it when we found out.”
The pair then confronted his estranged mother, who confirmed their worst fears.
Faced with the choice of breaking off the relationship, Price claimed he decided to stay in the relationship because his sister had just learned that she was pregnant, with Donna.
Pushing the truth to the back of his mind, he said the couple then went on to have three more children together.
He said: “It went through our minds once or twice to tell the kids, but by that time, we had said ‘that’s it.’”
The strain of having his family’s murky history examined for the past two years by police before going through the courts has taken its toll on Price.
The currently unemployed warehouse worker now lives with his new partner in a small apartment in southern England.
The apartment is decorated with photographs of his new partner, with the only hint at his former life a photograph of his youngest child Steven.
The boy was only 7 years old when he died in 2001, having suffered from severe epilepsy throughout his life.
Holding up the only photograph he has of his son, Price said he had done everything to help his sister raise their child, even after they separated in 1994.
But after Steven’s death, the pair went their separate ways – only seeing each other again as they faced court over incest charges last month.
The pair, who had been reported by police by their eldest Donna, both pleaded guilty to the charges.
Robin had initially pleaded not guilty to the charge, explaining: “I suppose in one respect we thought what we had done wasn’t wrong.”
But changing the plea to guilty, he said he had been “absolutely dreading” the sentencing, with fears he could be jailed for seven years.
Instead, the judge handed down five and three month suspended sentences for Price and his half-sister respectively.
Now estranged from Donna, Robin said he hoped to one day rekindle his relationship with them.
He said: “I don’t think about the relationship anymore, but I do miss the kids.”



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Ask Amy: I had sex with my brother. Should I just forget it?




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DEAR AMY: I am a 40-year-old woman with a brother two years younger.
We were raised in a house that had a lot of pornography exposure (initiated by my father — my mother was dismayed).
At the ages of 10 and 12, my brother and I started behaving sexually with each other. It went all the way.
It was consensual, and it lasted less than a year.
I still think about it and wonder if my brother ever thinks about or feels ashamed about it, like I do.
Should I still feel ashamed after all these years, or is this something I need to just forget about?
DEAR EMBARRASSED: Just forget about it?
Can you? No. So you should deal with it now.
You and your brother violated an ancient taboo without realizing it — because you were children. You were acting out adult sexual behavior that you were seeing in your home. Your father’s choice to expose you to pornography normalized behavior in your home that should not be normalized among children.
As the older sibling, you might have initiated this behavior — or as you got older, you might have realized it was wrong and now feel guilty that you either started it or didn’t put a stop to it sooner.
You should discuss this with a therapist.
Ultimately, you may choose to discuss this with your brother, to put it in perspective and — if necessary — explain and apologize for your part.
DEAR AMY: I barely talk to my wife.
What do you do when you know you still love someone and you know she still loves you, but the betrayal and actions of both parties were so great that forgiveness isn’t even an option?
DEAR SAD: Forgiveness is always an option.
The path toward forgiveness is paved through talk, connection and apology. You can’t undertake this journey without being truthful and heartbreakingly vulnerable with your partner.
It is possible to repair a relationship, but only if you are both willing to do the hard work necessary to repair and reattach to each other. I hope you will try.
DEAR AMY: “Estranged” fears being scorned by society for separating him/herself from an abusive father.
I lived for years with anger and depression rooted in an abusive upbringing.
I finally found the strength to walk away completely from my past — which included severing contact with my parents.
Within months, I began to heal. I’ve now been free of them for 15 years, and I’m happier every day for it.
As for social scorn, I was elated to discover that those who knew me fully understood my decision. The opinions of those who don’t know me don’t matter.
I hope “Estranged” is able to take the steps necessary to be happy — without concern for others’ perceptions.
DEAR HAPPY: Many readers have responded with similar stories. Sometimes the best way to heal from a legacy of abuse is to break the cycle and create a new, healthy life.
Send questions to askamy@tribune.com or Ask Amy, Chicago Tribune, TT500, 435 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, IL 60611.
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