Grandma Incest Stories

Grandma Incest Stories




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Grandma Incest Stories
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A 60-year-old grandma has detailed life with her 21-year-old fiance, saying while the bedroom action is great it has cost her in other ways.
A grandmother whose fiance is 39 years her junior has revealed she’s lost friends as a result of her relationship with a younger man.
Pam Shasteen, 60, was devastated when her best friends labelled Jonathan Langevin, 21, “young enough to be her grandson” and told her she “needed therapy”.
Since then, the loved-up US couple, from Tulsa, Oklahoma, have refused to let cruel comments affect them and insist age is just a number, while revealing the sex is “mind-blowing”.
“I still can’t believe my friends of over 30 years couldn’t be happy for me just because Jonathan is 21,” Pam said.
“Jonathan is the love of my life and I don’t care what anyone thinks.”
In February 2018, Pam, a counsellor, received a message from Jonathan, a computer engineering student, on dating app, Badoo.
Despite his bio saying he was 21, Jonathan later admitted to being just 19 years old when the pair started dating.
“I stressed that I was too old for him as I had two daughters in their 30s and I was a grandmother,” Pam said.
“But thankfully, Jonathan admitted he’d always wanted to be with an older woman.”
A week later, Jonathan who lived 1400km away in Minnesota, travelled across the country to meet Pam.
“When I spotted him, he was even more handsome in real life,” she said.
“We ran towards each other and kissed passionately. It was love at first sight.”
That day, while the pair were out sightseeing, they received dirty looks from strangers.
“I heard one woman tell her friend that we looked disgusting and we shouldn’t be together,” Pam said.
“Every person we walked past gave us a horrible look.”
‘WE MADE LOVE AND IT WAS WONDERFUL’
The following night, the pair spent the night together for the first time with Pam describing it as “wonderful”.
“There was very little sleeping done that night,” she said, adding that while Jonathan may have been decades younger, “he wasn’t inexperienced”.
“He knew exactly what he was doing,” she said.
“During the next few nights, we were all over each other. Jonathan was amazing.”
“I felt myself falling for him already.”
The following week after finished packing to head home, Pam admitted she loved him and begged him not to go.
“Jonathan told me he loved me too and agreed to stay,” she said.
“As Jonathan had been living on his friend’s sofa back in Minnesota, he didn’t need to make any arrangements and moved in.”
PAM’S DAUGHTERS MEET HER YOUNGER MAN
The following day, Pam invited her daughters over to meet her new boyfriend.
“Before they arrived I texted them, ‘Just a heads up, he’s 19 and he’s moved in with me.’
“When they arrived, they looked so shocked when they saw Jonathan’s baby-face.
“Jonathan said he hoped they could be friends and hugged them.
“As my daughters and I watched Jonathan play around the house with my six-year-old granddaughter, they admitted they liked him.
“I was relieved to have their blessing.”
Soon after, Jonathan broke the news to his parents, who are both in their 60s.
“They replied saying they knew Jonathan always had a thing for older women so they weren’t surprised,” Pam said.
“They even looked forward to meeting me. I was so relieved.”
Unfortunately for Ms Shasteen, her long-time friends didn’t have the same reaction when they met Jonathan, forcing the 60-year-old to cut them from her life.
“I hoped they’d be happy for me, but instead, they sat in silence and were cold towards Jonathan,” she said.
“A few days later they told me Jonathan was using me.
“Another said he was young enough to be my grandson and that I needed therapy.”
Jonathan proposed in May 2018, after three months of dating.
“I knew it was fast, but I was turning 60 soon and I knew life was for living,” Pam said.
“I’d been waiting all my life to meet my soulmate and he was right in front of me.”
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Family | Skinny-Dipping With Grandma
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In one of my favorite family pictures, I am standing in a semicircle of women — my mother, my aunts and my cousins — all of us barefoot on the grass, dressed in white terry cloth robes. We are about to take a memorial skinny-dip. It’s a year after my grandmother died, and this is the best way we know to honor her.
My grandmother spent her summers at a family lake house in northern Wisconsin. Every morning, she’d rise at dawn, put on her robe, and trek barefoot down the dirt path to the lake. Sometimes I’d go with her. We’d walk the cold metal dock to the end, where she’d pause to scan the lake for any fishermen before shaking off her robe and jumping into the water. “Chilly beans!” she always sang out, at the water’s touch. “Chilly beans!”
“No repression in your family!” a friend of mine recently said after looking at that photo. I privately disagreed, thinking of some of the behaviors that were repressed. Coed skinny-dipping was never done, for example, even with your own spouse. Sex was a mysterious activity, rarely alluded to, which shaded it with shame in my mind, though I now think the collective silence had more to do with respecting privacy. Still, my friend’s comment got me thinking about those mornings again, and what a gift my grandmother gave me by stripping naked in the wide-open dawn.
My grandmother majored in phys ed in college, and while she spent most of her life as a homemaker, mother of five and community volunteer, she was always moving. She played tennis, gardened, swam, sailed, water-skied — even slalom — and, for a while in the ’80s, practiced aerobics. She hung her laundry on a clothesline, letting it flap dry in the fresh air. She took me berry-picking and canoeing, and didn’t think twice about driving home from the river with the canoe sticking halfway out the back of the car (and an open bottle of beer between her thighs, more evidence of her devil-may-care attitude). She took pleasure in her body by using it, constantly and fearlessly.
She brought that same fearlessness to the rest of her life, whether she was playing a practical joke on one of her four siblings, housing Vietnamese refugees, starting an integrated preschool program in 1960s inner-city Washington, D.C., or marching across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Ala., with the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. A religious Christian, she believed in expressing her faith through service. I can see now that these two things — her physical fearlessness and her faith — were deeply connected. She pressed her body into service — for herself, her family, her community and her country.
That body wasn’t perfect, of course. Anyone could see that, watching her jump naked into that cold water. Long skinny legs, a round paunch, saggy old-lady breasts. But she never apologized for it, not even in her stance. She stood tall on that dock, in that water. This body has seen me through this far, she seemed to be saying. It’s as perfect as it needs to be.
And it was, until she began to be plagued by a recurring dizziness. She had a hemangioblastoma: a benign tumor the size of an orange lodged at the base of her skull. Surgery removed some of it, leaving the rest enmeshed in her brain tissue and a thick zipper of stitches up the back of her head. She never recovered her former mobility, never skinny-dipped again. That loss was painful for all of us, but especially for her, a woman who had taken such joy in her body. It became her final challenge: to learn to live without her gifts, and finally, to leave her physical form behind altogether.
We mourned her loss when she died. But her example left a powerful impression. For me, her lessons were embodied in those morning skinny-dips — those rituals of exuberance and praise, daily exercises in daring. They taught me to embrace the many thrilling sensations life has to offer, to be bold, to welcome each day with openness and joy, and to strive for a sense of pride and comfort in my own skin. When I waver in any of these areas — which I do often — I remember my grandmother plunging into that cold morning water.
My daughter never met her. But I’ve told her stories. And my family still vacations at that lake house most summers. My own mother now dons the white terry cloth robe in the mornings and treks down the path to the lake. Sometimes my daughter goes with her. I like to stay back, listening for my mother’s ritual howl of “Chilly beans!” My daughter never met my grandmother, but I think she knows her. The chill of the lake on her skin, the feeling of dirt beneath her feet, the voices echoing over the water — these things are teaching her all she needs to know.

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