Mom Cant Resist Sons Cock

Mom Cant Resist Sons Cock




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Mom Cant Resist Sons Cock
Read Deidre’s personal replies to today’s problems
I AM having sex with the husband of mum’s best friend. We both know it is
wrong but we can’t stop ourselves.
He is 41 but is really fit and looks and acts much younger. I am 19 but very
mature for my age. I have been their babysitter for two years and he gives
me a lift home afterwards.
We chatted in the car one evening. He asked about boyfriends and whether I had
ever had sex.
I told him I had made love with boyfriends but I was now single. The talk got
quite dirty. He asked for my phone number and gave me his.
We texted for a while, then we started sending each other sexy pics. One
evening last year he stopped the car on the way home from babysitting and
started kissing me. I melted and we had sex in the back of his car. Sex with
him is far better than it was with any younger guys.
We have been romping loads since then, meeting up after he leaves work, and
even managed to have a weekend away together.
I told my mum I was going to London with a friend and he told his wife it was
a conference for work. Then I left my phone at home by mistake one day and
my mum found it.
Her friend’s husband had sent me a flirty text asking me about babysitting.
That was our secret code for getting together. My mum phoned her friend and
said she would pass the message on.
Her friend had no idea what she was talking about but assumed her husband was
planning a surprise night out for them. I told him my mum had seen his text
and that he had better arrange the surprise for his wife — which he did.
I don’t think my mum realises how far things have gone. She told me to stop
flirting and said everyone, including his wife, knows he’s always been a
cheat and I was playing with fire.
I agreed and broke off contact with him but only for two days. Now we still
have sex whenever possible. I really like him and he says he feels the same.
How can we stop when it feels so good?
DEIDRE SAYS: You can stop yourself but you must make up your mind to do
so. This man is not free to love you and you are the one who will get a
broken heart.
He has always been a cheat. He is not going to risk losing his wife and his
children. My e-leaflet Your Lover Not Free? will help you to see this more
clearly.
MY boyfriend bought me a puppy to cheer me up but it just added to my
problems.
I was working in an understaffed and stressful call centre so I quit to set up
my own beauty business as I’d studied that at college.
I advertised but with little luck and was feeling very low, so my boyfriend
bought a retriever puppy to keep me company and cheer me up. We live
together. I am 26, he is 28.
I feel useless about not earning and want to apply for a full-time job but I
can’t leave the dog on its own.
DEIDRE SAYS: Before you give up your dream visit Business is Great
(greatbusiness.gov.uk, 0300 456 3565). Could a friend or relative share the
dog with you? Check out borrowmydoggy.com.
Otherwise make an appointment with your local vet practice together to talk
about what is fairest for the puppy.
I STUPIDLY dumped my girlfriend but she is the only one I want.
I am 24, she is 23 and we’d been together for two years but I was caught up in
my problems. My parents recently separated – my dad was devastated and I
hated my mum’s new man. Then the firm I worked for shut.
Everything got on top of me and I told my girlfriend I didn’t love her.
I realised a week later I’d made a huge mistake. I tried to get her back but
she said I’d hurt her too much. She is now with someone else so I should not
contact her.
DEIDRE SAYS: Why not contact her once more? Tell her you made a mistake
and want her back.
If she still says no, you can only accept it. Resist rushing into trying to
find someone new just yet.
You need time to get over the split and to learn from this mistake. Getting
out with your friends just to enjoy yourself will help.
MY daughter, who’s 18, beat up her twin brother.
He hit his head and needed a week off work. He is demanding she pays the money
he would’ve earned. I’m 42.
DEIDRE SAYS: If she is earning, why not pay something? She should
realise behaviour like that can land you in court and paying compensation.
If they have always suffered from intense sibling rivalry, ask your GP to
refer you all for family therapy.
My e-leaflet on Managing Anger explains how she can learn to control her
temper.
DAD has never shown any interest in me or my brother and sister. I love him
but he only sees me when I nag.
I’m a girl of 15, my sister is 12 and my brother is nine. My dad left my mum
five years ago for someone else. He has eight children from four different
women.
The oldest three children don’t speak to him. I’m wondering whether I should
do the same but Dad has a three-year-old son with his new partner and I
don’t want to miss out on my younger half-brother’s life.
Dad says it’s my fault. I went to live with him for a while but his current
partner was always shouting at me and I kicked off. She made Dad choose
between her and me.
DEIDRE SAYS: Tell your dad you miss him and your little half-brother
and ask if he will make proper arrangements regularly.
Try to speak to his partner as well. Tell her you’re sorry and you’re older
now and realise it wasn’t the way to handle things.
It’s very hurtful to feel sidelined but you can find confidential support with
The Mix (themix.org.uk, 0808 808 4994).
I’VE fallen head over heels for an amazing girl but I know people will say
we’re too young to be serious.
We’re both 15. I met her when I went to stay with my grandparents for the
summer last year. We have kept in touch ever since.
The problem is that we live 300 miles apart. She has no family in the town
where I live so we only meet when my parents decide to visit my
grandparents. We can’t afford train fares.
We talked about moving away together to see how well it would work out but
we’re worried our families will say that we can’t fall in love at our age.
We genuinely feel we are soul mates and truly the ones for each other.
DEIDRE SAYS: Some couples do fall in love very young and stay together
but many relationships don’t last, so take your time.
Keep in touch but don’t think of trying to move away right now. You’re not
ready to live independently – it would only convince people you are
immature. Talk to your parents about how you can meet up more often.
I TOOK my girlfriend for a luxury week away so we could spend more time
together but she dumped me a few days later.
We had been together for three months although we knew each other from school.
She is 25, I am 23.
It was wonderful when we admitted we had feelings for one another.
She was so loving and seemed to want to do anything to make me happy.
We live 150miles apart. I work in London, so took her away to a big, posh
hotel for a week of luxury but she got quieter as the week went on.
She said she was just tired from work but I realised I was the one making the
effort to stay in touch.
Two weeks ago she dumped me by text. To add insult to injury, she said she
wants to be friends.
When I told her I was too hurt for that, she got really angry.
I asked for answers why and she just said it was too much. I know we will not
get back together but why won’t women tell the truth?
DEIDRE SAYS: Perhaps spending proper time together showed her it wasn’t
right for her.
But it might not be because of you. She might have realised she didn’t want a
relationship.
My e-leaflet Moving On will help you.
I’M taking finals for my degree but it is hard to get the peace I need to
study.
I moved in with my boyfriend and his parents and younger brothers six months
ago. We are both 22. The house is always busy so I want to go to my parents’
for a few days to study without distractions.
But my boyfriend goes in a mood whenever I mention it. I feel stuck and
stressed.
DEIDRE SAYS: Your exams are very important. Tell him this is not about
his ego. My e-leaflets Standing Up For Yourself and Anxious About Exams?
will help.
MY ex-husband wants me to move back in but I won’t because we never have
sex.
We’d been married for six years when he left me for another woman. They split
up after a couple of years and I had boyfriends but nothing serious.
I am 40, he is 45 and we have been meeting again for three years but only had
sex once in that time. He says things like, “Sex isn’t the be-all and
end-all,” and: “We’re happy, aren’t we?”
I know it is not a physical problem because he watches porn and satisfies
himself.
The woman after me was older and not interested in sex so he started using
porn. It has wrecked the confidence I built up while we were apart. I have
cried in front of him and told him any other woman would have walked ages
ago.
I suggested counselling and he agreed but he never did it. I love him but I
believe our sex life should not be over. I will not move in with him till
this is sorted.
DEIDRE SAYS: Porn is often addictive and is easier because he can think
only about himself.
Spell out that if he wants your relationship, he has to give up porn and focus
on you.
My e-leaflet on Internet Pornography Worries can help him.
Whether they are emotionally abusive or inflicting physical harm, please try
to catch my phone-in on coercive control on Good Morning Britain tomorrow.
EVERY problem gets a free personal reply.
Email me here , private message me on Facebook , or write to Deidre Sanders, The Sun, London SE1 9GF (please enclose SAE).
You can also follow me on Twitter @deardeidre .
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By Theresa Edwards | August 1, 2014


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One of the things that I never stopped to consider about women who have sons is that they have a new level of peener to contend with: baby peen . When you’re a woman and you have a daughter you can recognize pretty much immediately what is normal down there and whether something is amiss , because you match, for the most part. Baby penis is something that you may or may not have a barometer for, depending on how many baby peens total you’ve dealt with in your lifetime.
Even so, when I started watching little boys, the baby penis thing didn’t faze me; I just adjusted and moved on. And yet, on more than one occasion a mom or dad might pull me aside and ask if their son appeared to be “on par down there” to which I could only shrug because I have no idea what average baby penis size is, unlike, say, a pediatrician would.
It turns out that the concern about baby twigs and bitty berries being too small is a real thing, and I don’t want to poke fun too much because I understand what it’s like to be concerned about every little thing.
But at the same time, I think it’s a foregone conclusion that baby penises are small. There are cases where there’s a real medical concern, but that is very rare indeed. When a doctor – a real one, not someone on the internet who totally majored in baby penis for a semester in college – tells you to worry, then you start to worry. Until then, it’s no big penis deal.
Hidden penis is a real thing, you guys, but try not to freak out, because it’s very common. According to medilexicon, it’s a “normal penis obscured by suprapubic fat.” So once the baby fat starts to disappear, everything will start to look normal.
I’d venture to say that the worst thing for a male isn’t to have a small penis. And boys can sit on toilet seats to pee until they have a little something more to grip.
Eight months is too early to start worrying overmuch about future penis size. According to WebMD (I know, I know), the magic doesn’t really start to happen until puberty. Extreme nausea is no joke so don’t play the game of “should I have just stuck it out?” You won’t win that game.
“I have a child here for the day. He’s seven months old.
His penis is very, very small, and it points in, not out. It’s just like an innie belly button. It’s buried inside his testicles.
I’m not going to ask his parents, because it’s clearly something they would have already asked a doctor about.
I’m just wondering if this is an actual medical condition, or if it’s something a child will outgrow? What causes this? Have you ever heard of something like this?”
Oh, my sweet chinchilla of a first time mom. Everything is fine. Two days is old is too young for a penis complex.
Injecting your child with hormones against your doctor’s advice is flirting with danger. Size doesn’t matter that much. Again, why not wait until puberty and see what happens down there? Until then, it’s as big of a deal as you make it.
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