Twink Sleep

Twink Sleep




⚡ ALL INFORMATION CLICK HERE 👈🏻👈🏻👈🏻

































Twink Sleep




News & Politics


Culture


Food






Science & Health


Life Stories


Video


About




Profile
Login/Sign Up
Sticky Header: off
Night Mode: off
Saved Articles
Go Ad-Free
Logout



Sticky Header




Night Mode






Published August 30, 2011 12:20AM (EDT)


Related Topics ------------------------------------------
Love And Sex
Since You Asked


Several months ago, I took a trip with a longtime, close friend. We are both gay men and have traveled many times together over the years with few problems and a hell of a lot of fun. My friend can be high-maintenance but I am pretty low-key and we've managed to work out our different styles and to enjoy ourselves.


We have shared many rooms together over the years, but this time our housing arrangement required us to share a bed, which did not give me a moment of pause. Like many gay men, our platonic friendship began with a roll in the hay. That first time was something of a quirk for both of us, fueled by too much drinking and ecstasy. We are not each other's types at all. I should also mention that I have boyfriend and my friend is married, but neither of our partners came with us on this trip.


It was very early in the morning of our first full day of vacation when I woke up to feel him pressed up against me. I had already told him that I need my space when I sleep, so without rolling over I asked him to move, which he did with a snort of impatience. I went back to sleep but awoke some time later when he started to moan. I assumed he was a having a nightmare and decided to wait for a bit to let it pass before I woke him. It lasted only a few seconds. It did cross my mind that the noise he was making was also very similar to an ejaculation, but I instantly dismissed the idea.


Later that morning as we had breakfast with our housemates, I asked him if he'd had a nightmare. He said he didn't, but I wondered if he'd simply forgotten and gave it no more thought.


The next morning, I awoke again. I don't remember what woke me, but it was alarming enough for me to rise up and check my surroundings. There was no mistaking it this time -- he was looking at me while he masturbated. Stunned and confused, I plopped back down on the bed, ignored a brief caress and went back to sleep. (I can sleep through anything.)


Hours later, the implications of what happened suddenly occurred to me. Both times he must have shaken me awake, and I was incredulous that he thought it appropriate to interrupt my sleep just because he was horny. I can understand waking a spouse or a romantic partner for sex, but not a platonic friend. I also became angry when I realized that he had given me no choice in the matter -- at least I was awake for our 30-minute fling from years before. This time I was simply parachuted into a situation I didn't expect or want, and I had no say or control over what was happening. I was struck by how self-centered it was.


Needless to say, the rest of the week I slept on the sofa. Several times, he asked why I was sleeping in the living room, but always in front of others. Since our housemates have to count pennies for a trip like this, I did not want to create tension for them, and invented excuses. But I also began to suspect that my friend was manipulating the situation, forcing me to lie in front of others in order to create an "official" version of events that let him off the hook. In any case, we never discussed what happened.


His behavior also gave me new insight into the falling-out he had with a mutual friend several years ago, while we vacationed in the same resort town. They had been sharing a bed, and I noted that our other friend had begun to sleep on the sofa, too. They had an angry fight one night on that trip and they've never spoken to each other again.


I was deeply depressed and upset. I rarely left our vacation house and I began to see my friend in a new light. While I normally overlook his tendency to orchestrate plans, I became increasingly irritated and angry at the way he expected everyone else to conform to his schedule. He also takes great delight in discussing the shortcomings of mutual friends, and more than once I had to bite my tongue while he regaled others with his disdain for certain people. The behavior became more pronounced as the days went by, and the final morning he was so thoroughly obnoxious I could barely look at or speak to him during our plane ride back.


After we returned home, I decided I needed some space. For several weeks we had no contact and I kept up with him only through his posts on Facebook. I saw all of these in a new light as well, and became angry at the dishonesty -- he made several claims I knew firsthand to be untrue, and all of them seemed tailored to lead to a bitchy remark that would end his post with a flourish.


And then about a month later his mother died.


She had become seriously ill only a few months before, and they were very close. I was sorry for his pain -- I vividly recall the unbelievable shock at losing my father even though I knew he was dying for almost three years. He had very little time to adjust to the imminent loss of his mother, so I'm sure his pain was severe. I sent him a note to acknowledge his grief and he replied with a polite thank-you.


Through Facebook, I know the ceremony of his mother's death lasted for a while -- culminating in a huge funeral about two weeks after she died. While all of this took place hundreds of miles from where we live, I would have participated in most of it had it not been for his outrageous behavior. As it was, my simple note and his reply was the only contact we had during this time.


It saddens me that the timing of these events means that our friendship has been irrevocably torn and I have begun to second-guess my response. I don't think of myself as the kind of person who would disappear when a close friend is experiencing enormous pain. My boyfriend says I did the right thing, that the timing of events is irrelevant and that my response was appropriate. But I would dearly love another opinion.

It sounds like this ended in the way one would expect. What he did caused your friendship to cool. You were hurt and outraged. So you backed off. And then, as can be expected, the unexpected happened. His mother died. You still had conflicted feelings. On the one hand, you had compassion for him. On the other hand, because of things he had done and things you had observed, you didn't feel that previous fervor for your friendship that might have driven you into action, to be there by his side enthusiastically.
This all sounds reasonable. When we are hurt we back off.
When someone asks if their behavior was "right" I hesitate, because I think, within certain limits, in our social arrangements, it is right for us to behave according to how we feel. Feeling is a great regulator of human behavior; we behave well toward others partly out of our own goodness and partly out of self-interest because we want their feelings toward us to be full and kind, in part so that when there is a death in the family they will show up at our side.
So we try to refrain from behavior that will outrage them and hurt them and disgrace us. But this is not easy. If we are still growing emotionally, if we are self-centered and immature, then we are likely to do things that will outrage and hurt our friends. We will definitely learn some hard lessons along the way. We will find that for some people, enough is enough. We will find certain doors are closed to us, and this will come as a shock. It may be that your friend is learning such things now.
But human worthiness runs along a continuum. I consider myself to be a deeply flawed person, and I identify with those whose character flaws have led them into grave troubles, whose momentary impulses have caused lasting harm.
He is not perfect but that doesn't mean you can't be friends -- that is, if you still want to be friends.
You may feel a desire to punish your friend. It's natural when we have been injured to want to lash out. But I think the best course is to spend some time with him and try to reach a new understanding that contains a further frankness. What has gone between you requires you, in fact, to find a further frankness. The casual arrangements you have made in the past are no longer enough to encompass what you now know.
I suggest you meet with him and have a frank talk. You might begin by saying that you care deeply about him but there are some things he has done that you find hard to accept. Maybe he can tell you something about what's been going on in his life, things that he has not mentioned, things that don't make him look good, things that will help you understand why he did the things he did.
Maybe you can be the one to elicit the darker truth. Think about it. His mother was dying. He was lonely. He was scared. You don't have to become his therapist to suggest that he be frank with you about the emotional needs that are driving his behavior. Maybe his marriage is unsatisfying. Maybe he feels people don't respect him. Maybe he's trying too hard.
Maybe you will find it in you to forgive his shortcomings. Or maybe not. Either way is OK to me. That is, what I prize in people is the ability to be who they are. For some people, these breaches would be so severe that they would have to end the friendship. Others might find it possible to overlook them. That is a personal matter.
I may be too liberal in my view of human conduct but I have done some fairly awful things in my time, and yet many of my friends stuck with me, and I appreciate that. I wish the same fortune for you and your friend.
Copyright © 2022 Salon.com, LLC. Reproduction of material from any Salon pages without written permission is strictly prohibited. SALON ® is registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office as a trademark of Salon.com, LLC. Associated Press articles: Copyright © 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


Use old embed code
Use new embed code


Tags:
lol
funny
haha
wtf
blooper


Uploaded Yesterday

in
Funny



Uploaded 10/10/2022

in
wtf



Uploaded Yesterday

in
Funny



Uploaded 22 hours ago

in
Funny



Uploaded 10/13/2022

in
Funny



Uploaded 10/13/2022

in
wow



Uploaded 10/13/2022

in
Funny




Notifications
Advertising
Privacy
Terms
DMCA
Contact





Home ‹ Board index ‹ General Topics ‹ Relationship Forum ‹ Sexuality Forum
Change font size
Print view




Blogs

FAQ
Register
Login











Jump to:


Select a forum
------------------
Members Corner

  Member's Corner

    Member introduction

    Venting Forum

General Topics

  Living With Mental Illness Forum

    Self Esteem

    Adjustment Disorder

  Anger Management

  Anti-Psych Forum

  Cutting and Self Injury Forum

  Grief and Loss Forum

    Family

    Friends

    Pets

  Hope

  Relationship Forum

    Sexuality Forum

    Marriage & Divorce

  Remorse

  Significant Others, Family & Friends Forum

Off topic

  Just For Fun

  Poetry Corner

  Surveys & Studies

Kinds of Abuse

  Bullying Forum

    Stalking and Harassment

  Child Abuse Forum

  Domestic Violence

    Physical

    Verbal & Emotional

    Elder Abuse

    Cult Abuse

  Sexual Abuse and Incest Forum

    Rape and Sexual Assault

  Post Traumatic Stress Disorder Forum

    Acute Stress Disorder

    Rape Trauma

    Combat Post Traumatic Stress Disorder

Anxiety Disorders

  Agoraphobia Forum

    Specific Phobias

  Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD) Forum

  Social Phobia Forum

    Separation Anxiety Disorder

  Generalized Anxiety Disorder Forum

    Panic Disorder

    Anxiety Disorder NOS

Developmental Disorders

  Tourette's Syndrome Forum

    Mixed-Receptive-Expressive Language Disorder

    Disruptive Behavior NOS

    Childhood Disintegrative Disorder

  Autism Forum

  Oppositional Defiant Disorder Forum

    Rett's Disorder

    Mental Retardation

  Asperger's Syndrome Forum

  Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Forum

  Stuttering Forum

    Dyslexia Forum

    Learning Disorders

  Selective Mutism Forum

  Reactive Attachment Disorder Forum

  Conduct Disorder Forum

    Pervasive Developmental Disorder NOS

  Childhood Disorder NOS Forum

Cognitive Disorders

  Alzheimer's Disease Forum

    Parkinson's Disease

    Amnestic Disorder

  Dementia Forum

    Huntington's Disease

  Delirium Forum

  Cognitive Disorder NOS Forum

Dissociative Disorders

  Depersonalization Disorder Forum

  Dissociative Identity Disorder Forum

  Dissociative Fugue Forum

  Dissociative Disorder NOS Forum

  Dissociative Amnesia Forum

Eating Disorders

  Anorexia Nervosa Forum

  Bulimia Nervosa Forum

  Binge Eating Disorder Forum

    Childhood Eating Disorders

Factitious Disorders

  Munchausen Syndrome Forum

    Munchausen by Proxy

  Factitious Disorder Forum

    Malingering

Impulse-Control Disorders

  Shoplifting Addiction

    Kleptomania

  Trichotillomania Forum

    Impulse-Control Disorder NOS

  Intermittent Explosive Disorder Forum

    Pyromania

  Compulsive Lying Forum

Mood Disorders

  Bipolar Disorder Forum

    Cyclothymia

  Seasonal Affective Disorder Forum

  Clinical Depression Forum

    Depressive Disorder NOS

    Dysthymia

    Cancer & Depression

  Postpartum Depression Forum

Personality Disorders

  Antisocial Personality Disorder Forum

  Borderline Personality Disorder Forum

  Avoidant Personality Disorder Forum

    Paranoid Personality Disorder Forum

  Narcissistic Personality Disorder Forum

  Histrionic Personality Disorder Forum

    Dependent Personality Disorder

    Personality Disorder NOS

    Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorder

  Schizoid Personality Disorder Forum

    Schizotypal Personality Disorder

Psychotic Disorders

  Delusional Disorder Forum

    Brief Psychotic Disorder

    Shared Psychotic Disorder

  Schizophrenia Forum

    Schizoaffective Disorder

Sexual Disorders

  Sexual Addiction Forum

  Gender Identity Disorder Forum

    Trans Gender

  Sexual Dysfunctions Forum

    Erectile Dysfunction

  Paraphilias Forum

    Fetishes

    BDSM

  Sexual Disorder NOS Forum

Sleep Disorders

  Insomnia Forum

    Hypersomnia

    Breathing-Related Sleep Disorder

  Nightmare Disorder Forum

    Sleepwalking Disorder

    Sleep Terror Disorder

  Primary Sleep Disorders Forum

    Narcolepsy

    Dyssomnia NOS

    Parasomnia NOS

Somatoform Disorders

  Undifferentiated Somatoform Disorder Forum

  Somatoform Disorder NOS Forum

  Somatization Disorder Forum

  Pain Disorder Forum

  Hypochondriasis Forum
Horny People
Teenager Fucked Anal
Femdom Slave Licking Pussy Mistress

Report Page