Comments: 29
Vagrant3D [2023-08-06 11:34:20 +0000 UTC]
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ClarkSavage [2019-10-22 20:25:20 +0000 UTC]
Extremely sensual!
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Bhr3730lhp [2017-07-13 14:15:44 +0000 UTC]
If I was going to ' brandish' anything at you it sure as hell wouldn't be a book !
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berseh In reply to Bhr3730lhp [2017-07-13 14:37:26 +0000 UTC]
Please Bhr, tell me more. As a bimbo, you know I can't understand everything. Like, what do you mean here?
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ronniebegoode In reply to berseh [2017-03-27 15:53:41 +0000 UTC]
You can slip your Ruger LCR into it?
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Sacron22 [2016-04-15 20:54:33 +0000 UTC]
You know, Nabokov was a butterfly collector. He curatoated or Harvard's collection for years. He published scientific papers on the subject. Several books have written about his collection. When he died his collection was (and is) put into the Zoology Museum at Harvard.
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berseh In reply to Sacron22 [2016-04-15 21:06:02 +0000 UTC]
I knew he was a scholar. His books are strong and thoughtful, very sincere.
I think he was very unfairly treated, a little like his character in Lolita. I have lived experiences where this book was brandished at me like a damnation.. The Lolita thing.. Some people don't seem to know what is life!
I'm glad you told me about the butterflies, I didn't know.
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Sacron22 In reply to berseh [2016-04-16 01:49:53 +0000 UTC]
That brilliant book has been brandished since ~1954. And he was ridiculed. He didn't care. He made money, for the first time in his life. Until then he was an impoverished Russian immigrant, getting part-time gigs at Harvard and Princeton. After Lolita, he had the time and resources to write his wonderful books, and collect butterflies.
Now, you berseh, why would anyone brandish that book at you? You're a women of intelligence and great sensuality. An explorer of your body-mind. Odd anyone would chastise you... except, of course, many people do not know the magical depths of life for those who seek them.
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berseh In reply to Sacron22 [2016-04-16 10:16:04 +0000 UTC]
Well Sacron, thank you for so many compliments!
When I was much younger, like many a teen ager, I didn't realize the impact my features had on men. Women often thought I was playing with them and trying to steal men from them, which I wasn't at all. Also, I started modelling quite young, not well versed in the intricacies of love and eros, possessive people and stuff. People around me were older and tended to forget how inexperienced and unaware of my physical impact I was.
Nabokov always interested me, like Kerouac, Miller, Lautréamont, Bukowski etc. I may have a tendancy to be attracted by outcasts, people rejected for stating what they believe in, what they like or love, people who take their lives in charge, whatever other's opinions. That might be due to being used to "important" people, that I often find humanely pathetic.
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Sacron22 In reply to berseh [2016-04-16 18:05:45 +0000 UTC]
"Humanely pathetic". Great phrase. The strange, the outcast has been the constant in great stories. You've hear, I guess, there are only two stories: 1. local boy/girl leaves town, 2. stranger comes to town. I know there are several more classic plots we reform, often brilliantly, over time. But the stranger in itself brings tension. The idea is redolent: "Call me Ishmael"; doesn't get more tense.
Are a model now? You certainly have the poise and looks. Or have you moved to other endeavors?
--
I've been reading a lot of feminist lit for the past few weeks. Two things occur to me. First, "No means no and Yes might not mean Yes." This confuses me. It does fit into the ideology of victim-hood, "the Anglo-American hetero-sexual white male oppressor/patriarchy" is omnipresent, invisible but to the enlightened, and I get that. I don't get that I can retroactively be labeled a 'molester' of some kind. Second, solidarity confuses me. It seems to me that we deny biological realities when we call jealousy a "social construct". I'm pretty well educated in bio and social-bio and psych and political theory; importantly in literature, too. Jealousy is certainly inherent, although mitigated by social norms a bit. You mention of 'trying to steal men from them' reminded me of the very natural, necessary, and unpleasant, fact of mate selection, and protection. I also understand your surprise upon learning you brought about jealous reactions. Believe it or not, it happens to me now. Yep, just hanging in some dive bar doin' nothin' and wham, 'whatya doin' lookin' at my girl, a-hole?'
Enough for now. You're fun.
Sean
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berseh In reply to shameless-sunset [2016-03-20 22:24:38 +0000 UTC]
It's really a beautiful dress, but so transparent I can rarely (and barely!) put it on in public. In the picture it doesn't show because I've tested a set with a special software that modified the original picture so much..
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berseh In reply to DNeil [2016-01-31 14:48:36 +0000 UTC]
Well I'll try DNiel, I'll try!
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berseh [2016-01-13 19:21:52 +0000 UTC]
Thank you Wimbo. And thank you; Will do .
I'm checking on you everyday after your stories, few times a day...
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wimbo15 In reply to berseh [2016-01-14 07:12:26 +0000 UTC]
Nice to hear, thank you! You flatter me...
It's a pitty I don't have much time during the week to work on my pictures and react to all the nice comments...
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wimbo15 [2016-01-13 05:18:01 +0000 UTC]
What a view!! What a astonishing beautiful pic again...
Please go on with your storie(s).......
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