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JayCeeKy

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Posts posted by JayCeeKy

  1. I contacted JimJim earlier today via text about a possible encounter in Indy next week. He was very quick to respond and his response was colloquial and friendly. Example: "I got a nice apt there (Indy) for the week. U can come to me then since I don't have a car." His rate was reasonable and I will likely meet up.

  2. I came close to hiring him but he mixed up our schedule meet time and I didn't have the time to reschedule with him when he was still in my area.

    Thanks for the link to the expired ad. I did not know he had advertised. I noticed in his porn flicks that he WAS a bottom but now, since he has muscled up, he is a featured top. I know nothing about bodybuilding or steroids, but his transformation from hot bottom to super-muscled hot top seems really dramatic. Max Konnor is another example of a bottom who turned into a super-muscled top like over night. Do steroids cause such dramatic changes in a man's physique? Or a combo of steroids and lost of gym? Or just gym? I once met Mr. Universe who told me that "You can't look like me w/out steroids." - not saying that Zario uses them.

  3. I remember E. B. White cautioning against using “big words” when a more common one will do just fine.

    The Elements of Style by Strunk & White, the best book ever written on literary composition.

     

    4. Avoid fancy words. Avoid the elaborate, the pretentious, the coy, and the cute. Do not be tempted by a twenty-dollar word when there is a ten-center handy, ready and able. Anglo-Saxon is a livelier tongue than Latin, so use Anglo-Saxon words. (Page 73)

     

    Download your own copy in PDF form:

     

    http://www.jlakes.org/ch/web/The-elements-of-style.pdf

  4. I have a Samsung gas range (gas stovetop and electric oven). The model number can be found by pulling out the drawer on the bottom - the tag should be just to the left of the drawer. Then go to the link down below and enter the model number to download the manual.

     

    https://www.samsung.com/us/support/home-appliances/ranges/gas

     

    My manual says that the default temp for Convection roasting/baking is 350 - and then you press the number pads to enter your desired cooking temp (e.g. 4,2,5).

     

    The manual for my Samsung gas oven says that "The Broil function allows you to cook and brown foods using only a top heat source." On my model (NX58965) there are only two temps for broil - Hi and Lo, at least that is what the manual says. Since TV dinners don't require broiling or using the convection oven, I have no experience with either. Hope this helps.

     

    BTW, it's my understanding that the difference between a regular oven and convection oven is that the convection oven blows the air in the oven so that you get a better overall bake/roasting, and decreases the cooking time. Says a Google search:

     

    Convection creates a dry atmosphere that caramelizes the sugars faster when roasting, so foods like meats and vegetables get browner, but the interiors stay moist. It saves energy: Because food cooks faster in a convection oven, and generally at a lower temperature, it's a bit more energy efficient than a regular oven.

  5. Disclaimer - I know virtually nothing about hair transplants. But I have heard that you can get a safe, inexpensive transplant in Mexico for about 25% of what they cost in the U.S. Their ads say their surgeons are trained in the US.

     

    "Hair Transplant can cost as much as $20,000 USD in the U.S. ($6-$11 per graft) and, because it is generally not covered by most Health Insurance plans, is typically paid out-of-pocket or financed with high interest rate loans. With Health & Wellness Bazaar, traveling to Mexico for Hair Transplant is safe, easy, and affordable with packages starting at $2,790 USD ($1/graft) with minimum wait times. " -- from Mexican advertisement

     

    https://hwbazaar.com/eng/treatment/hair-transplant-mexico/

     

    Might be worth looking into. But I agree with most of the other comments that shaving your head, in most cases, looks better than a scraggly pate..

  6. there is a fine line between counselor and client though many of the nuttier ones were excellent therapists.

    Good point. There was actually a study conducted many years ago in which researchers surveyed ex-patients who had recently been discharged from mental hospitals. They asked these former patients to rate which group of hospital workers had been the most therapeutic for them during their hospital stay: the psychiatrists, the nursing staff, the social workers, or the volunteer workers who dropped by once a week (mostly college students who didn't get paid)? The overwhelming verdict was that the unpaid volunteers had provided the most understanding, the best support, listened rather than gave out advice, and, in the long run, had been the most therapeutic for them during their hospital stay. Says something about academic degrees and "professionalism" in the art of healing. I've always thought that a really good friend is worth two therapists (and I'm a former therapist!).

  7. The best predictor of a positive therapeutic outcome is the therapeutic relationship. Translated: the most effective therapy occurs when the client and the therapist trust each other, are willing to work on ACHIEVABLE goals, and, even if they have their disagreements, respect each other and, in most cases, like each other. You can have two PhD.s in psychology from Ivy League schools and still be a rotten therapist. You can be as gay as a picnic basket and still be an ineffective therapist for gay folks. So, it is not really that important what a therapist did in his/her former life as long as he/she is willing to enter into the inner world of the client and attempt to discern what goals the client wants to achieve, and has the skills to design a strategy for CHANGE. Believing that therapy is more art than science, I would avoid blanket statements about who makes a good therapist - and would not rule in or out someone who worked in adult entertainment. A more relevant question would be: which therapist would be most effective for this particular client, at this particular time, and for this specific problem? And that varies over time and circumstance. I would advise, however, that if a client is contracting with a therapist because the therapist was previously an adult entertainer, it is very possible that there might be boundary crossings and possible boundary violations by either the therapist or client. Therapy is about making changes (in thoughts, behaviors, beliefs) and anything that interferes with that mission is inappropriate and not productive.

  8. I’d be all about that if he lived near me.

    He moves around a lot - I think he is currently in St. Louis. Usually, he moves in unison with a couple of other guys who advertise only as escorts (Hot Guy XOT and MrBlueEyes). One of Xot's reviews stated he was "Eastern European" and I've always kinda thought that's what this guy is. I've exhanged a few messages with him and he seems like a really nice, sensible guy, not a scammer. I have no real proof, but I have a feeling that if the photos are not actually his, then his looks are probably similar. I believe, at one time, he said he could verify his pics.

     

    As mentioned, he used to participate on these forums occasionally, but lately not so much. His "Nom de Voyage" on this site is "DaddyVoyeurWanted" but he hasn't contributed since October, 2018.

     

    Another of Xot's reviews also stated that he "travels the world." So, I think it is possible that, if these guys are Eastern European, their photos could very well be found on various sites across the globe. But, just speculation on my part.

  9. I'm sorry you feel isolated and humiliated at Pride events. You may find this book interesting: "Fat Gay Men: Girth, Mirth, and the Politics of Stigma."

     

    "Therefore, with Pride Month upon us, it’s my belief that the road to accepting those groups that continue to be marginalized within the gay community—people of size as well as transgender folks, people with disabilities, and/or racial-ethnic minorities—must involve more than simply tolerating these groups. It requires all of us to embrace a wider range of diversity unremarkably, and without fuss. Fat activists put it best when they say, “We’re here, we’re sphere, get used to it!” -- Jason Whitesel, author of Fat Gay Men: Girth, Mirth, and the Politics of Stigma

     

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