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Massageislife

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Everything posted by Massageislife

  1. No, I'm not saying that. In a sexist culture--which all cultures are to varying degrees, unfortunately-- men and women are kept in their place (which is with men in a generally dominant position) by rigidly defining what men and women can be. Sexual interest in men has always been defined as a feminine thing, which is a way of stigmatizing women who desire other women and of stigmatizing men who desire men. We've all got age, race, size, and gender performance preferences when it comes to sexual attraction, but it's painful to see the most damaging ones ("no fats, no femmes," "I'm not into [name the race] guys") show up on a site like this, which, at it's best, can be a place of real pleasure, humor, and support for each other.
  2. He lists $160/hr., which is what I paid last year ($240 for 90 min). Are you saying he upchatged for basic sensual elements?
  3. I saw Miguel again at his place in Union City. I was clear that I was interested in more erotic elements, and he included them.
  4. So sexy, but WAY TOO MUCH DICK!!
  5. to me the YMMV can be helpful but only as to indicate that a profile that i may have assumed was strictly massage (based on its presentation), that it may be ok under the appropriate circumstances to inquire with that masseur about extra services not mentioned but i don't assume or expect to necessarily get the same results. GTMike, thank you for posting on this thread. You bring back happy and embarrassing memories from when I started my own m4m massage journey 4 or 5 years ago. As for what you write about YMMV, that is also the only way I would use that acronym (which I don't), but what you explain about your usage is so much clearer than the acronym itself, the YMMV seems superflous, if not confusing
  6. Lots of realities are pretty mean. ?
  7. Yeah, I've always disliked the anti-short guy bias. I've been amazed by the number of heterosexual women who talk about a guy being shorter than them as a deal-breaker! Gay men have to do better than that!
  8. Smurof, thank you for posting on this thread! You don't really address the issue of the use of the term YMMV, but I hope we don't use it to signal to others "I take care of myself and look great, so you might not get the extras I do." That would be cruel. Your comments about the client's attractiveness do interest me. I think I'll start a new thread!
  9. Mikebidude, thank you for posting in this thread! I agree with your remarks, but, honestly, I don't see how adding YMMV helps. We should all know--and I think we do--that our experiences, even with same masseur, will vary. And when YMMV isn't merely being redundant in this way, it can have a meangirls-ish vibe to it ("I got more but you might not") or seem to apologize for masseurs who don't follow through on what they advertise. YMMV may be easy to type, but it doesn't really give the information we need and can make this amazing site a little more brutal than it has to be.
  10. Mplsgymguy, thank you for posting in this thread. The line you quote of mine is different Mplsgymguy, thanks for posting on this thread. I'm not sure why you quoted the specific line from my post that you do. One of the main things I look for on this site is reliable information on who provides the basics (not "extras" like kissing, sex, etc.) of erotic massage that I list. (On another thread, I have asked what people think "erotic massage" generally entails.) What I always appreciate in this regard is information about masseurs who advertise and charge for erotic but don't follow through. "YMMV" isn't helpful in this regard. If masseur is engaging in false advertising, I hope we'll all name it as such. You seem to be talking about the opposite thing: masseurs who offer more than they advertise. To reply "not in my experience" to someone who has indicated that their experience was only therapeutic gives a bit more information than "YMMV," I guess. (I mean, everything is more information than that phrase, in the way that many on this site use it, which is just to acknowledge the obvious truth that masseurs and clients are individuals and their interactions are always going to differ.) What would be more useful, in a case like this, I think, would be for you to share that your experience suggests that the masseur may be open to more and if an upcharge is involved. I hope the forum member in your final example did that for you, but anything beyond what a masseur advertises is never something we can--or have the right to--count on.
  11. Hornytwells, comments that appear to be baseless attacks on masseurs should be condemned, but I don't think you are saying that any of the negative comments about Ryan are baseless. What I am suggesting is that there is a difference between posting positive experiences about masseurs and "defending" them. What suggests an "agenda," to use your word, is going beyond adding one's positive experience to the discussion by moving onto language which seems to challenge or excuse other, less positive experiences. It is enough, for example, for you to say that he has usually been reliable in his appointments with you. You go beyond that, however, when you write that you "never...heard of him doing such a thing" as being unreliable. You, in fact, heard it from this very thread! Likewise, posting your own attitude towards Ryan's level of talkitiveness is appropriate, but it's bewildering to me why you would feel the need to tell us that "many people I know like to relax in a massage and not converse." We can speak for ourselves, and the posters in this thread have. The same goes for this comment of yours: "I have read several posts from people on here who hate chatty masseurs and complain that they talk too much." Again, we don't need you to tell us what others think. We can read. Your engaging in this kind of rhetoric is what makes your post seem like advocacy. I'm glad you have had good experiences with Ryan, but good masseurs don't need defenders. Their work and positive comments posted about them on this site are sufficient.
  12. Yes, apparently he was a professional, acrobatic dancer. Per Harryinny's recommendation, however, "Max" is my"go-from" masseur
  13. Please, someone try him out. So cute!
  14. Ah, Gustavo ?
  15. Hornytwells, by "both ways" do you mean that we should avoid writing malicious responses whose purpose is just to harm a masseur's reputation? I think we all agree that's also not the purpose of this site. The negative experiences with Ryan described above, however, don't have that character. I want to know if a masseur has smelled bad, shorted a client on time, cancelled at the last minute, or was chatty. You don't appear to be suggesting that these weren't the experiences of others. There is no need to try to "balance out" experiences that are different than your own. It's enough to add them to the mix.
  16. I think the point here is to consider our roles on this site. I certainly want to hear about masseurs with whom our comrades have had good (as well as bad) experiences; that's the main reason why we come here. It's when praise seems to grade into advocacy for a masseur, sometimes in the form of seeming to challenge negative experiences of others, that positive comments lose their value or even become suspect.
  17. I mostly agree except for that last, parenthetical remark. My hope is that we can agree on basics, like a massage advertised as erotic and costing $150-60/hr. has some basic, agreed upon parameters
  18. Yeah, sometimes guys have come right out and said that! Not helpful.
  19. $120 for an in-call. That's reasonable for an undraped massage by a hot guy. I generally want a combination therapeutic/erotic massage, however, and that rightly costs more.
  20. "A non-sexual interaction with a hot guy" when his hands are rubbing my naked body for 90 minutes is not conceivable, but that's considering "sexual" quite broadly. If a masseur is sending me clear vibes that he is not also sexually engaged (is nude, is aroused, is encouraging me to touch him, is stimulating my erotic zones, etc.), I won't get hard, but I'll feel aroused and distracted by sexual thoughts. That's what can be unpleasant about a strictly therapeutic massage from a guy I'm attracted to.
  21. EVdude, I hear you! I've gone to George twice, and I'll probably go again, but I'm conflicted. I don't want to spend any time during a therapeutic massage hoping that it will turn erotic. It's hard not to imagine it, however, with such a good-looking guy, pun intended. Unfortunately, although I'm pretty sure that George is gay, there aren't any signs, at least in my interactions with him, that he will move in a more erotic direction. A deep dig from the hands of someone so attractive--he really is a model--is "erotic," but that edging thing is just torture, if it doesn't pay off in the end. In videos it always does!
  22. Thanks, Frank!
  23. A thread on him detailing someone's successful tracking down of George's Instragram account and modeling pages, which offer stunning genuine images of him, pushed me into going for it (although I almost always opt for someone advertising erotic massage on rentmasseur.) George has an appealing personality. His massage was deep and skilled. My experiences with him, sadly, are strictly therapeutic. He doesn't even remove his shirt.
  24. Redwine, I get what you say. I just initiated a thread about the term, "YMMV." I think what you're saying is that YMMV may be useful when we get the sense that our experience--good or bad--may be typical, and we want to qualify what we've written.
  25. NYCman, thank you for posting on this thread. What you say is really useful, perfect really!
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