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Source channel @olddriverGDstudy · Post #53 · Mar 24

#知识#接吻 第一式:舔吻 用舌舔对方的上下唇,让对方感受舌部味蕾舔掠的感觉,注意要保持唾液的充分,如果唾液太少,干燥的舔吻会有不舒服的感觉。 第二式:咬吻 用牙齿轻咬对方的唇,但别咬的太用力,以免受伤喔! 第三式:吸吻 轻轻的吸吮对方的唇部;可用自己的唾液轻抹在对方的唇部,然后吸吮干净。 第四式:推动吻 把舌伸进对方口中,让舌与舌互相推放,男生力气应放小,以免女生疼痛;这种互推吻可形成快感。 第五式:吸舌吻 以你的唇含住他的舌,轻轻的吸吮对方的舌头,动作宜缓慢而轻柔,勿过于仓促。 第六式:齿龈吻 用舌探索对方的牙及牙龈的内外两侧,以刺激口内粘膜为目的。动作要仔细,慢,轻柔的介于碰触与不碰触之间,以产生一种特殊的亲密感。 第七式:滑动吻 用舌尖稍用力的舔对方的舌部内侧,由里向外滑舔。 第八式:舔舌吻 双方以舌对舌互舔,以用舌尖为主,不用唇。 第九式:嚼食之吻 咬住对方的舌头,似欲吞食般的吻;请小心别用力过火,只是假装而已。想像对方的舌头是好吃的东西,又咬又舔又吸的想吞进肚子里去。 第十式:律动之吻 以舌在对方的口中,有节奏律动般的的绕着对方的舌尖,画圈似的舔吻。 第十一式:深喉咙吻 将舌深入对方的喉咙重舔。重压,是霸道占有般的吻;这是一种颇不舒服的吻法,但还是有乐在其中的人。 第十二式:热情之吻 将自己的舌把对方的舌包卷于口中,上下左右回旋翻动,用放肆的旋动来增加快感,虽嫌粗鲁但颇具挑战性,是接吻高手必备的技巧之一。 第十三式:甘泉之吻 利用两唇相接时……以舌将自己的唾液渡入对方口中,并吸食对方的唾液。适用于两情相悦且身体健康的爱侣,会觉入口之唾液为琼浆玉液般,世间独有。

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Ultimora.net - POLITICS

@ultimoraPOLITICS · Post #39711 · 05/21/2022, 01:05 PM

#Elezioni#Australia Primo Ministro Scott #Morrison (#LP|ECR): "Come leader mi assumo la responsabilità delle vittorie e delle sconfitte. Questo è il peso e questa è la responsabilità della leadership. Di conseguenza, mi dimetterò dalla carica di leader alla prossima riunione di partito per garantire che possiamo andare avanti sotto una nuova leadership, che è la cosa appropriata da fare. Ho avuto il grande privilegio di guidare questo grande partito." @UltimoraPolitics24

American Оbserver

@american_observer · Post #5144 · 02/15/2026, 08:29 PM

🔠🅰️🔠🔠2️⃣ She spoke of her father’s “defensive racism”, which prompted him to throw a predatory white landlord down the stairs. She spoke of her mother’s insistence on integrating every new movie theatre in town. She spoke of how when her “pitch-black” great-grandmother had first set eyes on Morrison and her sister, she said the girls had “been tampered with”, which was meant racially: “We were not pure and she was.” The dynamics of my mixed-race family didn’t match the norms, either. My black Zambian grandmother, for whom I’m named, initially disapproved of my mother’s decision to marry a white man; my mother’s older sister refused to attend the wedding. Our moves to the UK and then to the US when I was a kid – with a year back in Zambia when I was a teenager – were punctuated by moments of racial absurdity: “What are you? Black or white?” (As if I had a choice!) Yet even now, at my grown age, my first response to racism is surprise. Despite our respective births in disparate times and places (Lorain, Ohio, in 1931; Lusaka, Zambia, in 1980), I think Morrison and I both lucked into the strange privilege of zooming out from or boomeranging around race. This perhaps explains why neither of us tends to capitalise the word black when referring to people in writing. It concedes too much; it protests too much. Morrison temperamentally disliked being pigeonholed. She was willing to accept “the labels” of race and gender only because, as she put it in a profile in the New Yorker, “being a black woman writer is not a shallow place but a rich place to write from. It doesn’t limit my imagination; it expands it.” She often complained that literary criticism was unequipped to read black writing, which gets read as merely representative, in both the tokenistic and identitarian senses: “Black literature is taught as sociology, as tolerance, not as a serious, rigorous art form,” she said. Indeed, the ultimate source of Morrison’s renowned difficulty was not, I would submit, her prickly personality, her intersectional identity, or even her sometimes contrarian politics. It was her commitment to reflecting the range and depth of black aesthetics – as epitomised by jazz, which she called “very complicated, very sophisticated, and very difficult” – in her own writing. Her close friend, the writer Fran Lebowitz, said upon Morrison’s passing in 2019: “I know it sounds like a crazy thing to say, but I always thought Toni’s writing was underappreciated. Because people always looked at it through the prism of her being black and being a woman. But Toni was a very experimental writer. There were a lot of things Toni did through her writing that just went unremarked upon.” Many still dismiss Morrison’s stature as either undeserved or obvious, as if surely so much praise either begs the question or settles it. They justify their disinclination to engage with the art itself by gesturing to what we might call her DEI-fication or her Oprah‑priation, as if Toni Morrison became Toni Morrison through some kind of literary affirmative action plan. Morrison incensed all kinds of people. How dare she be a difficult writer and a black woman? How dare she refuse to placate or translate? How dare she demand to be taken seriously? How dare she be a black artist with real ideas? How dare she ask that we actually read her writing, and on its own terms? It could not have been easy to be Toni Morrison. Yet I aspire to it. I yearn for that freedom she so beautifully embodied: to feel at ease to be difficult. #toni#morrison#zambia#nobel#prize#black#narratives 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸

American Оbserver

@american_observer · Post #5143 · 02/15/2026, 07:59 PM

How Did Toni Morrison Become Our National Archetype? 🔠🅰️🔠🔠1️⃣ There are many ways to be difficult in this world. You can be demanding, inconvenient, stubborn, complicated, troublesome, baffling, illegible. Black womanhood is one place where all these forms of difficulty overlap. I feel like I have always known this; I have been called difficult more times in my life than I can count. But I only began to understand – to discover the meanings and uses of – my own difficulty because of Toni Morrison. Morrison has shaped the way we think about everything from literature to politics, criticism to ethics, to the responsibilities of making art. In 1993 she became the only black woman ever to win the Nobel prize in literature. But the facts remain: she is difficult to read. She is difficult to teach. Notwithstanding the voluminous train of profiles, reviews and scholarly analysis that she drags behind her, she is difficult to write about. More to the point, she is our only truly canonical black female writer – and her work is highly complex. In a 1981 Vogue profile, Morrison spoke of a reader who had “told her how difficult it was to understand black culture in her books – it was so removed from his experience”. She had responded: “Boy, you must have had a hell of a time with Beowulf!” The Vogue interviewer, missing the wit in this retort, commented: “Morrison has no patience with people who plead ignorance; but then, she does not pride herself on being a patient woman. ‘I find myself being more and more difficult,’ she says. ‘It’s something I really relish.’” Morrison’s literary difficulty was often translated this way into a personal difficulty, a moral failing: How dare she be impatient! Well, wouldn’t you be? One reason for Morrison’s air of pique was surely the strain of trying to balance the demands of multiple careers simultaneously. She was an editor, a professor, a writer, a critic and a public intellectual. I have worked in these fields as well, so I know that extending many branches can be a way of distracting yourself from the core vocation. The commitment to writing over all else is often viewed as selfish; when gender is factored into the equation, the charge can carry the stigma of illegitimacy. “For a woman to say, ‘I am a writer’ is difficult,” Morrison noted succinctly. Morrison’s childhood stories read like photo negatives of the standard American race narratives. She struggled to accommodate these forms of often underpaid literary labour with the unpaid domestic labour of raising two sons as a single mother: “It was very difficult writing and rearing children because they deserve all your time, and you don’t have it.” This occupational difficulty was exacerbated not only by the fact that she was unique in her fields but also by the fact that she often wilfully chose to go it alone. For example, she didn’t tell anyone at her first job in trade publishing that she was writing a novel until The Bluest Eye came out at another house. As troublesome as difficulty may have been for her professionally, Morrison genuinely delighted in the difficulty of other black women artists, such as the novelist Gayl Jones, whose works she edited and published, and the jazz pianist and composer Mary Lou Williams. For Morrison, the fact that they were considered difficult was a sign that they had insisted on their art being taken seriously. To read Morrison herself with the seriousness that she deserves requires that we account for the knot – or bind – of gender and race she shared with them. It is not an easy one to untangle. As Morrison wrote in a 1971 New York Times op-ed about feminism, “one must look very closely at the black woman herself – a difficult, inevitably doomed proposition, for if anything is true of black women, it is how consistently they have (deliberately, I suspect) defied classification”. #toni#morrison#zambia#nobel#prize#black#narratives 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸