Search Results

Found 1 results for "29791146725d54b6ab424cb38f6755d3" across all boards searching md5.

Anonymous /jp/49784366#49792859
8/1/2025, 12:11:09 AM
>>49792686
That image is perfection. I need to chug that glass of gardener girl lemonade immediately, then peel the icy cold, soaking socks off of her feet and wring them into my own mouth. Never did I think temperature play could combine with footfaggotry like this. Bravissimo.

>>49791753
Basically what the schizo said. Theory is that we can pick up on good partners going off of BO. You know how some people smell like shit to you when they sweat, while others smell good in some weird way? It's that. Good BO means a healthy partner, and it makes your primate brain go haywire. Ever heard people say you should jog before you go on a date, or that some girls like how you smell after exercising? Makes you sweat, releasing pheromones.

I have a personal example on pheromones, but it's really just a blog post, I'll spoiler it.

It all started for me when I met up with an athletic, tomboyish friend of mine a couple years back after she'd been outside all day. She invited me over to her place a couple hours after she got home: we'd just shoot the shit for a couple hours and gossip, or whatever. Sounded cool, so I got my ass over there and got to her room. I open the door, and find her a sweaty mess on the bed. I didn't like the idea of sitting next to her at first, but there was basically nowhere else I could sit without inadvertently telling her she was gross, so I grin and bear it.

So we're sitting on the bed, and she's got her knees up. Keeps going on about how tired she is, how everything's aching, that sort of thing... then all of a sudden she extends her legs, and puts her bare, sweaty thighs literally straight over my lap. The air was already thick with her smell, but now it was something else. It just flipped a switch in me.

Every breath actually made my head spin, and I don't think I've felt a more primal, base urge to *mate* in my entire life. Pheromones go straight into your brain: it's how humans have been around for hundreds of generations.