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I am sitting at home half naked
send me a pic of yours so that i can masturbate
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This email was sent by Dickyvandyke
― teeny (teeny), Tuesday, 6 April 2004 14:46 (twenty years ago) link
Hello, Anna. I came across you through this page on the ilXor.com message board:
Clothing Mishaps
This is a discussion of clothing mishaps. You reminisced that "Actually whilst
at school the fashion for a while was for very tight pencil skirts. I think
someone would split the seam at the back of their skirt at least every couple of
days." I don't know to which generation you belong, but I was born in 1970, and
was exposed to the 1980s tight skirt fashion at a very susceptible age. I
remember this sort of thing going on myself, and as a teenage boy I enjoyed the
show! It's a long time ago now, though, and a new generation has grown up which
finds it hard to believe girls ever wore their skirts that tight. I was very
pleased to find someone else who could back me up.
If you don't mind me writing to you about this, then, a couple of questions.
Firstly, are you remembering the 1980s, or an earlier period? I am extremely
attracted by 1950s fashions, which seem to me elegant and glamorous, though that
was over long before I was born. And secondly, of course, do you remember any
more about it?
Whether you reply or not, thank you for reading my message.
― Anna (Anna), Tuesday, 6 April 2004 15:33 (twenty years ago) link
skull skull skull skull skull skull skull skull skull skull skull skull skull skull skull skull skull skull skull skull skull skull skull skull lol
now i'm drunk lol
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This email was sent by Michelle (michelleberg15@yahoo.com), a user of ilXor.com.
http://ilx.wh3rd.net/index.php
― stockholm cindy (Jody Beth Rosen), Sunday, 18 April 2004 06:42 (twenty years ago) link
Just Published...
Vedette
or Conversations with the Flamenco Shadows
Stephen Siciliano
Born to a Gothic social order, branded a haunter of men‚s dreams, Vedette is traumatized when her small town in the magical wetlands of southern Spain‚s Guadalquivir River is overrun by hashish-smoking anarchists promising free love and a life without sadness to those who would follow them.
Entranced by their flamenco music, their philosophy of revenge, and the concrete ability to deliver political results, the young woman joins a movement destined to annihilation and becomes its sole survivor, burdened with the task of keeping its memory and project for a better world alive through conversations with their flamenco shadows.
Transcending political viewpoints, Mr. Siciliano opens a new chapter in the understanding of the Spanish Civil War, opting for a literary interpretation that looks beyond right and wrong to more universal lessons only the passage of decades and the healing effects of time can reveal.
@ www.iUniverse.com
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This email was sent by Stephen Siciliano (highwayscribery@aol.com), a user of ilXor.com.
http://ilx.wh3rd.net/index.php
― DV (dirtyvicar), Sunday, 18 April 2004 08:16 (twenty years ago) link