bed selfies cause why not?
instagram: @meechonmars

bed selfies cause why not?
instagram: @meechonmars
Ig:darrin_jones
tips for giving good head
*Quick disclaimer*
This is going to make you look nasty as fuck I.MEAN.NASTY.AS.FUCK! Because when I get my dick suck I like it to be on some porno star shit, super freak. You gotta suck this dick like you’re the Fridah Kahlo of dick sucking. Fellatio is an art.
Dick Head
Shaft
Balls
Pace Yourself
POSITIONING
AMBIANCE (Very important, this can make it seem better than it actually is)
You’re doing a great job if you look like this
I feel like she is enjoying what she is doing and that energy is very important because vibes are contagious. Positive vibes on the dick, baby!
REPEAT AFTER ME AND REMEMBER THAT
IF YOU REALLY WANT TO BE NASTY OR FOR A SPECIAL OCCASION
You can do Cum bubbles.
*Also
*Drink plenty of water and lick it and jerk it off often so you won’t get lock jaw too quickly.*
Remember, “Fellatio is an art” - Me. Have fun and be creative.
👏👏
Let me tell y’all something that i learned after reading this post just now……
I AM A NASTY BITCH
And i aint even know it till now…..y’all telling me, it aint natural to do this to the dick?
This is on some nasty level type shit? Oh mah gawsh.
smh I feel like i need to clean up my act and go to church cause this aint right.
This is the reason why my mom and sister gave me werid looks when i told them The best part about it, is when you gag a little.”
This is how it should be.
Yasssssssss studies
This should be in a PowerPoint presentation!!!!!!
Very informative
Don’t be afraid stick your tongue in the head as well while your lips are wrapped around the head
HOLLUP u told ur mom u gag a little OMG 💀 but i made the heart red for future reference.
Lol my mom was the Original Hoe. Then she got saved and had to pass the baton on to successor! So hell yeah i told my mom i gag on dick a little. But ive gotten better since this post and barely gag on dick now.
American Terrorism… Lynching Postcards
Terrorism is defined as “the use of violence and intimidation in the pursuit of political aims.” Western media likes to paint terrorists with a brown face, but one of the most horrific campaigns of terror happened in the past century on American soil – the estimated 3,436 lynchings of black American men and women between 1882 and 1950, intended to control and intimidate the recently freed black population. There is nothing more disturbing than being confronted with visual evidence of humanity’s dark heart, especially when it is evidence of a widespread, mainstream hatred for and violence towards one another. Hatred that stems from fear, and is driven by religion and a belief that murder is morality made distorted flesh; violence that aims to cow and suppress any aspirations a community might have for equality and a brighter future.
When I came across this collection of American postcards from James Allen and John Littlefield, published in a book entitled Without Sanctuary, I saw how important it is to look at these images, today more than ever. These postcards were made to commemorate events that made many American white people feel proud – of their race, of their superiority, of their civilization and their intelligence. They took photos of their disgusting, cowardly accomplishments and memorialized them for future generations, to be found and collected and remembered by their descendents. On the backs, they wrote to friends and family in sociopathic excitement about the mob the participated in. These postcards capture the mobs witnessing with glee the murder of young men and women, whose most serious crime was the color of their skin. The corpses hanging and charred in these postcards lived in a world that counted down the days until their murder from the second they drew air into their infant lungs. This history is potent, stomach-churning and of essential importance to the America of today, and to the world of today. And the most striking thing about these photographs is that they don’t erase the perpetrators like many histories and memorials do today, preferring to focus on who was victimized rather than on those who proudly – and with government backing – tortured, raped and murdered people. The murderers in these photos stand proud, grown men looking at the camera with the smiling conviction that the teenage boy they just killed, one against a hundred, was deserving of their hatred, fear and frustration. No grand jury needed; the law was in the hands of the murderers.
History is not linear; history is happening all around us, all the time. These photos are context, they are reality, they are pictures of American terrorism. Read James Allen’s commentary below and be aware that these photos are sickening, and all too real.
Africans in America mounted resistance to white people lynchings in numerous ways. Intellectuals and journalists encouraged public education, actively protesting and lobbying against lynch mob violence and government complicity in that violence. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), as well as numerous other organizations, organized support from white and black Americans alike and conducted a national campaign to get a federal anti-lynching law passed. African American women’s clubs raised funds to support the work of public campaigns, including anti-lynching plays. Their petition drives, letter campaigns, meetings and demonstrations helped to highlight the issues and combat lynching.[4] In the Great Migration, extending in two waves from 1910 to 1970, 6.5 million African Americans left the South, primarily for destinations in northern and mid-western cities, both to gain better jobs and education and to escape the high rate of violence.
From 1882 to 1968, “…nearly 200 anti-lynching bills were introduced in Congress, and three passed the House. Seven presidents between 1890 and 1952 petitioned Congress to pass a federal law.”[5] In 1920 theRepublican Party promised at its national convention to support passage of such a law. In 1921 Leonidas C. Dyer from Saint Louissponsored an anti-lynching bill; it was passed in January 1922 in the United States House of Representatives, but a Senate filibuster by the Southern white Democratic block defeated it in December 1922. With the NAACP, Representative Dyer spoke across the country in support of his bill in 1923 and tried to gain passage that year and the next, but was defeated by the Southern Democratic block.
DO NOT BE SCARED TO REBLOG THIS. WHETHER YOU OR YOUR FOLLOWERS WANT TO SEE THIS OR NOT, IT NEEDS TO BE SEEN.
Oh my fucking god. This was a fucking hundred years ago. These were your grandparents parents.
POSTCARDS?!?
White people were the first terrorist…
Sorry but this needs to be seen . Smh this to fuckin messed up. Only 100 years ago.
you have been visited by the seven magic dragon balls your biggest wish will be granted but only if you reblog
- Comment mater une fille sans que ta copine te crame !
oh putain
😂😂
wheres the oscar!!!
I CAN’T BELIEVE
MANEUVERS
THIS IS AMAZING LMAO
ENJOYYYYYYY!!!!!
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I want them all! All of them!
Tough.
Moving onto something better like.
Poetic Justice : Tupac x Janet Jackson
“If I told you that a flower bloomed in a dark room, would you trust it?” x The rose that grew from concrete
!!!!!!!
keep it going
When you get left in 2015

