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It is fine you don't like this, but you obv. don't love him. If you did, this would be endearing. If you aren't in 100% then your find it cringe.
* caveat that if you're married for years you can find it cringe haha. But for dating. no can't be cringe when you're in new love |
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Come to bed.
- married 36 years. |
+1000 I think you'd be able to hear some cosmic record scratch if someone pulled that on me |
It’s always cringe, love or not love, long relationship or new. |
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What about the old Bon Newbanks term on the Newlywed Game
Making woopie |
| You make a sandwich, not love… |
| Demand that he stick it in your butt and see if he call that making line. You’ll have your answer. |
Wham, bam, thank you ma’am. |
Be honest with yourself- you think he is too vanilla in bed and the phrase “making love” is exacerbating your irritation. Talk dirty to him in bed and see if he follows your lead. |
😂 |
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Sex with you must be boring and vanilla. Making love and f’*cking are 2 different things. So is having sex. Last night my DH f’ed me. It was wonderful. Sometimes we make love and it feels like another plane but also wonderful. It all depends on the moods we’re in and circumstances leading up to it but the act is never just one concept all the time.
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| Agree with PP. |
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Maybe, OP, you should try leaning in to his mindset and see if you might like it more than you think. Put on the Barry White, slip into a naughty little negligee, get some champagne and chocolates, and prepare for a long night of “making love” on the brown shag carpet of your sunken living room. I mean really go all in, Chef-from-South Park-style, and see what happens. Perhaps the 70s had a point.
Also, I think “making whoopie” should be the new DCUM linguistic standard for all sex related standards. Let’s try to make that a thing. |
| Does he call you his “lover”? |