Looking for an easy, fun, and safe way to meet friends, dates, lovers of your dreams? You have come to the right place!
Here's the best part, it's FREE to join. As a member, you can search for your ideal partners, check out their photos and profiles, contact them, post your personal ad, upload your photo. Whether you're looking for new friends or searching for your soul mate, it couldn't be any easier.
Similar posts: china dating
Here's the best part, it's FREE to join. As a member, you can search for your ideal partners, check out their photos and profiles, contact them, post your personal ad, upload your photo. Whether you're looking for new friends or searching for your soul mate, it couldn't be any easier.
Similar posts: china dating
- Mood:hangry
- Music:Nickelback
Sandie Caine home video. For all the Sandie Caine fans out there of which there are many you are in for a treat, this sexy british blonde milf made a home video of herself whilst on holiday and Filthy Britain has that video and its oh so dirty! The home video of Sandie starts with her taking in the sun on the beach wearing a sexy blue bikini and filp flops, the breeze must be making Sandie a little horny because she rushes off to the bathroom, whips out the baby lotion and starts massaging that beautiful shaven pussy she has. As you all know Sandie Caine isn't shy and she likes her toys, she gets out her favorite sex toy and fuck's both her tight arse and her soaking wet pussy at the same time bringing herself to an almighty climax.
Similar posts: flashing tit
- Mood:Very good
- Music:Craig David
I went down to Stechford Cascades swimming baths on Monday to check out the Wet Sounds events, and what can I say? It was one of the weirdest, yet most enjoyable art events I’ve attended in a while. Describing itself as an ‘underwater sound art gallery’, it involved all the anticipation – and general lumbering around of electronic kit – as a club night, with the DJ/curator lowering huge speakers into the water while we waited at the side of the pool watching a sculpture of a gramophone floating gently on the water.
Once in the pool, we were encouraged to use strange u-shaped floats, which are placed under the thighs so that you’re lying comfortably on your back in the water. Then the madness began…
Firstly, the audio sounded like an unimpressive general booming, but the minute my ears were submerged in the water, I heard dialogue and music of pin-sharp clarity. Phones rang, dogs barked; snatches from The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou tinkled in my ears (this year’s theme being cinematic narratives).
Sound moves faster in water than in air, so the audio quality underwater was astounding. Doing the breaststroke was like a frustrating eavesdrop on a conversation, the lower frequencies occasionally rumbling in my stomach, and the dialogue snatched away as my head came out of the water again. Wet Sounds is currently on a UK tour, so if you can catch it in any other regional cities, it’s definitely worth attending.
Similar posts: nightclub photography
Once in the pool, we were encouraged to use strange u-shaped floats, which are placed under the thighs so that you’re lying comfortably on your back in the water. Then the madness began…
Firstly, the audio sounded like an unimpressive general booming, but the minute my ears were submerged in the water, I heard dialogue and music of pin-sharp clarity. Phones rang, dogs barked; snatches from The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou tinkled in my ears (this year’s theme being cinematic narratives).
Sound moves faster in water than in air, so the audio quality underwater was astounding. Doing the breaststroke was like a frustrating eavesdrop on a conversation, the lower frequencies occasionally rumbling in my stomach, and the dialogue snatched away as my head came out of the water again. Wet Sounds is currently on a UK tour, so if you can catch it in any other regional cities, it’s definitely worth attending.
Similar posts: nightclub photography
- Mood:More emotions
- Music:Tokio Hotel
Because Glugs and I are living together after merging our two households, we're both in our thirties and both gainfully employed... we have decided to forego traditional wedding gifts, and go a different route.
We attended a wedding last year in October- the very formal one that I was so excited about finding a dress for- and the couple who wed that day had registered with the World Wildlife Fund to cover the "eco-footprint" that their wedding would make on the world. You made a donation to the WWF in the couple's name, with the details provided on the invitation.
Glugs and I have decided to go a similar route.
We haven't chosen specific charities yet, but I think we're going to choose one each- for causes that are close to our hearts- and request that people make a donation to these charities in lieu of a gift for us.
Similar posts: music wedding
We attended a wedding last year in October- the very formal one that I was so excited about finding a dress for- and the couple who wed that day had registered with the World Wildlife Fund to cover the "eco-footprint" that their wedding would make on the world. You made a donation to the WWF in the couple's name, with the details provided on the invitation.
Glugs and I have decided to go a similar route.
We haven't chosen specific charities yet, but I think we're going to choose one each- for causes that are close to our hearts- and request that people make a donation to these charities in lieu of a gift for us.
Similar posts: music wedding
- Mood:smile
- Music:Linkin Park
In gambling, everyone wants to keep their losses low and profits consistent. Why not? It only makes good gambling and business sense. But that's easier said than done. Up to now, the Benson Company has controlled your losses by strict adherence to your money management and departure rules. This issue I would like to focus on departure rules only.
I know you've heard it a hundred times before. That is, all previous Benson systems and Newsletters have stressed the absolute importance of departure rules. It is the key to the player's math. That is, departure rules are a powerful weapon to controlling the built-in negative expectation of each casino game.
Leonard says it best, "You can miss a bet from time to time, mess up the strategy once in a while, but to win in the long run you must not break your departure rules."
He's right. And we've discussed this many times before in the Newsletter. Joe even discusses it in his "Winning and Losing" article on page 4 of this very issue. Bottom line, there are four possible outcomes every time you gamble: 1) You can win a lot. 2) You can win a little. 3) You can lose a little. 4) You can lose a lot. If you eliminate "losing a lot" from these four outcomes then two out of the three are winners. Departure rules are key to removing "losing a lot" from your play.
That said, everything so far is an introduction to why I wrote this article: Recession Proof Gambling. And in order to understand how to "recession proof" your play, you need a whole new look at what we mean by "departure rules." Let me explain.
I was introduced to the Benson Company in 1993 with Playing Craps as a Profession. I had played throughout the 1980s in Atlantic City but I never heard the word "depart" until I attended Leonard's seminar. The only word I knew was "attack"! Anyway, Leonard showed me and a lot of other gamblers that there was a middle ground to our play. That is, there was nothing wrong with winning a little and accepting small losses as long as your departure rules kept you away from losing a lot. It is the time-proven approach of "hit and run."
But even with the original departure rules, there were times I found myself "losing too much" for my liking. With Playing Craps as a Profession, if I hit the switch from the don't side to the do side, I could lose half a buy-in with one shooter. Although this did not happen often, it introduced "losing too much" into the overall picture.
During the last 10 years I have looked for more conservative playing strategies to offset "losing too much." I did not trust the departure rules alone to eliminate this outcome. I felt the departure rules needed the support of these conservative plays to keep me within the three desired outcomes. Then about six months ago, I realized that there might be another way to eliminate both "losing a lot" and "losing too much" from my play. I realized I didn't need the conservative strategies. I could do it with just the departure rules. All I needed was a different approach to the original departure rules.
Isn't the worst-case scenario responsible for "losing too much"? That's the Achilles heel to our gambling. In Playing Craps as a Profession, if I had limited my play after encountering the switch, wouldn't I control my losses better? Looking to play five tables doesn't address the issue of how we "lose too much" in one session. In those five tables you can hit the switch or worst-case scenario at each table. Then what? How does limiting your play to five tables in craps or two shoes in baccarat or a full buy-in in blackjack or roulette guarantee that you will keep down the big fluctuations?
It doesn't really. The key to controlling your losses and signaling when to depart is the worst-case scenario. And every system has one. If it didn't then we would own the casinos. When we don't encounter a worst-case scenario our buy-in is usually intact and most times we are ahead. When we do encounter a worst-case scenario then our losses tend to mount and we may be forced to stop playing.
Suddenly, my gambling came into a new light. The original departure rules seemed antiquated. As long as I evaluated my play with each worst-case scenario, I could stay well within the desired three outcomes. I began analyzing the worst-case scenarios for each of the Benson systems and slowly developed new departure rules and playing strategies around these worst-case scenarios. But here's the best part: I found myself gambling longer and if the worst-case scenario appeared, I continued playing as long as I knew that I was within the three desired outcomes.
I now refer to these new departure rules as "recession proofing" my play. They truly eliminate the fluctuations and give me the consistent wins I demand from my play. We are still finalizing these new departure rules for each system. But we plan to incorporate them into all of our games. There's still work left to be done but we are close. Until next time.
Similar posts: internet casino gambling
I know you've heard it a hundred times before. That is, all previous Benson systems and Newsletters have stressed the absolute importance of departure rules. It is the key to the player's math. That is, departure rules are a powerful weapon to controlling the built-in negative expectation of each casino game.
Leonard says it best, "You can miss a bet from time to time, mess up the strategy once in a while, but to win in the long run you must not break your departure rules."
He's right. And we've discussed this many times before in the Newsletter. Joe even discusses it in his "Winning and Losing" article on page 4 of this very issue. Bottom line, there are four possible outcomes every time you gamble: 1) You can win a lot. 2) You can win a little. 3) You can lose a little. 4) You can lose a lot. If you eliminate "losing a lot" from these four outcomes then two out of the three are winners. Departure rules are key to removing "losing a lot" from your play.
That said, everything so far is an introduction to why I wrote this article: Recession Proof Gambling. And in order to understand how to "recession proof" your play, you need a whole new look at what we mean by "departure rules." Let me explain.
I was introduced to the Benson Company in 1993 with Playing Craps as a Profession. I had played throughout the 1980s in Atlantic City but I never heard the word "depart" until I attended Leonard's seminar. The only word I knew was "attack"! Anyway, Leonard showed me and a lot of other gamblers that there was a middle ground to our play. That is, there was nothing wrong with winning a little and accepting small losses as long as your departure rules kept you away from losing a lot. It is the time-proven approach of "hit and run."
But even with the original departure rules, there were times I found myself "losing too much" for my liking. With Playing Craps as a Profession, if I hit the switch from the don't side to the do side, I could lose half a buy-in with one shooter. Although this did not happen often, it introduced "losing too much" into the overall picture.
During the last 10 years I have looked for more conservative playing strategies to offset "losing too much." I did not trust the departure rules alone to eliminate this outcome. I felt the departure rules needed the support of these conservative plays to keep me within the three desired outcomes. Then about six months ago, I realized that there might be another way to eliminate both "losing a lot" and "losing too much" from my play. I realized I didn't need the conservative strategies. I could do it with just the departure rules. All I needed was a different approach to the original departure rules.
Isn't the worst-case scenario responsible for "losing too much"? That's the Achilles heel to our gambling. In Playing Craps as a Profession, if I had limited my play after encountering the switch, wouldn't I control my losses better? Looking to play five tables doesn't address the issue of how we "lose too much" in one session. In those five tables you can hit the switch or worst-case scenario at each table. Then what? How does limiting your play to five tables in craps or two shoes in baccarat or a full buy-in in blackjack or roulette guarantee that you will keep down the big fluctuations?
It doesn't really. The key to controlling your losses and signaling when to depart is the worst-case scenario. And every system has one. If it didn't then we would own the casinos. When we don't encounter a worst-case scenario our buy-in is usually intact and most times we are ahead. When we do encounter a worst-case scenario then our losses tend to mount and we may be forced to stop playing.
Suddenly, my gambling came into a new light. The original departure rules seemed antiquated. As long as I evaluated my play with each worst-case scenario, I could stay well within the desired three outcomes. I began analyzing the worst-case scenarios for each of the Benson systems and slowly developed new departure rules and playing strategies around these worst-case scenarios. But here's the best part: I found myself gambling longer and if the worst-case scenario appeared, I continued playing as long as I knew that I was within the three desired outcomes.
I now refer to these new departure rules as "recession proofing" my play. They truly eliminate the fluctuations and give me the consistent wins I demand from my play. We are still finalizing these new departure rules for each system. But we plan to incorporate them into all of our games. There's still work left to be done but we are close. Until next time.
Similar posts: internet casino gambling
- Mood:bad
- Music:Bob Sinclar
Sometimes we wonder how some guys ever manage to get laid -- especially when they're as suave and well-mannered as the two guys our friend Kimmy dated.
The first said this gem: "Most men won't cheat on their wives with women who don't look better than them, but you're the exception because you have nice hair."
And the second? Says Kimmy, "On the first date with this guy we were sitting over dinner. He pulls out his wallet and shows me pics of his daughters and says 'See, these are the kind of babies you'd make if you were with me.'" We're wondering if he was the inspiration for the shirt we saw on the subway the other day. We hope so.
Got a story like Kimmy's? We want your tales of craptacular dude behavior. Bad boys. Creepy guys. Crappy texts. Nasty emails. Leave yours in the comments (resist the urge to include his full name, blog and email address) or send it to us. We promise we'll change all incriminating names and details.
Similar posts: naked sex teen
The first said this gem: "Most men won't cheat on their wives with women who don't look better than them, but you're the exception because you have nice hair."
And the second? Says Kimmy, "On the first date with this guy we were sitting over dinner. He pulls out his wallet and shows me pics of his daughters and says 'See, these are the kind of babies you'd make if you were with me.'" We're wondering if he was the inspiration for the shirt we saw on the subway the other day. We hope so.
Got a story like Kimmy's? We want your tales of craptacular dude behavior. Bad boys. Creepy guys. Crappy texts. Nasty emails. Leave yours in the comments (resist the urge to include his full name, blog and email address) or send it to us. We promise we'll change all incriminating names and details.
Similar posts: naked sex teen
- Mood:normal
- Music:Jay-Z
PartyPoker has tapped into the brilliance of the finest scientific minds around to formulate a new promotion thats absolute genius.
Starting Monday 6th July, PartyPoker are going to square the pot of every 50,000th hand thats played on cash tables to create some mind-blowing jackpots, from a minimum of $100 up to a staggering $5,000. Better still, everyone involved in the hand will get an equal share of the payout, while the winner will also take the original pot.
Similar posts: casino royal
Starting Monday 6th July, PartyPoker are going to square the pot of every 50,000th hand thats played on cash tables to create some mind-blowing jackpots, from a minimum of $100 up to a staggering $5,000. Better still, everyone involved in the hand will get an equal share of the payout, while the winner will also take the original pot.
Similar posts: casino royal
- Mood:bad
- Music:Jay-Z
Guest Passes let you share your photos that aren't public. Anyone can see your public photos anytime, whether they're a Flickr member or not. But! If you want to share photos marked as friends, family or private, use a Guest Pass. If you're sharing photos from a set, you can create a Guest Pass that includes any of your photos marked as friends, family, or private. If you're sharing your entire photostream, you can create a Guest Pass that includes photos marked as friends or family (but not your private photos). Learn more about Guest Passes