Yearly Archives: 2009

The 10 Most Popular Places to Have Sex…Besides Your Bedroom!





The 10 Most Popular Places to Have Sex…Besides Your Bedroom!
10. In the laundry room: 29%
9. In your parents’ bedroom: 34%
8. In a tent: 37%
7. At a park: 42%
6. On the kitchen table: 48%
5. In the woods: 49%
4. In the pool or a body of water: 54%
3. In your childhood bedroom: 65%
2. In a car: 80%
1. In the shower or bathtub: 82%

source: cosmopolitan

Want to earn like Warren Buffett? 24 tips

One of the world’s most successful investors, Warren Buffett is the richest man on earth. Chairman of the Berkshire Hathaway, Buffett’s wealth jumped by $10 billion to hit $62 billion during 2007. Buffett’s life is an inspiration for investors across the globe.

So what makes the world’s wealthiest man so rich? Buffett believes that successful investing is about having common sense, patience and independent research.

‘How Buffett Does It’, by James Pardoe is a great guide for investing in any market. A look into Buffett’s simple, yet intelligent mantras for investing and minting millions.

1. A frugal billionaire Buffett believes in simplicity. He advises investors to take easy decisions. Never buy when you are doubtful. Invest only if you understand the businesses well.

2. Focus on not losing money rather than making it. Don’t own any stock for 10 minutes that you wouldn’t own for 10 years.

3. A proponent of value investing, he believes that one must take decisions on his own. He doesn’t believe in listening to analysts or brokers. The best investing decisions come from oneself.
“It is not necessary to do extraordinary things to get extraordinary results.”

4. Buffett advises to invest in ‘old economy’ businesses, companies, which have been around for fifty years and will continue to have a long innings.

5. We have often heard of people suffering heart attacks when markets crash. Well, Buffett advocates a sound temperament for stock market success.

6. You don’t need to be a genius to succeed in the stock markets. People who can stay cool will succeed in the long run. Always keep in mind the hidden costs, from commissions on active stock trading to high mutual fund fees.

7. Buffett always looks at businesses he can understand, look at the profits in the past, long-term potential of the company, good top level management of the company and companies that have a good value proposition. The strategy is to think about the business in the long term.
“You are neither right nor wrong because the crowd disagrees with you. You are right because your data and reasoning are right.”

8. Invest in businesses with great management. Always keep a track of the management of the company. The top decision makers have a lot to do with the company’s performance.

9. One of Buffet’s biggest strengths is independent thinking. Many people go by what the experts says or what others do but belief in one’s own judgement is the key to stock market success.

10. Patience pays, says Buffet. He says one must not worry too much about the price of the stocks. What’s more important is the nature of business of the company, earnings capability and its future potential.

11. Don’t target just stocks, look at businesses. How a company performs is key to its stock market performance. You must know the track record of a company before you invest in it.
“Price is what you pay. Value is what you get.”

12. Prices keep changing. Don’t get worried by the ups and downs. Investing is all about creating wealth. It’s important to understand the value of a stock than its price.

13. He believes that franchisee businesses are good opportunities to invest in. Avoid hi-tech, complex businesses. Look for businesses that are set to diversify and grow.

14. Never be disappointed when markets fall. Take it as a buying opportunity. Buffet says one must have lesser number of investments with more money in each lot.

15. He advises to avoid diversification. Invest in companies with sound business models. Choose a few good ones and stay invested, it will give you the benefits.
“I don’t look to jump over 7-foot bars; I look around for 1-foot bars that I can step over.”

16. Doing nothing pays at times! One must not jump at price fluctuations and take impulsive decisions.

17. Don’t get carried away by market forecasts. Ignore market swings and remain an investor with a good business sense.

18. Buffett advises to be fearful when others are greedy and greedy when others are fearful. Buy when people are selling and sell when people are buying.

19. Make a list of companies, sectors that you find safe to invest in and try to stick to the list.

20. A sound business, strong management, good fundamental and low stock price should be a must-buy.
“Most people get interested in stocks when everyone else is. The time to get interested is when no one else is. You can’t buy what is popular and do well.”

21. Try to ignore stock charts, says Buffett. They may not give the right indicators. A stock which may have done well earlier may not do so in future.

22. Buffet spends a lot of time on reading and more importantly thinking. Reading helps investors, so spend a lot of time reading about the stocks, companies and markets. A good investor must have a good knowledge base.

23. A good investor also needs to be efficient. Investors may have great capabilities but many do not make use of it. One needs to hone skills to meet the targets.

24. Good investors never rush to make money. They give time, thought and work on investment decisions. The mistakes that others make should be a lesson for you.

Business and Financial Journalism
Osmania University MCJ Second Semester Syllabus for Print media specialization:-

Unit – I: Finance and business journalism. Financial and Business newspapers, and magazines, Areas of reporting financial and business aspects. Sources of Financial and Business news. Characteristics of financial reporting, Trends in financial and business journalism.

Unit – II: Understanding broad features of economy. Structure of finance and banking sector, regulatory, institutions – Reserve Bank of India, SEBI, Indian Banks Association, Chambers of Commerce & Industry. Policies – fiscal, industrial, agricultural & trade.

Unit – III: Importance of budgets – national and state. Analysing business trends, interpreting and presenting statistical data of business, industry & finance.

Unit – IV: Importance of science journalism. Role of science and technology news, sources techniques, writing science for various audiences- science news & features in various media interpreting research reports, use of illustrations- problems, emerging areas- medicine, energy, science magazines,. Research and development agencies.

Unit – V: Reporting specialised areas like human rights, child rights, terrorism- war guidelines, propaganda, abuse, standpoint of warring parties, embedded journalism

Business journalism is the branch of journalism that tracks, records, analyses and interprets the economic changes that take place in a society. It could include anything from personal finance, to business at the local market to the malls, to performance of well-known and not-so-well-known companies.
This form of journalism covers news and feature articles about people, places and issues related to the field of business. Almost all general newspapers and magazines, radio and television news channels carry a business segment. But one finds detailed and indepth business journalism in dedicated business or financial publications, radio and television channels.
Business coverage gained prominence in the 1990s, with wider investment in the stock market. The Wall Street Journal is one such example of business journalism, and is amongst the United States of America’s top newspapers in terms of both circulation and respect of journalists.

A stakeholders’ view of environmental reporting

In practice, environmental reports can range from a simple public relations statement to a detailed and in-depth examination of the company’s environmental performance, policies, practices and future direction. The central objective of any environmental report has to be to communicate the company’s environmental performance to the report reader. This article is based on the assumption that the vast majority of existing environmental reports are unable to satisfy all of the information requirements of the target groups for which they are written. To try and rectify this situation the article first of all defines the different audiences, or ‘target groups’, of an environmental report. The authors have then consulted with key representatives of each of these target groups and identified the most important issues that they want to see presented in an environmental report. This information is summarized in tabular form, and from these findings the article proposes two separate reporting strategies which companies may pursue for a more effective environmental report: (1) they can produce a ‘generic report’ concentrating on the key points which all target groups accept as being of primary importance; or alternatively (2) they can produce ‘specialized’ environmental reports which address all of the requirements of a specific target group. It is the authors’ intention in this article to provide companies with the information necessary to choose and then be able to undertake either of these scenarios.

Science journalism is a relatively new branch of journalism, which uses the art of reporting to convey information about science topics to a public forum. The communication of scientific knowledge through mass media requires a special relationship between the world of science and news media, which is still just beginning to form.
The first task of a science journalist is to render the very detailed, specific, and often jargon-laden information produced by scientists into a form that the average media consumer can understand and appreciate, while still communicating the information accurately. Science journalists often, but not always, have advanced training in the particular scientific disciplines that they cover — they may have been scientists or medical doctors before becoming journalists — or have at least exhibited talent in writing about science subjects.
In recent years, the amount of scientific news has grown rapidly with science playing an increasingly central role in society, and interaction between the scientific community and news media has increased. The differences between the methodologies of these two “pillars” of modern society, particularly their distinct ways of developing their realities, have led to some difficulties. Journalism tends to have a stronger bias towards truth and speculative theories than science, whereas science focuses more on fact and empirical measurement.

Following are some of the key highlights of the Economic Survey 2008-09 tabled by Finance Minister P Chidambaram in Parliament today.
Economy moves decisively to higher growth phase
Economic growth in 2007-08 projected at 8.7 per cent
Overall inflation projected to decline from 5.6 per cent in 2006-07 to 4.1 per cent in 2007-08
Acceleration in domestic investment and savings rates
Buoyant growth in Government RevenuesInvestment climate full of optimism
Concern over slowdown in consumer goods segment of industry and infrastructure constraints
Indian economy at market exchange rate to cross 1 trillion dollars in current fiscal
Growth in service sector continues to be broad based with ‘transport and communication’ being the fastest during the Xth Five Year Plan
13.9 per cent growth in financial services in 2006-07
Annual average growth of money on an accelerating trend since 2003-04 reaching 19.5 per cent in 2006-07
Considerable uncertainty in quantifying the downside risk arising from the housing market and sub-prime mortgage market crisis in the US150 per cent increase in net foreign direct investment inflows in 2006-07 to US dollar 23 billion. Trend continues in the current financial year with gross Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) inflows reaching US dollar 11.2 billion in first six months
Trade to Gross Domestic Product (GDP) ratio increases from 22.5 per cent of GDP in 2000-01 to 34.8 per cent of GDP in 2006-07
Heightened urgency to augment and upgrade infrastructure both physical as well as social and in particular power, roads and ports
Persistent institutional weaknesses and implementation constrains at different levels of government need to be addressed
Private sector requires policy and regulations that are comprehensive but simple and clear and credible
Share of Central Government expenditure on social services, including rural development, in total expenditure (Plan and Non-Plan) increased from 10.97 per cent in 2001-02 to 16.42 per cent in 2007-08
Agricultural growth, dependent as it is on monsoon, continues to fluctuate. Overall foodgrains production in 2007-08 expected to fall short of the target by 2.2 million tonnes. Need for second green revolution particularly in rainfed areas emphasized.

Science journalism: bright future ahead
“There’s never been a better time to become a journalist,” declared Dianne Lynch, dean of the Park School of Communications at Ithaca College, in her talk at a two-day MIT Knight Science Journalism Fellowships symposium last week on the future of science journalism.
Some people might have thought otherwise, given the spate of reports recently about the falling circulation and revenues of newspapers and the resulting staff layoffs and buyouts. But those problems have nothing to do with journalism itself, Lynch said, but only with “the demise of a business model” that’s based on “an outdated delivery system.”
The news business is changing fast, but it’s not going away. In fact, more people than ever are reading about science and technology, but just doing it in different ways–for the most part, online instead of in traditional printed newspapers, Lynch explained.
The symposium, held to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the MIT fellowship program that has become the leading professional program for mid-career science journalists, drew 192 ex-Knight fellows (or Bush fellows, as the program was known in its initial years) and other journalists from around the country and several other nations.
The event also marked another milestone, the impending retirement of the program’s director, Boyce Rensberger, after 10 years. He will be replaced in June by Philip Hilts, who teaches science journalism at Boston University. The program was founded by Victor McElheny in 1983.
MIT President Susan Hockfield opened the meeting by stressing the importance of good science communications in this era when people are constantly faced with increasingly complex scientific and technical issues. “We need to help the public make decisions based on fact, not fear,” she said. “Without incisive, nuanced writing, we at MIT might as well fold up our solar collectors and go home.”
The role of journalists is changing in this evolving media landscape, said Tom Rosenstiel, director of the Project for Excellence in Journalism. While their role has often been described as that of gatekeepers, the more appropriate role is now that of authenticator–helping readers figure out, from the vast array of sources of information now available, what can be believed and trusted and “where the good stuff is.” Comparing science to sports, he said the journalist’s role is evolving from that of color commentator to being a referee on the field.
But as much as the means of distribution may change and business models may need to shift accordingly, people’s interest in reading authoritative reporting has not diminished, Rosenstiel said. “The problem is not a demand problem,” he said. For example, “more people actually read what comes out of The New York Times newsroom” than ever before. Although we are now in a period of transition in terms of how people receive their news and information, “things will work out,” he predicted. “There’s a golden age of science journalism ahead.”

Propaganda is a concerted set of messages aimed at influencing the opinions or behavior of large numbers of people. Instead of impartially providing information, propaganda in its most basic sense presents information in order to influence its audience. The most effective propaganda is often completely truthful, but some propaganda presents facts selectively (thus lying by omission) to encourage a particular synthesis, or gives loaded messages in order to produce an emotional rather than rational response to the information presented. The desired result is a change of the cognitive narrative of the subject in the target audience. Propaganda is most frequently employed in the service of political and military ends.

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Blog Tools
Are you feeling the lure of Weblogging? Publishing your ideas and opinions for all the World Wide Web to read? If you are, you will need to know which sites offer the best tools for setting up and managing your fledgling Web publishing operation. For most of us, using a hosted blog Web site like Google-owned Blogger.com or Yahoo’s360 or MSN Spaces will be the best option because these sites give you everything you need and walk you through the process at no cost. Setting up a blog at one of these sites takes about five minutes. However, if you want to create a more customized feature-rich Weblog with your own domain name and the ability to track and manage user interaction, you will want to subscribe to a Web hosting space (check http://www.webhostingtalk.com for good suggestions) and use non-hosted blog software. Below you will find our picks for the best Web sites for those in need of the tools to set up hosted or non-hosted Weblogs. Don’t worry if you want to start with a simpler, hosted blog alternative, it’s easy to up grade and most sites will let you import from other services. (forbes)

How to Find a New Job


At least 1,500 years old, this 300-foot giant in California’s Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park has the most complex crown ever mapped
Biggest, Tallest Tree Photo Ever

How to Find a New Job
What Work-at-Home Jobs Are All About
If you’re willing to do your homework and use common sense, you can find real toil-from-your-dining-table jobs, ranging from telemarketing and virtual assistance to software development and graphic design. It will also take you only a few clicks to see scams worthy of a loan-seeking Nigerian prince. “Any kid in his basement can make a decent-looking website,” warns Alison Southwick of the Better Business Bureau. Indeed, one industry observer put the ratio of scams to legitimate jobs at an astonishing 54 to 1. (Check out BBB guidelines.) And no matter what, don’t send anyone money, account numbers, or your Social Security number until you’re well along in the hiring process and know exactly whom you are dealing with.
and westathome.com specialize in outsourced call center jobs that can be done from home and generally pay $7 to $14 an hour. Read the fine print, though, and you’ll find that some pay only per minute you’re on the phone (like LiveOps, which takes calls for infomercial customers), while others guarantee an hourly rate. There can be charges for a background and credit check (not unusual in this industry) as well as training, incorporation, and equipment fees: a headset ($75 or so), high- speed Internet access, a dedicated landline, and current software.

Then there are sites such as virtualassistants.com and tjobs.com, which are in effect job boards that charge a fee for access to listings. The trade-off is that you don’t have to weed through postings to find ones geared toward home workers and there are fewer scam listings. But anyone willing to do the work can generally find the same listings on free job boards, then do the due diligence him- or herself. Momcorps.com is a free job board geared toward stay-at-home mothers as well as a staffing service that lets you post a detailed profile. Pay $9.95 a month and your profile jumps to the top of an employer’s search.

Virtual marketplace sites—like elance.com, odesk.com, and guru.com—link up freelancers who have specialized skills (like video editing, blog writing, or Web developing) with employers by having candidates bid for jobs. Grumblers complain that they’re competing with offshore workers who give lowball figures to win assignments. Sometimes the better listings cost extra-from $9.95 per month to $129.94 per quarter, depending on your field and the site.

Some of the most attractive work-at-home jobs can be found at vipdesk.com, which hires virtual personal assistants for clients. The catch? You need to submit a résumé and writing sample, agree to a background and credit check, interview by phone twice, train for ten days, provide references, and be available to work nights, weekends, and holidays. And you may have to wait. Hourly pay is $14 to $20.

What Happens at a Job Fair
The word fair doesn’t exactly describe the events that bring together recruiters and job seekers, or even your odds of landing a job offer at this venue. Today, fewer companies send fewer recruiters to these meet-and-greet gatherings, which are drawing larger numbers of applicants. Still, if you’re looking for an entry-level position, a mid-level career change, or a job in a specific geographic area, a job fair may come under the “leave no stone unturned strategy,” says John Challenger. Bob Westerkamp, general manager of Targeted Job Fairs, offers these tips:

* Preregister online to avoid the lines, and research the companies you want to approach.
* Dress as though you’re going on a job interview. You are.
* Take multiple copies of your résumé.
* Arrive early to get the complete list of jobs that recruiters are offering that day.
* Network with everyone, not just recruiters.

Online Job Resources
Pounding the pavement for work has been trumped by pounding the keyboard. But with 50,000 career-related sites to click on, where’s a wage earner to start?

* If you’re new to the game, try the clearinghouses of helpful information first.
* Then go to the big job boards, the aggregators (they search listings on the major job sites), and sites with a broad focus and a similarly broad reach.
* Next, turn your attention to sites devoted specifically to jobs in your field or your hometown.

But first things first: For privacy and security, set up a separate e-mail account used solely when wearing your job hunter’s hat—with a professional-sounding name and address (not “totalhottie891”). Replace identifying details, such as your name, home address, home phone number, etc., with your new e-mail address. Don’t refer to your current employer by name, either; describe it in general terms. And to further ensure that your current boss or HR manager won’t stumble onto your résumé, use the blocking feature many sites have to restrict access.

Give thought to keywords, those searchable terms that will determine whether your résumé is plucked from the ether. Put these in either your job description or a series at the bottom of your résumé preceded by the word keywords. The better your list, the higher the chances that you’ll trigger a search engine match. Describe yourself as precisely as possible, using job titles, specialties, skills, award names, acronyms, and trademarked products if applicable (not “software engineer,” but “principal IT software system engineer, developer, skilled in Java with strategic knowledge of J2EE and senior management experience”). Browse postings and borrow words from ones you’d want to pursue.
First Stop: The ClearningHouses
These umbrella sites gather valuable information, statistics, advice, and links to even more resources under one URL. They’re the place to bone up before plunging in.

* job-hunt.org—Don’t let the tiny type turn you off. This free employment portal is vacuum-packed with solid advice (including a great list of tips for self-promotion without self-puffery) and links to 11,000 employers and job search resources.
* careerjournal.com—Even those without “executive vice president” on their business cards will find useful content at this offering from the Wall Street Journal, including articles from the paper itself and more than 125,000 listings, most for senior executives.
* quintcareers.com—A staggering 3,500 pages of content can be viewed at this award-winning site, including “best of” job site compilations and links, tutorials, and advice aimed at everyone from students to career switchers.

Supersite Me: The Big Job Boards
* monster.com—Like Jack Donaghy on 30 Rock: slick, hefty, powerful, and often annoying. The best-known of the supersites, with at least 200 million postings, has a tedious registration process and more pop-ups than a toaster. But the sheer volume of listings (which you can search quickly or by using more specific criteria), plus an easy résumé-upload feature, makes it worth a look.
* careerbuilder.com—Owned jointly by three major newspaper chains, this meat-and-potatoes site posts not only paid listings but also classifieds from 200 papers across the country. Consequently, there are more clerical and blue-collar positions than at other sites.
* hotjobs.yahoo.com—Less spam (though plenty of ads), a pleasant interface, and seemingly fewer bogus listings distinguish this Internet portal’s megaboard, where you can save searches, see the number of times your résumé is viewed, and sign up for e-mail alerts.

Aggregator Sites: The Major Job Search Engines
* indeed.com—The home page couldn’t be simpler: What/Where/Find Jobs. You can drill down deep at this banner-ad-free search engine, zeroing in on relevant jobs among the one million plus in the index by salary, location within five miles, and more.
* simplyhired.com—It’s easy to use the intuitive interface to search everything that’s out there (the good, the bad, and the Ponzi) at this site—which indexes more than three million jobs—and then tailor the results, filtering by job type, education, work experience, company name, revenue, size, or other characteristics. The site is linked to the networking site LinkedIn.
* jobster.com—Half job board, half search engine, this site makes you register to create a résumé but not to search listings by keyword and location or to sign up for alerts. It’s uncluttered and not clunky, but you won’t find tons of resources or information here.

The Little Guys
* jobfox.com—It’s called the eHarmony of job search sites because it uses a five-point method to match up employers and job hunters in over 300 professions and at over 3,000 companies. Genius idea, but what you gain in relevance, you lose in immediate gratification, which can be frustrating. So can the very long registration process.
* craigslist.org—The place where people go to swap their used power tools now draws a fair share of local employers and has become a good source for freelance types. There are no ads on this no-frills site, just a simple search tool and a flagging system that tends to weed out scammers.
* oodle.com—Much smaller but craftier than classifieds king Craigslist, this combination classifieds board and aggregator indexes mostly non- corporate, nontechnical jobs and organizes them by area.

source: rd

6 Rear-Entry Positions


6 Rear-Entry Positions

Whether you’re a fan of the anal or vaginal canal, sex from behind can provide for some of the best sex you’ll ever have. And contrary to popular opinion, women enjoy this position just as much as men do.

Today’s tip is going to add a little gusto to the rear-entry position. If you weren’t yet aware of it, something as simple as moving her leg slightly or angling your penis differently can turn your “bend over” into a roller coaster ride of orgasms.

The original rear-entry position involves the woman on all fours and the man (that would be you) behind her on his knees, holding onto her hips as he penetrates her. But we’re going to change all that.

So without further ado, here are six ways to add a little kick to your doggie stylin’.

1- The tight grip
If your woman has great balancing capabilities, then you’re in for a great treat. Your woman starts off on her hands and knees, like she normally would for the rear-entry position. The catch is that when you place your hands on her waist, your objective is to lift her legs up so that her feet are against your butt (OK that’s not really your objective, but you know what I mean).

Although this may be difficult at first, the sensations this position provides are enough to keep you going — or coming, as the case may be. In this position, penetrate her slowly and deeply.

2- The leg spread
With her lying on her stomach with her legs straight and closed, straddle on top of her. Your legs should also be stretched out, and somewhat spread. Your arms should be straight and holding you up. Make your way in and keep in mind that this position works best with deep, slow penetration.

And if you feel like getting romantic, bend your elbows and kiss her mouth. She will, however, have to meet you halfway.

3- Deep penetration
Again, she lies down on her stomach, but this time her legs are spread open and her knees are bent (her feet should be in the air).

Using your hands for support, straddle her slowly at first, but make sure your legs are together. This allows for deep penetration, and whether you thrust slowly or quickly, I can virtually guarantee that both you and she will achieve monumental orgasms.

To add variation to this position, simply angle her thighs in different ways.

Whether you’re a fan of the anal or vaginal canal, sex from behind can provide for some of the best sex you’ll ever have. And contrary to popular opinion, women enjoy this position just as much as men do.

Today’s tip is going to add a little gusto to the rear-entry position. If you weren’t yet aware of it, something as simple as moving her leg slightly or angling your penis differently can turn your “bend over” into a roller coaster ride of orgasms.

The original rear-entry position involves the woman on all fours and the man (that would be you) behind her on his knees, holding onto her hips as he penetrates her. But we’re going to change all that.

So without further ado, here are six ways to add a little kick to your doggie stylin’.

1- The tight grip
If your woman has great balancing capabilities, then you’re in for a great treat. Your woman starts off on her hands and knees, like she normally would for the rear-entry position. The catch is that when you place your hands on her waist, your objective is to lift her legs up so that her feet are against your butt (OK that’s not really your objective, but you know what I mean).

Although this may be difficult at first, the sensations this position provides are enough to keep you going — or coming, as the case may be. In this position, penetrate her slowly and deeply.

2- The leg spread
With her lying on her stomach with her legs straight and closed, straddle on top of her. Your legs should also be stretched out, and somewhat spread. Your arms should be straight and holding you up. Make your way in and keep in mind that this position works best with deep, slow penetration.

And if you feel like getting romantic, bend your elbows and kiss her mouth. She will, however, have to meet you halfway.

3- Deep penetration
Again, she lies down on her stomach, but this time her legs are spread open and her knees are bent (her feet should be in the air).

Using your hands for support, straddle her slowly at first, but make sure your legs are together. This allows for deep penetration, and whether you thrust slowly or quickly, I can virtually guarantee that both you and she will achieve monumental orgasms.

To add variation to this position, simply angle her thighs in different ways.

4- The chair bend over
Finally, props! Bend your woman over on a chair and have her lean on it with her elbows facing the spine of the chair. Enter her from behind and, with your left hand, lift her left leg and place it on your hip.

Again, if you like deep penetration, then this position will take you far. To avoid injury or pain, place pillows under your and her knees. This will allow both of you to concentrate on the pleasure and not your cracking bones.

5- Stand and bang
For this position, you should both be on your feet, preferably in front of a mirror. Have her lean against the wall, office desk, etc., with her hands, and make your way behind her and inside her. You can use your hands to hold her waist, lean against the wall, or even play with her clitoris.

The mirror will add more appeal to the position, as she will be able to look at you as you’re doing your thing. As well, you get to see the look on her face as she reaches her climax.

6- The sideway insert
In this position, your woman should lie on her side (either side), lean on one elbow, and bring her legs forward. Lean on your hands, placing one on either side of her, and stretch your legs out as you place yourself inside.

As well, you can opt to bend your knees and hold one of her legs up in the air (and possibly place it on your shoulder). This position provides more control over your thrusting.

Or, you can always spoon it. Leaving her in the aforementioned position, make your way directly behind her, also leaning on your side, and press your body against hers as you thrust your way in.

source: askmen

Hollywood actress Tara Reid to pose for Playboy



Hollywood actress Tara Reid to pose for Playboy

Hilary Swank Sleeps Naked, Stays Naked In Front Of Boyfriend’s 6-Year Old


Hilary Swank
Hilary Swank Sleeps Naked, Stays Naked In Front Of Boyfriend’s 6-Year Old (huffingtonpost)

The 50 Biggest Movies of 2009 | 2009 Movies Guide – Times Online


couple

The 50 Biggest Movies of 2009 | 2009 Movies Guide – Times Online

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How to Blog Almost Every Day


Katie Downes

How to Blog Almost Every Day

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Cassie






Cassie