I've always been fascinated with the thought of a female using a strapon on me (a male). I've practised using dildos before but I've never been able to maintain an erection while being anally penetrated. Now granted, I've not had the continual stimulation of a nice domme positioned behind me rocking her hips back and forth so I don't know if that would help. Has anyone here experienced the same issue and if so, are there countermeasures I can pursue to maintain erection? Thanks.
I've been trying for the past two days to get a good bag of water sealed around my neck and it's very difficult, at least without making a huge mess. I've been trying by placing a bag in a bucket of water and letting some of the water into the bag. Then I take a deep breath, place my head down in the bag and then attempt to pull it tight against my neck. However, pulling it tight and sealing it with saran wrap or even duct tape is very cumbersome and the added work makes me run out of breath quicker. I realise anything can be done in cartoons but can someone provide some guidance on getting this on right ? I've already found some good tutorials on increasing your breath holding time (up to 1:45 now) so I'm hoping to put that toward an orgasm. Thanks.
I just finished constructing an adjustable power timer and thought I'd share it with all of you nice people (and get up my first post ever on this forum).
Plug it in, and a digital programmable timer will turn the outlet on and off (up to 7 programs, time resolution of 1 minute). A dimmer allows you to adjust the output voltage if desired. I have also included a mechanical timer as a safety feature - it will shut off, no matter what, after an hour. You could use this to power a vibrator, a light, a vacuum, an electromagnet, or anything else that uses mains power.
I was looking at a way to control a vac bed or a vibrator (or both). I didn't need the vacuum running at full bore the entire time (plus, there are other people living on the floor below mine, and I strive to be nice). The dimmer works great for this. It takes a little longer to evacuate the air, but that's fine by me. It works just as well, and it's quieter, and it can run longer without overheating.
The wiring looks complicated, but it's actually fairly simple.
The power first goes into the digital timer. Then, the load wire runs through the dimmer, then the mechanical timer, and finally into the outlet, with the neutral wire from the input power completing the circuit (and, of course, grounding everything).
Enter your program in the digital timer, set the dimmer to the appropriate level, turn the mechanical timer to the maximum allowable time, and get ready.
Although it seems a bit complex, this builds in several safety checks. If the power goes out, everything turns off immediately. When power is restored, the digital timer defaults to off, so you don't get stuck when the programming gets erased. The mechanical timer provides another backup in case you accidentally screw up the program or if there's some weird power surge. It will keep counting down, regardless of whether it has power or not, so even if everything else goes wrong, it will still cut off when it's supposed to. I chose a mechanical timer that maxes out at 60 minutes, but there are others that range anywhere from 5 minutes to a full day, if you so wish.
All told, the system set me back about $60 (most of that cost was the timers - I decided to go for a more pricey model because that gave me more flexibility in my design and programming). I built it in about hour (plus an extra trip to the hardware store to get a different dimmer that would fit better). Then, I decided to be nice and create a CAD drawing of the wiring diagram (also, to get better at using CAD, since it's a program that I use for work), which took me another couple of hours.
The wire colors are shown correctly in the drawing. The red wire is for a different configuration of the digital timer, so that it can be hooked to another toggle switch when you use it like you're supposed to in a building; thus, it is left unconnected. I should also note that the dimmer and the mechanical timer are switched in the drawing, though that doesn't really matter in the grand scheme of things.
It works great, and it looks pretty (I'm glad I went for the nice-looking brown fiberglass gang box instead of the blue plastic one), and everything matches, including the orientation of the screws (to satisfy my OCD!).
Remember, play safe! [Insert obligatory 'don't use a vacbed alone' and 'always have another backup or three' warnings here].
Parts list:
-Grounded [3 prong] power cable (scavenged from an old computer)
-4-gang box
-4-gang wallplate with square [Decorator] cutouts
-Digital programmable wall timer
-Spring-wound countdown timer (60 minute)
-Slide dimmer
-Duplex outlet for rectangular wallplate cutout
I see Burberry's winter collection has some overcoats, dresses, skirts and tops in quite heavy translucent rubber (if you have a few thousand Euros to spare ).
Now instead of adding file-by-file, you can upload multiple images at once:
Click "New Reply"
Click "Select file"
Highlight the files you want to upload
Click "Upload"
Select the files you want to insert in the text using the check-boxes on the right side
Click "Add-editor (Multiple)"
If you do not select and then Add files to the editor, they will appear as Attachments.
Make sure, that:
The file name extensions do match the content. For example, if the being uploaded image is a JPEG one, it must have .jpg/.JPG/.jpeg/.JPEG extension and not, say .png.
The files must not be bigger than 4MB each.
You will not get any error message for any of the above, but when you try to add the files to the message you will get [attachment=] or [attachment=undefined] instead of the attachment number.