A quick wordsearch puzzle task before bedtime for subboy
A quick wordsearch puzzle task before bedtime for subboy
2022-06-07 20:34:57 +0000 UTC View PostA quick wordsearch puzzle task before bedtime for subboy
2022-06-07 20:34:57 +0000 UTC View PostYour slave task for Monday June 6th 2022. These slave tasks are designed to be interactive - feel free to send any pictures / videos of yourself completing the tasks to my inbox for my reply
2022-06-06 07:00:08 +0000 UTC View Post"Anally trained & humiliated on Mistress' Break" PT 1 OF 2 It's time for Mistress to have a break from overseeing her collared slaves chores, but to ensure the time isn't squandered, Mistress Serena chains her slave up inside a cage hooked up to a fucking machine whilst she rests so that the slave's boy pussy can continue its training. With the remote control to the machine in hand, Mistress relaxes with a cup of tea and her tablet so she can do some reading and put her feet up. Remembering she has people to catch up with, Mistress makes two familial video calls and one to her best friend to humiliate the slave over his half an hour shared break. His reward is a nice freshly prepared bowl of water nectar.
2022-06-05 08:48:50 +0000 UTC View PostHello underlings! Goddess is off to get sweaty
2022-06-05 08:25:00 +0000 UTC View PostHappy Serena Sunday. How are you serving today?
2022-06-05 08:00:05 +0000 UTC View PostWould you suck it? * *rhetorical question
2022-06-04 11:00:57 +0000 UTC View Post♀️ Feminist Friday ♀️ Florence Kelly Florence Kelley dedicated her life to social reform. She worked to end many social problems, including labor and racial discrimination. She influenced many social movements in the United States. Born on September 12, 1859 in Philadelphia Pennsylvania, Florence Kelley was pushed into social activism as a chi ld. Her parents, both abolitionists, supported Kelley’s early interest in education and women’s rights. At 16 she entered Cornell University. After she graduated, she moved to Europe to study at the University of Zurich. While in Europe, Kelley joined the Germany Social Democratic Party and translated many of the party’s important works. She returned to the United States in 1891 and joined the reform movement in Chicago. While working with Hull-House founded by Jane Addams, Kelley was hired to investigate the labor industry in the city. Her findings led to changes in working conditions for laborers. She was selected to be the Chief Factory Inspector for the state of Illinois. She was the first woman to hold this position. As inspector, Kelley, tried to force sweatshops to follow the rules to treat their employees better. She sued several businesses. Unfortunately, she never won, this inspired her to become a lawyer. In 1895, Kelley graduated with a law degree from Northwestern University. In 1899, she moved to New York City and became the head of the National Consumers League (NCL). At the NCL Kelley worked to shorten work days and pay workers more money. Kelley’s work helped create 10-hour workdays and some state minimum wage laws. Her time with the NCL led to the creation of the white label. The “white label” was given to stores that treated employees fairly. Citizens were asked to support worker’s rights by only shopping at businesses that had the “white label”. Kelley’s investigation into labor conditions made her aware of how different races were being treated differently in the workplace. In 1909, Kelley, helped organize the (NAACP) National Advancement of Colored People. Kelley also worked to end ch ild labor. In 1911, she founded the National Labor Committee. She also joined the fight for women’s rights as the Vice President of the National American Woman Suffrage Association. She was a founding member of the Women’s International League for Peace. She died in 1932, having spent her entire life fighting for better conditions for worker and equality for women and African American
2022-06-03 11:00:04 +0000 UTC View PostYour slave task for Friday June 3rd 2022. These slave tasks are designed to be interactive - feel free to send any pictures / videos of yourself completing the tasks to my inbox for my reply
2022-06-03 07:00:03 +0000 UTC View PostWhere subboy is spending the night tonight 🔒
2022-06-01 21:42:44 +0000 UTC View PostTreated myself to some new gym wear to celebrate my hard work.
2022-06-01 10:10:59 +0000 UTC View PostAs of now I will not be on line until after the bank holiday and weekend! So back Monday 12pm GMT
2022-05-31 20:59:42 +0000 UTC View PostI’ll be online to chat at 4-6pm and 9-10pm today
2022-05-30 10:44:35 +0000 UTC View PostYour slave task for Monday May 30th 2022. These slave tasks are designed to be interactive - feel free to send any pictures / videos of yourself completing the tasks to my inbox for my reply
2022-05-30 07:00:08 +0000 UTC View PostMy playtime with Cici after they completed 101 days in chastity!
2022-05-29 09:39:47 +0000 UTC View Post♀️ Feminist Friday ♀️ Lani Ka’ahumanu Lani Ka’ahumanu, a leader of the bisexual rights movement in the U.S., has worked for greater visibility for bisexuals both within the LGBTQ movement as well as broader society. An author, community organizer, and health advocate, she has been a driving force behind the fight against biphobia since 1980. Lani Ka’ahumanu was born in Edmonton, Alberta on October 5, 1943 and grew up in the Bay Area. Her mother was of Native Hawaiian, Japanese and Euro descent and her father had Irish and Polish Jewish ancestry. Ka’ahumanu often passed for white, due to her light skin and features, and from a you ng age she saw how she was treated differently than her mother and sister as a result. These experiences with racial bias and passing informed her advocacy for social justice and bisexual rights and visibility later in life. Ka’ahumanu married her high school sweetheart when she was 19. She settled in to life as a suburban housewife and the mother of two children. Ka’ahumanu grew more politically active in the 1960s: she joined Another Mother for Peace, an anti-war advocacy group; collected food for the Black Panther free breakfast program; and supported the United Farm Workers’ grape boycott. Buoyed by the women’s movement, she started taking college courses and began going by Ms. instead of Mrs. By the late 1960s, Ka’ahumanu recognized that she was unhappy, but could not determine why. She was leading the life of marriage and motherhood that she had been raised to desire. Her husband figured it out first, telling Ka’ahumanu that she had never had a life of her own, that she needed to experience independence. He took care of their children while she moved to an apartment nearby and continued working at the children’s school. She eventually moved to San Francisco. The two divorced amicably in 1974. Ka’ahumanu continued her education at San Francisco State University (SFSU), where she took part in the successful campaign to establish a Women Studies Department. In 1976, Ka’ahumanu came out as a lesbian. She thrived in the burgeoning feminist community, one made up largely of lesbian feminists and separatists. Ka’ahumanu acknowledges she supported the commonly held idea that there are only two sexual orientations before realizing that she herself was bisexual. In 1979, Ka’ahumanu earned a B.A. in Women Studies from SFSU. She was the first person in her family to graduate from college. She took a summer job as a chef at a new-age resort in Mendocino County called The Village Oz. There, Ka’ahumanu struck up a friendship with a bisexual man. Soon, their relationship became romantic, causing Ka’ahumanu to struggle with her identity. She later attributed her reluctance to identify as bisexual to her belief that bisexuality did not exist. When she moved back to San Francisco as an out bisexual in 1980, she knew she would be ostracized from her lesbian community. Many of her old friends did distance themselves, but a few stuck by her. At first, Ka’ahumanu described herself as a lesbian-identified bisexual, to demonstrate her continued alliance with the lesbian feminist community, despite her relationship with a man. Soon, though, Ka’ahumanu dropped the “lesbian-identified” qualifier and began organizing a bisexual community within the lesbian and gay community in San Francisco. In 1983, she co-founded BiPOL, the first feminist bisexual political action group in the country. Ka’ahumanu then co-coordinated the San Francisco Bay Area Bisexual Network (BABN) in 1987. BABN offered an array of programming, including cultural and educational forums, social retreats, and a newsletter that became the first national bisexual magazine, Anything That Moves. Ka’ahumanu’s organizing efforts expanded when she met with bisexuals from around the country at the Second National March on Washington for Lesbian and Gay Rights in 1987. Spurred by a call from the Boston Bisexual Women’s Network to organize nationally, Ka’ahumanu and fellow activist Autumn Courtney worked with BiPOL and BABN to coordinate the first National Bisexual Conference in 1990, where BiNET USA, the first national bisexual rights group, was founded. When organizing began for the 1993 March on Washington, Ka’ahumanu challenged lesbian and gay leadership to include bisexuals in the name of the march, citing growing bisexual visibility and inclusion throughout the country. She organized a 12-city campaign for bisexuals to canvass prominent local lesbian and gay leaders for their endorsements. The campaign was successful, but there was a catch – they had to remove the “sexual” from “bisexual.” The full name read: “The 1993 March on Washington for Lesbian, Gay, and Bi Equal Rights and Liberation.” Ka’ahumanu was the only openly bisexual person invited to speak on the march’s main stage, where she was the last of 18 speakers. The event ran long, her time was cut short, and the stage was being dismantled behind her as she spoke. Despite these obstacles, Ka’ahumanu was proud of what they achieved: “We were at that national table. We did the work. We got the votes. We were there." Ka’ahumanu published the anthology Bi Any Other Name: Bisexual People Speak Out in 1991. Co-edited with Loraine Hutchins, the book is considered a major text in the modern bisexual rights movement and was listed by the Lambda Book Review as one of the top 100 GLBT books of the twentieth century. Ms. Magazine recognized Ka’ahumanu, who had become a safe sex educator in the early 1990s, in its 1994 “50 Ways to be a Feminist” issue for her work with the Safer Sex Sluts. Ka’ahumanu organized the group while coordinating an American Foundation for AIDS Research grant for Lyon-Martin Health Services’ outreach program, which targeted you ng lesbian and bisexual women at high-risk for HIV/AIDS. Safer Sex Sluts conducted interviews and performed comedic skits that demonstrated the erotic side of safer sex practices in an amusing way. Ka’ahumanu was the first openly bisexual person to be invited and to sit on any national lesbian and gay organization’s board of directors; she concluded her term on the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force’s board in 2000. Ka’ahumanu is currently completing her activist memoir, My Grassroots Are Showing, and a book of poetry, Passing for Other.
2022-05-27 11:00:03 +0000 UTC View PostYour slave task for Friday May 27th 2022. These slave tasks are designed to be interactive - feel free to send any pictures / videos of yourself completing the tasks to my inbox for my reply
2022-05-27 07:00:05 +0000 UTC View Post