Leave a comment

Comments 308

hundredflowers August 10 2009, 17:18:10 UTC
No, no, and yes.

Reply

itextedyou August 10 2009, 17:23:44 UTC
Why is the third a yes?

Reply

hundredflowers August 10 2009, 17:28:41 UTC
The other two are just facts, because they depend on time. Can it be healthy? No, surely as one of them outlives the other, as the difference between their relative ages tears them apart. Can it be equal? No, one's mortal and what's immortal, and those two traits aren't something comparable, in the way that perhaps something human and something not-human could possibly be.

But can it be fulfilling? I think so.

Love doesn't depend entirely on time.

Reply

itextedyou August 10 2009, 17:32:46 UTC
Love isn't a part of this equation to begin with.

Reply


...assumed after sundown. waking up to this. gdi eric. oh, and 1/1 werecycle August 10 2009, 17:20:35 UTC
he loevs you and suckeh itextedyou August 10 2009, 17:22:27 UTC
Hi, Bill.

Reply

he doesn't know what love is >; werecycle August 10 2009, 18:22:21 UTC
You claim that you are attempting to understand yet we both know that you are already decided on the matter.

Reply

jesuspire needs to show him the way itextedyou August 10 2009, 18:27:04 UTC
Now that isn't very fair.

Maybe I just do not see what she sees in you. You're flaccid, Bill.

Reply


[private] missesthestars August 10 2009, 17:42:55 UTC
Healthy, emotionally or physically?
Equal, yes and no.
Fulfilling certainly.

Reply

[private] itextedyou August 10 2009, 17:52:05 UTC
Emotionally for the immortal. In the case of vampires, physically for the human, no doubt.

Why is it fulfilling?

Reply

[private] missesthestars August 10 2009, 18:09:40 UTC
In the long run there may be some emotional damage. But I've been close to those of my kind who have perished, leaving me behind. Loss is loss, it's just more... expected when you're dealing with humans.

As for physically, he has nothing to fear from me, but elements of my past have harmed him, or attempted to. It's a worry for me, that it could happen again, but he's strong and more than capable of protecting himself.

As for fulfilling... we compliment each other. I can be myself around him without worry of what he may think of me and vice versa.

Reply

[private] itextedyou August 10 2009, 18:18:52 UTC
They feel more strongly than we do. But when one of our own that we are close to is destroyed, we lose something that we can never recover. That any one of us would risk that emotion over something that will be dead before we realize it is...idiotic.

And on their end, I don't understand how they could ever be 'themselves' in the relationship. Would they be themselves with a tiger?

Reply


downrightlinear August 10 2009, 18:23:27 UTC
That depends on what kind of relationship are you talking about.

Reply

itextedyou August 10 2009, 18:24:09 UTC
Sexual.

Reply

downrightlinear August 10 2009, 18:41:00 UTC
There's a difference between just sleeping with someone and having a relationship with them. I know it's hard for guys to distinguish the difference, but there is.

Reply

itextedyou August 10 2009, 18:49:50 UTC
Fine.

A romantic sexual relationship.

Reply


sleepyseer August 10 2009, 23:09:10 UTC
What kind of positions are you hiring for?

Reply

itextedyou August 11 2009, 01:42:53 UTC
All of them. Servers, tenders, dancers, daylight prep, bouncers, shift managers. Most is not hard work, but it pays well.

Reply

sleepyseer August 11 2009, 01:53:36 UTC
What would be most appropriate for someone who hasn't worked before, but is willing to put all her effort into it?

Reply

itextedyou August 11 2009, 01:56:15 UTC
There is waitressing, but that job is from six in the afternoon for prep to six in the morning at the end of cleanup.

There is daylight work. Office management, cleaning and food prep.

Reply


Leave a comment

Up