Thursday, October 7, 2021

Sex with swinger TikTok's Madi Brooks (video)

Who's Mara Born-Among-Devas, and why does he enjoy trapping beings in the Sensual Sphere?

Madi's TikTok – Madi Brooks and family are swingers
(4TYH, Oct. 6, 2021) A swinging wife claims she shares her husband with her mom and little sister to keep him cheerful.

Madi Brooks talked about her lifestyle in a video on TikTok, where she draws more than tens of thousands of followers.

Madi (right), Mom, and happy husband
The Daily Star explains: A woman has opened up about her relationship after admitting she shares her husband with her mom and sister.

Madi Brooks, from the USA, has spoken out about her arrangement in a video on TikTok, where she has over 92,700 followers.

The social media star, her mom, and husband are in an open relationship – and even her younger sister gets involved in the action.

In the clip, she says: "Me and my mom are both swingers, and it's great.

"You know why? Whenever I'm not in the mood, I can just let my husband have her.

"Yeah I'm that kind of wife. I let my husband have her a couple of times a week."

Since it was shared, the video racked up 13,100 comments and 311,900 likes.
  • Polyamory (multiple-lovers) is nice for the honest, and it's cheating/infidelity for the dishonest.
Was Uppalavanna an ancient "swinger"?
It's been a long strange trip to enlightenment
How can our greatest fear be someone else's kink? The thought of my significant other hooking up with my mom, aarrrgh (barf).

That's grounds for immediate separation and never speaking to the person again -- and very awkward conversations with my mom. But if I allowed it or encouraged it and it made my mom happy, well...

Who can say? There's a Buddhist story about a beautiful woman, one of the Buddha's four foremost disciples, who had had a very sexual life:

The Therī-gāthā (The Verses of Enlightened Elder Nunsvv.234-5) contains several verses attributed to Ven. Uppalavanna Theri.

Three of them had been uttered in anguish by a mother who had been unwittingly living as her daughter's rival with the man who later became the monk Ven. Gangātīriya.

Ven. Uppalavannā repeated them to help her to reflect on the harm and foul vileness of sensual craving. Two others are joyful utterances on the distinctions she had won, and another records a miracle she performed in front of the Buddha with his consent.

The rest contain a conversation between Uppalavannā and the Lucifer-like demon Māra Devaputra (more or less identical with S.i.131f), where she tells him that she has passed completely beyond his power [of sensuality]. More

No comments: