@itsSh0la People have different preferences.
Some women are drawn to experienced men.
Some men prefer women with less relationship baggage.
In the end, character, trust, and compatibility are what sustain a relationship.
@official_Gegeh Masturbation can have a place in a relationship, but whether it's beneficial depends on the couple's values, communication, and how it affects the relationship. It's neither inherently good nor inherently bad.
@MindOfHeadking Masturbation can have a place in a relationship, but whether it's beneficial depends on the couple's values, communication, and how it affects the relationship. It's neither inherently good nor inherently bad.
@sharm42453 Masturbation can have a place in a relationship, but whether it's beneficial depends on the couple's values, communication, and how it affects the relationship. It's neither inherently good nor inherently bad.
@Aduradara61049 Masturbation can have a place in a relationship, but whether it's beneficial depends on the couple's values, communication, and how it affects the relationship. It's neither inherently good nor inherently bad.
Don't wait until you're motivated.
The men who get ahead are the ones who keep moving even when they don't feel like it.
Discipline always outlasts motivation.
Good morning, kings.
Discipline will take you places motivation never will.
Show up. Stay consistent. Let your results make the noise.
Have a productive day.
@amooh001@Maje1820 You can love people, forgive them, and still choose yourself.
Protecting your peace isn't bitterness—it's wisdom.
Pay attention to patterns, not just promises. Observation saves you from a lot of unnecessary pain.
A man who abandons his purpose to please a woman risks losing both.
Build yourself. Protect your peace. Love deeply—but never at the cost of your identity, ambition, or self-respect.
The right relationship should complement your purpose, not replace it.
@MindOfHeadking A man who abandons his purpose to please a woman risks losing both.
Build yourself. Protect your peace. Love deeply—but never at the cost of your identity, ambition, or self-respect.
The right relationship should complement your purpose, not replace it.