blank
search-icon
Love & Relationship

4 Instances The Ghanaian Man Can Be Painfully Unromantic : When We Ask Them To Watch La Gata, They Tell Us We Are Feeding On Fiction

3. Their Approach To Sex
14397488_1222479611126636_262317321_n_opt
Sometimes I wonder if  some of our men are living in the caves or whether they are living in the 2 century because that is how best I can understand them.
Unless we have with mutuality decided to have the sailors sex— the rushed,rugged and rough kind of sex, where less or no fore play is required, I deem it really distasteful when men go in for the cookie without any fore play.
Some of our men would pounce on you with lividity and greed like lions who have not been fed in years. No kissing, sucking, licking and all the necessary elements that make sex a smooth ride. All they care about is unzipping their flyer, penetrating and humping on you with sweats as if they are running miles.
Like Nigga relax, we are just trying to have sex not to compete with Usain Bolt. To think that these same shameless mistake of humans would tell their friends whose stories are no different how well they were able to knock one lady off her feet is pathetic.
And they constantly join the many voices that sing the Ghanaian women fake orgasm song— why won’t we fake it, we know how well you ride on your ego and we do not want to be the ones to dent that ego.

READ ALSO: Refused A UK Visa? CLICK HERE FOR HELP

CLICK HERE to subscribe to our daily up-to-date news!!

POPULAR POSTS

LATEST NEWS

MORE FROM Love & Relationship

No related posts found...

1 thought on “4 Instances The Ghanaian Man Can Be Painfully Unromantic : When We Ask Them To Watch La Gata, They Tell Us We Are Feeding On Fiction”

  1. Scratching my head as to why an article addressing an issue between African men and women has a white couple as the main image. As Africans several generations removed from the continent and forced to live in America, we look up to you. Having never been enslaved and never having your connection to Mother Africa interrupted, we admire you and long to live in a country, as you do, where positive black imagery can flourish. To see this front and center feels like the same white supremacy brainwashing we’ve been battered with here. Unexpected and jolting to find it in an African publication. Why? Or what am I missing?

    Reply

Leave a Reply