Dildo
Robbie Webb
Publisher: Robbie Webb
Summary
Six boys have fun with a dildo. All characters and terms including 'boy' 'lad' and 'girl' refer to people age 18 and over. This book contains explicit sexual material and is for adults only.
Publisher: Robbie Webb
Six boys have fun with a dildo. All characters and terms including 'boy' 'lad' and 'girl' refer to people age 18 and over. This book contains explicit sexual material and is for adults only.
Decode body language, pick up on the subtlest of gestures, and effortlessly connect with people even without saying a word! Do you want to know what other people are thinking? We all do, but it's not always easy to figure out. You might not always be sure if they're telling the truth, or if they're just trying to manipulate you. You can’t help but feel like you're missing out on a lot of important information. Most people are terrible at reading body language and understanding what other people are thinking. How to Read People Like a Book will teach you everything you need to know about analyzing and decoding body language, intentions, thoughts, emotions, behaviors, and more. You'll learn the techniques used by top negotiators, detectives, and therapists to get inside people's heads and understand exactly what they're thinking. Discover:How to read people's facial expressions, gestures, and postureSubtle techniques for uncovering hidden intentionsStrategies for decoding body language signals in different contexts — from job interviews to courtship situations.Tips on deciphering non-verbal communication so you can respond accordinglyHow to interpret vocal cuesWhen to trust your gutDifferent communication styles and the type of people that use them You'll be able to spot body language cues that indicate deception, establish trust and rapport in any situation, identify hidden emotions, read the underlying intentions behind people's words, and navigate difficult conversations with ease.Scroll up, get the audiobook, and start listening!Show book
While many falconry books briefly touch on the ethics of the sport, “The Philosophy & Ethics of Falconry” is entirely dedicated to addressing the chief ethical and philosophical questions at the heart of falconry. Readers, whether they are aspiring, new, or experienced falconers (or simply someone intrigued by this unique method of hunting) will be introduced to several philosophical traditions and what wisdom they have to offer for falconry. This book also responds to critics of falconry and offers a robust ethical defense of the sport from an internationally recognized teacher of philosophy and debate. Regardless of the reader’s experience with falconry or style of hawking, everyone will walk away from this book with a richer understanding of what makes the sport worth pursuing and how it fits into an examined, ethical, and worthwhile life.Show book
A military operation unlike any other on American soil, Morgan's Raid was characterized by incredible speed, superhuman endurance, and innovative tactics. One of the nation's most colorful leaders, Confederate general John Hunt Morgan, took his cavalry through enemy-occupied territory in three states in one of the longest offensives of the Civil War. The effort produced the only battles fought north of the Ohio River and reached farther north than any other regular Confederate force. Morgan's Raid historian David L. Mowery takes a new look at this unprecedented event in American history, one historians rank among the world's greatest land-based raids since Elizabethan times.Show book
The Dunning-Kruger effect is a cognitive bias that leads individuals with limited knowledge or ability in a particular area to overestimate their competence. Named after psychologists David Dunning and Justin Kruger, who first identified this phenomenon in 1999, the effect reveals a paradox in human cognition: the less people know, the more likely they are to believe they know everything. Conversely, experts in a field tend to underestimate their abilities, assuming that others possess the same level of expertise. This bias is not only fascinating from a psychological standpoint but also carries significant implications for personal, professional, and societal development. At the core of the Dunning-Kruger effect is the misjudgment of one’s capabilities, which stems from a lack of metacognitive awareness—the ability to assess one’s own knowledge and skills accurately. Incompetent individuals, lacking the expertise required to recognize their deficiencies, are unable to discern how little they know. This lack of insight leads them to overestimate their abilities and make decisions based on flawed reasoning. As a result, they may unknowingly engage in behaviors that exacerbate their incompetence, further reinforcing their false sense of expertise. One of the most compelling aspects of the Dunning-Kruger effect is its broad applicability across various fields. From everyday social interactions to high-stakes decision-making in professional environments, this cognitive bias affects people at all levels. In the workplace, for example, leaders with limited knowledge in a specific domain may make decisions that negatively impact their teams, while employees with expertise may remain silent or defer to those who appear more confident. In education, students and teachers alike may fall victim to this effect, with the former believing they fully understand a topic despite limited comprehension, and the latter overestimating their teaching efficacy.Show book
This audiobook is narrated by an AI Voice. Unlock the Brain's Buy Button What if you could understand your customers better than they understand themselves? Wired To Buy takes you inside the mind of the modern consumer, revealing the hidden neurological triggers that drive decision-making, loyalty, and purchase behavior. Blending cutting-edge neuroscience with real-world marketing strategies, this groundbreaking guide decodes how emotions, cognitive biases, and sensory input influence buying choices and how you can ethically harness this knowledge to boost engagement, trust, and sales. Whether you're an entrepreneur, marketer, business leader, or simply curious about the brain's role in commerce, this book will equip you with the science-backed techniques the world's most successful brands use to turn browsers into buyers. In this eye-opening book, you'll discover: • How to activate the primal parts of the brain that drive decisions • Why storytelling outperforms data—and how to craft irresistible brand narratives • The surprising role of visuals, colors, and sounds in consumer behavior • How to design messages that bypass skepticism and hit emotional hot buttons • Ethical strategies to build lasting trust and brand loyalty Wired To Buy is your shortcut to mastering the psychology of persuasion in the digital age because when you understand how the brain works, you can make marketing that truly works.Show book
For decades, this book has been recognized as the finest book ever written by a Catholic on the subject of communism. Dedicated to Our Lady in prayerful hope for the conversion of Russia, this is one of Fulton Sheen’s most forgotten yet most important books. In Communism and the Conscience of the West, Sheen explains the problems with society stemming from socialism and communism, which continue to infect universities and political discourse today. This timeless book exposes communism’s defects, its attitude toward the family, the decline of historical liberalism, and the rise of the antireligious spirit that pervades our world. Readers will be impressed as Sheen diagnoses the issues facing our once peaceful cities, with history being put on trial, scrubbed, rewritten, and explained in terms of class hate. While communism destroys human freedom, Sheen illustrates how man is free as a result of two guarantees: one economic and the other spiritual. The economic enables man to call something his own which is outside of himself. The spiritual is the soul, which makes man independent of an earthly tyrant or a political dictator. In short, man’s soul is his own on the inside, as his property is his own on the outside. Sheen carefully illustrates how even though we are living at a time when man has all the material conditions necessary for his happiness, “having lost the purpose of life which religion supplied, modern man became increasingly frustrated as his disappointed hedonism turned to pessimism. Thus man, who isolated himself from the religious community, now by reaction finds himself absorbed by the political community as despair becomes the dominant note of contemporary philosophy and literature.” For anyone seeking to understand one of the greatest threats to the Faith and our world, Communism and the Conscience of the West will be your guide.Show book