• The dawn’s light, pale and meagre, stole through the curtains like an uninvited thought. My fire had long since expired, leaving my chamber in that peculiar half chill which seems neither of death nor life. There, upon the table, lay my mourning attire, folded with the reverence one affords to relics rather than garments.

    The Black Satin Tartan gleamed faintly even in that dimness, threads of shadow crossing one another in solemn geometry. My fingers lingered upon it as one might upon the pages of a sacred book. How deftly I remembered the press of another hand guiding mine, long ago, when love was still unashamed to breathe in daylight.

    “Gökçe,” I murmured, and her name rang through the silence, strange and sweet as the chime of a music box long unopened.

    She had been of fragile constitution but radiant humour, a nurse by occupation, yet a poet in spirit. When first we met, it was under the discreet roof of a friend who hosted assemblies for kindred souls ill fitted to the rigid forms of the age. There, amid whispered laughter and the scent of spiced punch, she first beheld me crossdressed as myself, not the half version polite society demanded. Her smile, so unafraid, so brilliantly defiant had unstitched my fears as though they were loose threads upon a cuff.

    Our meetings became the secret rhythm of our lives: letters written in unseen ink, evenings stolen beneath the mist‑wreathed arches of the Cathedral close, where even the saints carved upon the walls seemed complicit in our forbidden contentment.

    Then came the pandemic fever. The city coughed and trembled beneath its pall, and Gökçe torn from me within a week was laid among the cold stones of St. Chad’s yard. In her final moments, as I sat cloaked at her bedside, she had whispered through cracked lips, “Promise me you will not hide yourself from the world in mourning. Wear beauty for both of us.”

    Yet how could I do so? Beauty, to the bereaved, becomes a cutting blade.

    Thus it was upon this morning, four months hence, that I sought to honour that vow. I made my way through the quiet lanes of the Cathedral City to McRae & Daughters, Purveyors of Mourning and Formal Attire. The shop’s brass bell gave a low, reverent note as I entered.

    Mrs McRae herself appeared, a tall woman of genteel bearing, her hair silvered but her eyes bright as cut glass.

    “Good morrow,” she said softly. “You come for mourning, I think?”

    “For remembrance,” I replied. “Not of death, but of what death could not take.”

    She inclined her head, understanding blooming behind that merchant’s polish which age cannot quite conceal. From the cupboard behind her she drew forth two treasures: a Black Tartan Satin headscarf, its sheen as moonlight upon coal, and a sheer chiffon voile veil, so fine that breath seemed likely to scatter it.

    “Exquisite work,” she murmured, laying them before me.

    “I require them for a pilgrimage,” I told her. “To the resting place of one whose heart yet governs mine.”

    Her lips did not move, but a flicker of softness crossed her expression, a compassion seasoned by decades of watching others purchase attire for grief.

    When I placed the scarf upon my head, its coolness brushed my temples like benediction. The veil descended over my eyes, dimming the world into softened outlines. For a moment, I believed I glimpsed Gökçe reflected behind me in the mirror, a faint silhouette, smiling through the satin haze.

    Outside, the bells of noon tolled low and heavy across the square. I crossed the flagstones toward the Cathedral, that great monument of patient sorrow, its stones blackened by both rain and memory. The wind played with my attire, lifting the edges of my veil in gentle mockery, as if inviting me to dance once more through the shadows of our secret youth.

    At the gates of the graveyard, I paused. A gypsy lady selling flowers approached shyly, clutching a handful of violets.

    “For your lost love?” she asked, her accent plain as clay.

    “For my beloved,” I said, and pressed a coin into her palm.

    At the grave, a modest stone softened by the dew, I knelt. The fabric of my skirts rippled like dark water about me.

    “Gökçe,” I whispered, “I have done as you bade me. I wear what beauty remains, though the joy of it burns like frost upon my breast.”

    The wind answered in a voice not unlike laughter. The veil brushed against my lips once more, fluttering as though stirred by a sigh too gentle for this world.

    When I rose, I did not feel the weight of sorrow so keenly as before. It seemed to me that in the gleam of the tartan, in the satin’s melodic rustle, something of our love still lived, a pulse across the gulf of years.

    Watching from a distance, the gypsy lady would say later that she thought she saw two figures leaving the yard that day: one in mourning black, the other in pale reflection, hand‑in‑hand beneath the shrouded sun. Perhaps she was right.
    The dawn’s light, pale and meagre, stole through the curtains like an uninvited thought. My fire had long since expired, leaving my chamber in that peculiar half chill which seems neither of death nor life. There, upon the table, lay my mourning attire, folded with the reverence one affords to relics rather than garments. The Black Satin Tartan gleamed faintly even in that dimness, threads of shadow crossing one another in solemn geometry. My fingers lingered upon it as one might upon the pages of a sacred book. How deftly I remembered the press of another hand guiding mine, long ago, when love was still unashamed to breathe in daylight. “Gökçe,” I murmured, and her name rang through the silence, strange and sweet as the chime of a music box long unopened. She had been of fragile constitution but radiant humour, a nurse by occupation, yet a poet in spirit. When first we met, it was under the discreet roof of a friend who hosted assemblies for kindred souls ill fitted to the rigid forms of the age. There, amid whispered laughter and the scent of spiced punch, she first beheld me crossdressed as myself, not the half version polite society demanded. Her smile, so unafraid, so brilliantly defiant had unstitched my fears as though they were loose threads upon a cuff. Our meetings became the secret rhythm of our lives: letters written in unseen ink, evenings stolen beneath the mist‑wreathed arches of the Cathedral close, where even the saints carved upon the walls seemed complicit in our forbidden contentment. Then came the pandemic fever. The city coughed and trembled beneath its pall, and Gökçe torn from me within a week was laid among the cold stones of St. Chad’s yard. In her final moments, as I sat cloaked at her bedside, she had whispered through cracked lips, “Promise me you will not hide yourself from the world in mourning. Wear beauty for both of us.” Yet how could I do so? Beauty, to the bereaved, becomes a cutting blade. Thus it was upon this morning, four months hence, that I sought to honour that vow. I made my way through the quiet lanes of the Cathedral City to McRae & Daughters, Purveyors of Mourning and Formal Attire. The shop’s brass bell gave a low, reverent note as I entered. Mrs McRae herself appeared, a tall woman of genteel bearing, her hair silvered but her eyes bright as cut glass. “Good morrow,” she said softly. “You come for mourning, I think?” “For remembrance,” I replied. “Not of death, but of what death could not take.” She inclined her head, understanding blooming behind that merchant’s polish which age cannot quite conceal. From the cupboard behind her she drew forth two treasures: a Black Tartan Satin headscarf, its sheen as moonlight upon coal, and a sheer chiffon voile veil, so fine that breath seemed likely to scatter it. “Exquisite work,” she murmured, laying them before me. “I require them for a pilgrimage,” I told her. “To the resting place of one whose heart yet governs mine.” Her lips did not move, but a flicker of softness crossed her expression, a compassion seasoned by decades of watching others purchase attire for grief. When I placed the scarf upon my head, its coolness brushed my temples like benediction. The veil descended over my eyes, dimming the world into softened outlines. For a moment, I believed I glimpsed Gökçe reflected behind me in the mirror, a faint silhouette, smiling through the satin haze. Outside, the bells of noon tolled low and heavy across the square. I crossed the flagstones toward the Cathedral, that great monument of patient sorrow, its stones blackened by both rain and memory. The wind played with my attire, lifting the edges of my veil in gentle mockery, as if inviting me to dance once more through the shadows of our secret youth. At the gates of the graveyard, I paused. A gypsy lady selling flowers approached shyly, clutching a handful of violets. “For your lost love?” she asked, her accent plain as clay. “For my beloved,” I said, and pressed a coin into her palm. At the grave, a modest stone softened by the dew, I knelt. The fabric of my skirts rippled like dark water about me. “Gökçe,” I whispered, “I have done as you bade me. I wear what beauty remains, though the joy of it burns like frost upon my breast.” The wind answered in a voice not unlike laughter. The veil brushed against my lips once more, fluttering as though stirred by a sigh too gentle for this world. When I rose, I did not feel the weight of sorrow so keenly as before. It seemed to me that in the gleam of the tartan, in the satin’s melodic rustle, something of our love still lived, a pulse across the gulf of years. Watching from a distance, the gypsy lady would say later that she thought she saw two figures leaving the yard that day: one in mourning black, the other in pale reflection, hand‑in‑hand beneath the shrouded sun. Perhaps she was right.
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  • I. Carnt dance to save my life and when my skirt and petticoats go on with heels well seem to just swing my hips x x
    #skirt #petticoat #stockings #suspenders #highheels
    I. Carnt dance to save my life and when my skirt and petticoats go on with heels well seem to just swing my hips x 🤭🤭😬🥰 x #skirt #petticoat #stockings #suspenders #highheels
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  • (How to Spot a Fake)

    There is a few things you can look for when spotting Fake Pictures.

    Of course there is also the Very Poor Picture quality which people use to hide FAKE enhancements which can make things tricky.

    A high percentage of users use Ai in the form of Apps and Software to change there appearance. FaceApp, Snapchat and many many more Ai based tools are available to change your appearance.

    The old addage that says if it's too good to be true then it probably is, a 60 year old will not have Flawless Skin and Flawless Legs. As you will see

    Large Body, Big Hairy Arms, Large Fingers, with beautiful flawless Face, errr No, Fake.

    Many Ai creation Software/Apps struggle to Create Hands, Hair, Facial Skin, Backgrounds. Will expand on this ..

    Hands take alot of Ai processing power and many times there will be mistakes like, Six fingers, Rings that span two fingers, Hands that Blend into other Bodyparts.

    Facial Skin is very often not Flawless, Freckles, Spots, Blemishes, Moles, Fine Hair, Often All Missing, If it's Flawless it's more than Likely Fake, unless they are Professional Models, but enen they have freckles spots blemishes and birth marks even with loads of makeup.

    Backgrounds are often either Blurry or very Perfectly Random, Often not associated with any other Photo in someone's collection, Sometimes Backgrounds are set in Luxury Rooms with Gold Plated Furniture, Not usually associated with a UK Council Estate, or Someone on Job Seekers Allowance... Common Sense on much of this.

    Bare Feet can be tricky for Ai Software too same as Hands, Same Rules Apply.

    Other people in the same photo can end up Morphing into Clothing or even other people's Body Parts, Skin near Skin of two people can be an Ai nightmare so look out for this.

    Scale is an Ai issue too, look out for Big Heads, Small Legs, way out of proportion Body Parts, all common mistakes.

    Hairy Chest, Flawless Face, - Fake. Hairy Big/Overweight Body, Flawless Face and perfect legs - Fake.

    Common Sense Prevails here, Think about who you are looking at, How Old, How Fit, Younger Fit People will use Natural Pictures as they have no need not too.

    Very Blurred and Poor quality photos are often used to hide something.

    Look out for photos where every shot shows the head in the same position and looks totally flawless, This is because this Face Position is the best one for the Ai Software/App to make the face look the same each time... Otherwise they may end up looking different... Fakes.

    Look carefully at the photos you like, don't just see a pretty picture and assume it is real, have a look at others they have done, don't play into there Fake loving hands.... They are trying to make you look a fool because they can con you.... Don't let it be you.

    This is just the Basics, Hope it helps. After a while you will find it easier to spot these Fakers... Enjoy your new skill

    Please ask for guidance if your unsure about anyone...

    All my pics as you can see are me and mine, what you see is what you will get if you want it xxx
    (How to Spot a Fake) There is a few things you can look for when spotting Fake Pictures. Of course there is also the Very Poor Picture quality which people use to hide FAKE enhancements which can make things tricky. A high percentage of users use Ai in the form of Apps and Software to change there appearance. FaceApp, Snapchat and many many more Ai based tools are available to change your appearance. The old addage that says if it's too good to be true then it probably is, a 60 year old will not have Flawless Skin and Flawless Legs. As you will see Large Body, Big Hairy Arms, Large Fingers, with beautiful flawless Face, errr No, Fake. Many Ai creation Software/Apps struggle to Create Hands, Hair, Facial Skin, Backgrounds. Will expand on this .. Hands take alot of Ai processing power and many times there will be mistakes like, Six fingers, Rings that span two fingers, Hands that Blend into other Bodyparts. Facial Skin is very often not Flawless, Freckles, Spots, Blemishes, Moles, Fine Hair, Often All Missing, If it's Flawless it's more than Likely Fake, unless they are Professional Models, but enen they have freckles spots blemishes and birth marks even with loads of makeup. Backgrounds are often either Blurry or very Perfectly Random, Often not associated with any other Photo in someone's collection, Sometimes Backgrounds are set in Luxury Rooms with Gold Plated Furniture, Not usually associated with a UK Council Estate, or Someone on Job Seekers Allowance... Common Sense on much of this. Bare Feet can be tricky for Ai Software too same as Hands, Same Rules Apply. Other people in the same photo can end up Morphing into Clothing or even other people's Body Parts, Skin near Skin of two people can be an Ai nightmare so look out for this. Scale is an Ai issue too, look out for Big Heads, Small Legs, way out of proportion Body Parts, all common mistakes. Hairy Chest, Flawless Face, - Fake. Hairy Big/Overweight Body, Flawless Face and perfect legs - Fake. Common Sense Prevails here, Think about who you are looking at, How Old, How Fit, Younger Fit People will use Natural Pictures as they have no need not too. Very Blurred and Poor quality photos are often used to hide something. Look out for photos where every shot shows the head in the same position and looks totally flawless, This is because this Face Position is the best one for the Ai Software/App to make the face look the same each time... Otherwise they may end up looking different... Fakes. Look carefully at the photos you like, don't just see a pretty picture and assume it is real, have a look at others they have done, don't play into there Fake loving hands.... They are trying to make you look a fool because they can con you.... Don't let it be you. This is just the Basics, Hope it helps. After a while you will find it easier to spot these Fakers... Enjoy your new skill Please ask for guidance if your unsure about anyone... All my pics as you can see are me and mine, what you see is what you will get if you want it xxx
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  • I still remember the first time fabric dared me to see myself anew. The polyester floral maxi gaudy, inexpensive, snatched from a shadowed market stall beneath buzzing orange lamps. Petals in violent pink and electric lime sprawled across it like spilled paint. I wore it home half expecting regret. Instead, when the synthetic sheen slid over skin, it moved with a borrowed audacity, whispering against thighs, insisting I stand taller in the fractured mirror. For once I lingered. The dress refused apology; it demanded witness.
    Then the voile mesh wrap arrived, smoke pale and gossamer thin. I layered it timidly over black at first, arms folded like armour. But light caught the weave and traced the quiet architecture of collarbone and shoulder revealing rather than concealing. Veiling, it taught, is not burial; it is emphasis. Each shimmer became a period at the end of a sentence I had never finished speaking: I am here.
    Winter brought the satin cardigan, blush rose and impossibly smooth, buttons small as moon droplets. I thought softness would diminish me. Instead it armoured me in quiet. During boardroom silences, late night doubts, the satin rested against wrists like a steady hand saying: power can arrive without sound, without edge simply by refusing to harden.
    The silken kimono midnight deep, silver veins threading through named me bold outright. Sleeves swept like banners as I crossed a rooftop threshold into city light. Heads turned, not in judgment, but in recognition of someone who had stopped asking permission to fill space. The fabric did not negotiate; it declared.
    Later the taffeta mermaid gown caressed with emerald discipline, gold shot and unyielding from hip to ankle. Every step became a measured ceremony spine aligned, breath shallow and deliberate. Restriction, it showed me, is not caged but choreography; I learned to dance inside the silhouette of my own resolve until the lines felt like wings.
    Chiffon followed in pale fog layers, turning breakfast into sacrament, the turn of a key into procession. Ordinary hours gained cadence, became worth the slow unfurling of cloth.
    And at last the chiffon voile ruffled square neck gown ivory blushed with first light, ruffles spilling like laughter caught mid fall. Wearing it felt like coronation, self bestowed. No audience required.
    Now February 27, 2026 I stand alone.
    Rain sheets the asphalt black and glossy. Neon bleeds upward in acid pinks, cyan, violent violet; holographic serpents twist through mist twenty stories overhead, advertising dreams no one can afford. Damp wind lifts the black silk hijab edged in silver so it floats behind me like a separate wing. Beneath, the ruffled gown moves in slow, liquid obedience to each breath, pale chiffon catching stray photons and scattering them soft against wet pavement.
    Reflections fracture at my feet: fractured dragons, shattered company logos, my own silhouette stretched long and thin. Mist coils low, veiling the distance so the city feels both infinite and intimately close.
    I do not shrink from the gaze of unseeing windows. I do not apologise to the indifferent hum of drones overhead. The gown breathes with me. The hijab lifts, settles, lifts again like a pulse the city has forgotten it still has. Here, rain-slicked and haloed in synthetic light, every garment I have ever worn has converged into this moment: a ceremony of one, where solitude is no longer absence but the quietest, most deliberate form of presence. I tilt my face to the falling water and let the neon baptise me in colours I once feared were too bright to claim.
    I still remember the first time fabric dared me to see myself anew. The polyester floral maxi gaudy, inexpensive, snatched from a shadowed market stall beneath buzzing orange lamps. Petals in violent pink and electric lime sprawled across it like spilled paint. I wore it home half expecting regret. Instead, when the synthetic sheen slid over skin, it moved with a borrowed audacity, whispering against thighs, insisting I stand taller in the fractured mirror. For once I lingered. The dress refused apology; it demanded witness. Then the voile mesh wrap arrived, smoke pale and gossamer thin. I layered it timidly over black at first, arms folded like armour. But light caught the weave and traced the quiet architecture of collarbone and shoulder revealing rather than concealing. Veiling, it taught, is not burial; it is emphasis. Each shimmer became a period at the end of a sentence I had never finished speaking: I am here. Winter brought the satin cardigan, blush rose and impossibly smooth, buttons small as moon droplets. I thought softness would diminish me. Instead it armoured me in quiet. During boardroom silences, late night doubts, the satin rested against wrists like a steady hand saying: power can arrive without sound, without edge simply by refusing to harden. The silken kimono midnight deep, silver veins threading through named me bold outright. Sleeves swept like banners as I crossed a rooftop threshold into city light. Heads turned, not in judgment, but in recognition of someone who had stopped asking permission to fill space. The fabric did not negotiate; it declared. Later the taffeta mermaid gown caressed with emerald discipline, gold shot and unyielding from hip to ankle. Every step became a measured ceremony spine aligned, breath shallow and deliberate. Restriction, it showed me, is not caged but choreography; I learned to dance inside the silhouette of my own resolve until the lines felt like wings. Chiffon followed in pale fog layers, turning breakfast into sacrament, the turn of a key into procession. Ordinary hours gained cadence, became worth the slow unfurling of cloth. And at last the chiffon voile ruffled square neck gown ivory blushed with first light, ruffles spilling like laughter caught mid fall. Wearing it felt like coronation, self bestowed. No audience required. Now February 27, 2026 I stand alone. Rain sheets the asphalt black and glossy. Neon bleeds upward in acid pinks, cyan, violent violet; holographic serpents twist through mist twenty stories overhead, advertising dreams no one can afford. Damp wind lifts the black silk hijab edged in silver so it floats behind me like a separate wing. Beneath, the ruffled gown moves in slow, liquid obedience to each breath, pale chiffon catching stray photons and scattering them soft against wet pavement. Reflections fracture at my feet: fractured dragons, shattered company logos, my own silhouette stretched long and thin. Mist coils low, veiling the distance so the city feels both infinite and intimately close. I do not shrink from the gaze of unseeing windows. I do not apologise to the indifferent hum of drones overhead. The gown breathes with me. The hijab lifts, settles, lifts again like a pulse the city has forgotten it still has. Here, rain-slicked and haloed in synthetic light, every garment I have ever worn has converged into this moment: a ceremony of one, where solitude is no longer absence but the quietest, most deliberate form of presence. I tilt my face to the falling water and let the neon baptise me in colours I once feared were too bright to claim.
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  • The rain came down in sheets, the kind that makes you wonder if the sky has finally decided the city's sins need a proper rinse. It hammered the cobbles like an angry landlord demanding back rent, and the neon signs those hopeful lies in electric pink and acid green fizzed and spat reflections that danced across puddles deep enough to drown a man's regrets.
    I stood there under the brim of my hat, which had given up pretending to be waterproof about three streets ago. The turquoise satin trench coat clung to me like an ambitious squid, heavy and glistening, the sort of garment that looks magnificent in the mirror at three in the afternoon and ridiculous at three in the morning when you're soaked to the marrow and smelling faintly of wet ferret. But dignity is a luxury, and mine had pawned itself years back for a bottle of something that promised to forget.
    Beside me stood the Turquoise Queen.
    She didn't so much stand as preside. The satin hijab caught what little light there was and threw it back in shimmering defiance, while the oversized headscarf cascaded into a chiffon voile veil that billowed and swirled in the fog like the ghost of a particularly extravagant wedding dress that had died of embarrassment. Every time she moved even to breathe the fabric whispered secrets to the night air, expensive secrets involving rose attar and old money and perhaps the occasional small assassination. In this monochrome world of stark blacks and murderous whites, she was a scandal in turquoise, a splash of colour that the rain itself seemed too polite to touch.
    I took a drag on the cigarette that had somehow survived the deluge. The smoke curled upward in lazy question marks, as if even it was wondering what the hell we were doing here.
    "You know," I said, because silence is only golden until it starts to rust, "most people come to this northern town looking for opportunity. Or revenge. Or a decent kebab at two in the morning. Very few arrive dressed like the centrepiece of a particularly expensive funeral."
    She tilted her head, and the veil shifted in a slow, liquid motion that suggested physics had been bribed. "And yet here I am, Grimshaw, The Gumshoe. Opportunity found me first. It was wearing a cheap suit and carrying a very sharp knife."
    I grunted. Grunting is cheaper than conversation and usually gets the same results. "Opportunity has a habit of leaving bodies behind. That's why they pay me to follow the stains."
    A passing drunk staggered through a puddle that may or may not have contained tomorrow's headlines. He stared at her veil as though it might contain the meaning of life, then decided it probably didn't and lurched onward toward whatever oblivion still had room for one more customer.
    The fog thickened, turning the streetlamps into soft, accusing halos. Somewhere in the distance a greasy takeaway exploded in a brief symphony of swearing and sizzling fat. Life in the town: always conducting itself with unnecessary drama.
    She lifted one gloved hand turquoise, naturally and pointed toward the mouth of an alley that smelled strongly of yesterday's fish and tomorrow's trouble. "The man we're after went that way. He thinks shadows will hide him."
    "They won't," I said. "Shadows in this town are unionised. They demand overtime for hiding villains after midnight."
    Her laugh was low, like velvet dragged over broken glass. "Then let us give them something to earn their pay, Detective."
    I flicked the cigarette into a puddle where it hissed its last. The Turquoise Queen moved ahead, veil trailing like a comet's tail made of expensive regret. I followed, because that's what you do when the only alternative is standing alone in the rain wondering why the universe bothers.
    Somewhere ahead, a door creaked. A scream started, then thought better of it.
    The night was just getting interesting.
    The rain came down in sheets, the kind that makes you wonder if the sky has finally decided the city's sins need a proper rinse. It hammered the cobbles like an angry landlord demanding back rent, and the neon signs those hopeful lies in electric pink and acid green fizzed and spat reflections that danced across puddles deep enough to drown a man's regrets. I stood there under the brim of my hat, which had given up pretending to be waterproof about three streets ago. The turquoise satin trench coat clung to me like an ambitious squid, heavy and glistening, the sort of garment that looks magnificent in the mirror at three in the afternoon and ridiculous at three in the morning when you're soaked to the marrow and smelling faintly of wet ferret. But dignity is a luxury, and mine had pawned itself years back for a bottle of something that promised to forget. Beside me stood the Turquoise Queen. She didn't so much stand as preside. The satin hijab caught what little light there was and threw it back in shimmering defiance, while the oversized headscarf cascaded into a chiffon voile veil that billowed and swirled in the fog like the ghost of a particularly extravagant wedding dress that had died of embarrassment. Every time she moved even to breathe the fabric whispered secrets to the night air, expensive secrets involving rose attar and old money and perhaps the occasional small assassination. In this monochrome world of stark blacks and murderous whites, she was a scandal in turquoise, a splash of colour that the rain itself seemed too polite to touch. I took a drag on the cigarette that had somehow survived the deluge. The smoke curled upward in lazy question marks, as if even it was wondering what the hell we were doing here. "You know," I said, because silence is only golden until it starts to rust, "most people come to this northern town looking for opportunity. Or revenge. Or a decent kebab at two in the morning. Very few arrive dressed like the centrepiece of a particularly expensive funeral." She tilted her head, and the veil shifted in a slow, liquid motion that suggested physics had been bribed. "And yet here I am, Grimshaw, The Gumshoe. Opportunity found me first. It was wearing a cheap suit and carrying a very sharp knife." I grunted. Grunting is cheaper than conversation and usually gets the same results. "Opportunity has a habit of leaving bodies behind. That's why they pay me to follow the stains." A passing drunk staggered through a puddle that may or may not have contained tomorrow's headlines. He stared at her veil as though it might contain the meaning of life, then decided it probably didn't and lurched onward toward whatever oblivion still had room for one more customer. The fog thickened, turning the streetlamps into soft, accusing halos. Somewhere in the distance a greasy takeaway exploded in a brief symphony of swearing and sizzling fat. Life in the town: always conducting itself with unnecessary drama. She lifted one gloved hand turquoise, naturally and pointed toward the mouth of an alley that smelled strongly of yesterday's fish and tomorrow's trouble. "The man we're after went that way. He thinks shadows will hide him." "They won't," I said. "Shadows in this town are unionised. They demand overtime for hiding villains after midnight." Her laugh was low, like velvet dragged over broken glass. "Then let us give them something to earn their pay, Detective." I flicked the cigarette into a puddle where it hissed its last. The Turquoise Queen moved ahead, veil trailing like a comet's tail made of expensive regret. I followed, because that's what you do when the only alternative is standing alone in the rain wondering why the universe bothers. Somewhere ahead, a door creaked. A scream started, then thought better of it. The night was just getting interesting.
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  • Patti has her dancing dress on, feeling so girly dancing around. Who would like to dance with me ? I promise I only bite if bitten, I’m very soft and love to kiss
    Patti has her dancing dress on, feeling so girly dancing around. Who would like to dance with me ? I promise I only bite if bitten, I’m very soft and love to kiss
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  • Not posting a photo right now - but I have over 20 ready to post. Really like to know what my BGFs and BBFs like? - Colors- settings/locations - dresses - swimsuits/bikinies - dance and athletic wear - sexy night wear. And I love to answer questions and chat when I can. I will always respond. And yes "body talk" is also OK. Tell me about your journeys, experiences dressing and life stories - also questions about crossdressing - lets connect a bit.
    Not posting a photo right now - but I have over 20 ready to post. Really like to know what my BGFs and BBFs like? - Colors- settings/locations - dresses - swimsuits/bikinies - dance and athletic wear - sexy night wear. And I love to answer questions and chat when I can. I will always respond. And yes "body talk" is also OK. Tell me about your journeys, experiences dressing and life stories - also questions about crossdressing - lets connect a bit. 🥰
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  • #danceskirt #petticoats #stockings #suspenders #highheels
    #danceskirt #petticoats #stockings #suspenders #highheels
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  • #danceskirt #petticoat #stockings #suspenders #highheels
    #danceskirt #petticoat #stockings #suspenders #highheels
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  • You are safe with me I know you’ve been hurt and let down before but I want you to breathe and trust that you’re in good hands now I don’t take your loyalty for granted I value it deeply With me, you’ll find peace guidance and care You won’t regret giving me your trust I’ll protect it and I’ll protect you

    Says MattressWinifred - Yeah, right!
    You are safe with me I know you’ve been hurt and let down before but I want you to breathe and trust that you’re in good hands now I don’t take your loyalty for granted I value it deeply With me, you’ll find peace guidance and care You won’t regret giving me your trust I’ll protect it and I’ll protect you Says MattressWinifred - Yeah, right! 🤣
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    6
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  • The dress had lived in my saved folder for weeks: an elegant plus size kaftan, long and sweeping, described in loving detail online as a “maxi robe style” masterpiece. Bold geometric shapes danced across it, interrupted by playful polka dots, all in the richest shades of brown, deep coffee, and warm beige. No stretch, just pure, structured non stretch fabric that would drape and flow with quiet authority. Off the shoulder design that could be worn modestly high or slipped gently down for a more relaxed silhouette, and those perfect short sleeves. And then the detail that had sealed it for me a matching set of satin accessories: a hijab, a headscarf, and an oversized satin scarf, all in the same lush coffee beige family.
    I’d imagined myself in it so many times. Not just wearing it, but being in it moving through a room and feeling the hem brush my ankles like a whispered promise.
    The sales assistant smiled when she saw me lingering near the display. “That one’s new in,” she said, lifting the hanger with the kind of reverence usually reserved for museum pieces. “It’s even more striking up close.”
    She wasn’t wrong.
    Up close, the patterns were alive. The geometrics felt almost architectural, like tiny tiled courtyards from some ancient medina, while the polka dots added a mischievous modern wink. The colours were deeper than the photos had captured less flat beige, more toasted almond and espresso swirling together. I ran my fingertips over the fabric. Crisp, cool, luxuriously matte except where the satin accents caught the light and turned molten.
    I asked to try it on.
    In the fitting room, the kaftan slipped over my head like cool water. The weight of the non stretch fabric gave it presence; it didn’t cling, it enveloped. I adjusted the off shoulder neckline until it sat just where I wanted respectful yet softly open, framing my collarbones without apology. The short sleeves ended exactly where they should, leaving my forearms free. I turned slowly in front of the mirror and watched the skirt flare and settle, the patterns shifting like a living mosaic.
    Then came the satin pieces.
    I draped the hijab first, letting the silky coffee coloured length glide over my hair and shoulders. The texture was heaven smooth against my skin, cool and weightless. Next the headscarf, wrapped and tucked with practiced care (I’d watched enough tutorials to fake confidence). Finally, the oversized satin scarf, which I looped loosely around my neck and let trail down my back like a royal train in miniature.
    When I stepped out of the cubicle, the assistant actually gasped quietly, politely, but it was there.
    I felt… regal. Not in a loud, glittering way, but in the way old Islamic manuscript illuminations are regal: intricate, deliberate, quietly commanding attention through beauty rather than volume. The kaftan moved with me like an extension of breath. Every step sent gentle waves through the fabric, the geometric lines bending and realigning, the polka dots catching tiny sparks of that golden-hour light pouring through the shop windows.
    I bought it. No hesitation.
    Now, when I wear it at home in the evenings, I light a few low lamps to recreate that same warm glow. I walk slowly across the hardwood floor just to feel the hem sweep behind me. I arrange the satin scarf different ways draped over one shoulder, wrapped as a belt, left to float free and each time the mirror shows me someone new, yet completely myself.
    It isn’t just a dress.
    It’s the version of elegance I’d been quietly sketching in my mind for years, finally given shape in brown, coffee, and beige.
    And every time I put it on, I remember that afternoon in the boutique when the light hit just right, and I finally recognised the person looking back at me.
    The dress had lived in my saved folder for weeks: an elegant plus size kaftan, long and sweeping, described in loving detail online as a “maxi robe style” masterpiece. Bold geometric shapes danced across it, interrupted by playful polka dots, all in the richest shades of brown, deep coffee, and warm beige. No stretch, just pure, structured non stretch fabric that would drape and flow with quiet authority. Off the shoulder design that could be worn modestly high or slipped gently down for a more relaxed silhouette, and those perfect short sleeves. And then the detail that had sealed it for me a matching set of satin accessories: a hijab, a headscarf, and an oversized satin scarf, all in the same lush coffee beige family. I’d imagined myself in it so many times. Not just wearing it, but being in it moving through a room and feeling the hem brush my ankles like a whispered promise. The sales assistant smiled when she saw me lingering near the display. “That one’s new in,” she said, lifting the hanger with the kind of reverence usually reserved for museum pieces. “It’s even more striking up close.” She wasn’t wrong. Up close, the patterns were alive. The geometrics felt almost architectural, like tiny tiled courtyards from some ancient medina, while the polka dots added a mischievous modern wink. The colours were deeper than the photos had captured less flat beige, more toasted almond and espresso swirling together. I ran my fingertips over the fabric. Crisp, cool, luxuriously matte except where the satin accents caught the light and turned molten. I asked to try it on. In the fitting room, the kaftan slipped over my head like cool water. The weight of the non stretch fabric gave it presence; it didn’t cling, it enveloped. I adjusted the off shoulder neckline until it sat just where I wanted respectful yet softly open, framing my collarbones without apology. The short sleeves ended exactly where they should, leaving my forearms free. I turned slowly in front of the mirror and watched the skirt flare and settle, the patterns shifting like a living mosaic. Then came the satin pieces. I draped the hijab first, letting the silky coffee coloured length glide over my hair and shoulders. The texture was heaven smooth against my skin, cool and weightless. Next the headscarf, wrapped and tucked with practiced care (I’d watched enough tutorials to fake confidence). Finally, the oversized satin scarf, which I looped loosely around my neck and let trail down my back like a royal train in miniature. When I stepped out of the cubicle, the assistant actually gasped quietly, politely, but it was there. I felt… regal. Not in a loud, glittering way, but in the way old Islamic manuscript illuminations are regal: intricate, deliberate, quietly commanding attention through beauty rather than volume. The kaftan moved with me like an extension of breath. Every step sent gentle waves through the fabric, the geometric lines bending and realigning, the polka dots catching tiny sparks of that golden-hour light pouring through the shop windows. I bought it. No hesitation. Now, when I wear it at home in the evenings, I light a few low lamps to recreate that same warm glow. I walk slowly across the hardwood floor just to feel the hem sweep behind me. I arrange the satin scarf different ways draped over one shoulder, wrapped as a belt, left to float free and each time the mirror shows me someone new, yet completely myself. It isn’t just a dress. It’s the version of elegance I’d been quietly sketching in my mind for years, finally given shape in brown, coffee, and beige. And every time I put it on, I remember that afternoon in the boutique when the light hit just right, and I finally recognised the person looking back at me.
    Like
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    4
    0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 7K Views
  • In the dim parlour of a narrow terraced house on the edge of town, where the January dusk pressed against fogged windowpanes, Hanimefendi (once Tony, though the name now felt like an old coat left in the attic) sat perfectly still before the tall cheval mirror.
    At sixty four, the body that looked back at her was soft and heavy, rolls of flesh pressing against the seams of her chosen mourning. Yet every inch of it had been reclaimed in Barbie Pink the violent, unapologetic pink of bubblegum, flamingos, and little girls’ birthday dreams. She had buried the muted blacks and charcoals of conventional widowhood the same afternoon she buried her former self. Grief, she decided, deserved better than drabness. Grief deserved to scream.
    Her long gown swept the floorboards in heavy, liquid folds of pink satin. The fabric caught the lamplight in subtle, expensive highlights shimmering like wet sugar or the inside of a seashell. Tiny seed pearls marched along the modestly high neckline and down the front in orderly, virginal rows. The sleeves ended in deep cuffs of gathered pink chiffon that trembled with each slow breath.
    Over the gown rode the blouse: glossy, deluxe, almost liquid in its sheen. Frills cascaded from throat to waist like a waterfall of spun sugar ruffles upon ruffles upon ruffles, each edge finished with the thinnest piping of darker rose. The cuffs alone could have doubled as christening bonnets.
    But the true crown was the headscarf.
    An oversized triangle of blush pink satin, almost cartoonishly large, draped from the top of her head and cascaded past her shoulders in glossy waves. She had tied it under the chin with an extravagant bow, the ends trailing like rabbit ears. Pinned beneath it floated a sheer pink chiffon voile veil long enough to brush the upper swell of her ample chest, fine enough that her features showed through like a watercolour left in the rain. The veil softened the male jawline she had once hated, blurred the double chin, turned every blink into something theatrical and tender.
    Her mouth was a dramatic wound of matte fuchsia, outlined sharper than a paper cut. Above it arched brows drawn in powdery rose, while the eyelids shimmered with pearlescent pink shadow and were rimmed in vivid bubblegum liner that flicked outward in exaggerated Rococo commas. Cheeks bloomed with circular rouge like a porcelain doll painted by an over enthusiastic child. The overall effect was sissy maid meets Marie Antoinette in full defiant mourning feminine, excessive, absurdly pretty, and deliberately inconsolable.
    He, her male persona had hated the colour pink. Called it childish. Called it weak. On the nightstand sat the little brass urn containing what remained of him, his cremated wardrobe of male clothes, positioned so that the urn had no choice but to stare at her forever.
    Hanimefendi lifted one plump, ring laden hand. The nails were lacquered the exact shade of strawberry marshmallow. She touched the veil where it lay across her lips, pressing the satin bow against them as though kissing herself goodnight.
    I wore navy coloured clothes for forty-one years, she whispered to the mirror, voice low and cracked from crying and cigarettes she had given up in 1998. Navy and sensible shoes and ‘yes dear’ and ‘not now.’ You had your funeral in charcoal. Mine is pink. Barbie bloody pink. And I’m not sorry.
    A tear escaped, cutting a bright path through the rouge. It hung on the veil like dew on candyfloss before soaking in.
    She rose slowly, arthritic joints protesting and moved to the ancient radiogram in the corner. The needle settled onto an old 78. A scratchy soprano began to sing something unbearably sentimental about lost loves and rose gardens. Hanimefendi began to sway. The gown whispered against itself. The frills trembled. The veil floated like breath.
    In the mirror a vast, pink, glittering figure danced alone widowed, overweight, outrageously made up, and for the first time in six decades entirely herself.
    She was mourning, yes. But she was mourning in colour. And the house, for one evening at least, smelled faintly of rose talc, hot satin, and the sweetest kind of revenge.
    In the dim parlour of a narrow terraced house on the edge of town, where the January dusk pressed against fogged windowpanes, Hanimefendi (once Tony, though the name now felt like an old coat left in the attic) sat perfectly still before the tall cheval mirror. At sixty four, the body that looked back at her was soft and heavy, rolls of flesh pressing against the seams of her chosen mourning. Yet every inch of it had been reclaimed in Barbie Pink the violent, unapologetic pink of bubblegum, flamingos, and little girls’ birthday dreams. She had buried the muted blacks and charcoals of conventional widowhood the same afternoon she buried her former self. Grief, she decided, deserved better than drabness. Grief deserved to scream. Her long gown swept the floorboards in heavy, liquid folds of pink satin. The fabric caught the lamplight in subtle, expensive highlights shimmering like wet sugar or the inside of a seashell. Tiny seed pearls marched along the modestly high neckline and down the front in orderly, virginal rows. The sleeves ended in deep cuffs of gathered pink chiffon that trembled with each slow breath. Over the gown rode the blouse: glossy, deluxe, almost liquid in its sheen. Frills cascaded from throat to waist like a waterfall of spun sugar ruffles upon ruffles upon ruffles, each edge finished with the thinnest piping of darker rose. The cuffs alone could have doubled as christening bonnets. But the true crown was the headscarf. An oversized triangle of blush pink satin, almost cartoonishly large, draped from the top of her head and cascaded past her shoulders in glossy waves. She had tied it under the chin with an extravagant bow, the ends trailing like rabbit ears. Pinned beneath it floated a sheer pink chiffon voile veil long enough to brush the upper swell of her ample chest, fine enough that her features showed through like a watercolour left in the rain. The veil softened the male jawline she had once hated, blurred the double chin, turned every blink into something theatrical and tender. Her mouth was a dramatic wound of matte fuchsia, outlined sharper than a paper cut. Above it arched brows drawn in powdery rose, while the eyelids shimmered with pearlescent pink shadow and were rimmed in vivid bubblegum liner that flicked outward in exaggerated Rococo commas. Cheeks bloomed with circular rouge like a porcelain doll painted by an over enthusiastic child. The overall effect was sissy maid meets Marie Antoinette in full defiant mourning feminine, excessive, absurdly pretty, and deliberately inconsolable. He, her male persona had hated the colour pink. Called it childish. Called it weak. On the nightstand sat the little brass urn containing what remained of him, his cremated wardrobe of male clothes, positioned so that the urn had no choice but to stare at her forever. Hanimefendi lifted one plump, ring laden hand. The nails were lacquered the exact shade of strawberry marshmallow. She touched the veil where it lay across her lips, pressing the satin bow against them as though kissing herself goodnight. I wore navy coloured clothes for forty-one years, she whispered to the mirror, voice low and cracked from crying and cigarettes she had given up in 1998. Navy and sensible shoes and ‘yes dear’ and ‘not now.’ You had your funeral in charcoal. Mine is pink. Barbie bloody pink. And I’m not sorry. A tear escaped, cutting a bright path through the rouge. It hung on the veil like dew on candyfloss before soaking in. She rose slowly, arthritic joints protesting and moved to the ancient radiogram in the corner. The needle settled onto an old 78. A scratchy soprano began to sing something unbearably sentimental about lost loves and rose gardens. Hanimefendi began to sway. The gown whispered against itself. The frills trembled. The veil floated like breath. In the mirror a vast, pink, glittering figure danced alone widowed, overweight, outrageously made up, and for the first time in six decades entirely herself. She was mourning, yes. But she was mourning in colour. And the house, for one evening at least, smelled faintly of rose talc, hot satin, and the sweetest kind of revenge.
    Love
    3
    0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 10K Views
  • Patti loves short dresses and heels, I want to have someone to dance with, who would cup my cheeks while slowly dancing ?
    Patti loves short dresses and heels, I want to have someone to dance with, who would cup my cheeks while slowly dancing ?
    Love
    Like
    Yay
    19
    8 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 3K Views
  • And when i go to the pub, see bands, dance in stone-floored clubs, Adventure in the woods late at night, visit the spa or club with the like-minded, go shopping, carbooting, holidaying, riding my Ferocious Motorbike...
    And when i go to the pub, see bands, dance in stone-floored clubs, Adventure in the woods late at night, visit the spa or club with the like-minded, go shopping, carbooting, holidaying, riding my Ferocious Motorbike...
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    Haha
    8
    2 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 3K Views
  • I wonder whether Karen1969 realises that if he blocks me for explaining the rules regarding his pic of his flabby little cocktail sausage, it means whatever vile unpleasant reply he tries to make is blocked too, so i can't see it! Good riddance, and saves me the effort!
    I wonder whether Karen1969 realises that if he blocks me for explaining the rules regarding his pic of his flabby little cocktail sausage, it means whatever vile unpleasant reply he tries to make is blocked too, so i can't see it! Good riddance, and saves me the effort! 🤣
    Haha
    Like
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    13
    4 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 3K Views
  • Since we're uploading dance videos now...
    Since we're uploading dance videos now... 😆
    Love
    Like
    Wow
    23
    4 Yorumlar 1 hisse senetleri 9K Views 1063
  • Lady in red, who wants to dance with me . Xx
    Lady in red, who wants to dance with me . Xx
    Love
    Wow
    10
    1 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 4K Views
  • Looking for a dance partner!
    Looking for a dance partner! 💞
    Love
    Like
    12
    7 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 2K Views
  • Work week yesterday but I had a good "lunch" break, read my book and stretched a bit to get rid of the office chair butt! (disclaimer for honesty and avoidance of misunderstandings: I am a crossdresser. I am wearing a breastplate. I colour correct my pics a lot generally, i think that' fine as I'm not lying, or changing myself in any way. I'm just trying to portrait an atmosphere - 50s pinup here for example. In this series though I've gone a little extra and hid the breastplate seams. It's an aesthetic decision and not with the aim to confuse or misdirect anyone. Sorry if someone is offended I'm happy to re upload with the seams visible) xx
    Work week yesterday but I had a good "lunch" break, read my book and stretched a bit to get rid of the office chair butt! (disclaimer for honesty and avoidance of misunderstandings: I am a crossdresser. I am wearing a breastplate. I colour correct my pics a lot generally, i think that' fine as I'm not lying, or changing myself in any way. I'm just trying to portrait an atmosphere - 50s pinup here for example. In this series though I've gone a little extra and hid the breastplate seams. It's an aesthetic decision and not with the aim to confuse or misdirect anyone. Sorry if someone is offended I'm happy to re upload with the seams visible) xx
    Love
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    33
    6 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 7K Views
  • t.me/DisciplineMommy
    Send me a private message begging for entry into my training attendance Only then will you begin your path to becoming the best, most devoted submissive sissy girl under my heart’s discipline and serious service to prove the reality of the slut
    🌑 t.me/DisciplineMommy 🌑 Send me a private message begging for entry into my training attendance Only then will you begin your path to becoming the best, most devoted submissive sissy girl under my heart’s discipline and serious service to prove the reality of the slut
    Love
    4
    0 Yorumlar 2 hisse senetleri 9K Views
  • sissy shauna dance
    sissy shauna dance
    0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 2K Views
  • sissy shauna swiss miss dance
    sissy shauna swiss miss dance
    0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 2K Views
  • t.me/DisciplineMommy
    I am the Great ******* strict in my Discipline, irresistible in my pull, when you come to my Telegram training space , you will send me a proper private message, there are no shortcuts, no games. Understand? You will begin by begging for my training attendance, In that message, you will show respect, hunger, and readiness. Only then will you step onto the path of becoming the best, most devoted submissive sissy girl shaped under my heart’s discipline, ruled by my serious service, drawn deeper into the reality of the slut you truly are
    🌑 t.me/DisciplineMommy 🌑 I am the Great Goddess strict in my Discipline, irresistible in my pull, when you come to my Telegram training space 🌈🆔, you will send me a proper private message, there are no shortcuts, no games. Understand? You will begin by begging for my training attendance, In that message, you will show respect, hunger, and readiness. Only then will you step onto the path of becoming the best, most devoted submissive sissy girl shaped under my heart’s discipline, ruled by my serious service, drawn deeper into the reality of the slut you truly are
    Haha
    1
    0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 6K Views
  • Who is online now?
    I am a man that love to dress like a girl and dance, who wants to see me?
    Who is online now? I am a man that love to dress like a girl and dance, who wants to see me?
    Love
    2
    4 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 3K Views
  • Had a lot of fun today with some of my photos. The photos are all me - yes is my body, as I have been feminizing it over the last 10+ years - But I tried some AI to change what I am wearing and the background. I do dance regularly so I am actually attuned to ballet studios and to dancing on stage. But the AI is so fun to try out - gives me great ideas for outfits and places I would like to go to. Let me know - comments please. I love to share comments and chat, when I can. I will always respond to your comments.
    Had a lot of fun today with some of my photos. The photos are all me - yes is my body, as I have been feminizing it over the last 10+ years - But I tried some AI to change what I am wearing and the background. I do dance regularly so I am actually attuned to ballet studios and to dancing on stage. But the AI is so fun to try out - gives me great ideas for outfits and places I would like to go to. Let me know - comments please. I love to share comments and chat, when I can. I will always respond to your comments.🥰
    Love
    8
    3 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 5K Views
  • t.me/DisciplineMommy
    I am the Great *******, the one you’ve been seeking.
    You will find me at my Telegram training space and you will message me properly. Understand?
    Send me a private message begging for entry into my training attendance. Only then will you begin your path to becoming the best, most devoted submissive sissy girl under my heart’s discipline and serious service to prove the reality of the slut you truly are
    🌑 t.me/DisciplineMommy 🌑 I am the Great Goddess, the one you’ve been seeking. You will find me at my Telegram training space 🌈🆔 and you will message me properly. Understand? Send me a private message begging for entry into my training attendance. Only then will you begin your path to becoming the best, most devoted submissive sissy girl under my heart’s discipline and serious service to prove the reality of the slut you truly are 🤩🤩🤩
    Haha
    1
    0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 8K Views
  • Hello to you'll listen submited submissive male who's here interested and ready to become a truly great and useful sissy slut, sissy bitch, sissy girly, sissy property. Now this is an offer to the right interested reality one's As a great honest Dominant Discipline ******** I would like to have you in my right training place as my little sissy wife to be, if you are serious, do you have Discord or Telegram? That is where I continue with my subs and claim them properly as my new property. Interesting reality one's aks for the right training attendance and dressd up properly whenever you provide the best and great useful obedience that you are under my Discipline service to become an expensive beautiful woman made up forever at my Sup, Dom platforms.
    Hello 👋 to you'll listen 👂 submited submissive male who's here interested and ready to become a truly great and useful sissy slut, sissy bitch, sissy girly, sissy property. Now this is an offer to the right interested reality one's As a great honest Dominant Discipline Mistress I would like to have you in my right training place as my little sissy wife to be, if you are serious, do you have Discord or Telegram? That is where I continue with my subs and claim them properly as my new property. Interesting reality one's aks for the right training attendance and dressd up properly whenever you provide the best and great useful obedience that you are under my Discipline service to become an expensive beautiful woman ♀️ made up forever at my Sup, Dom platforms. 🆔 👗🌈☯️🏳️‍🌈😈👣💅🐾🩱🩲👙👛👠💄👜👘👢🥿
    Love
    1
    0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 8K Views
  • Hello to you'll listen submited submissive male who's here interested and ready to become a truly great and useful sissy slut, sissy bitch, sissy girly, sissy property. Now this is an offer to the right interested reality one's As a great honest Dominant Discipline ******** I would like to have you in my right training place as my little sissy wife to be, if you are serious, do you have Discord or Telegram? That is where I continue with my subs and claim them properly as my new property. Interesting reality one's aks for the right training attendance and dressd up properly whenever you provide the best and great useful obedience that you are under my Discipline service to become an expensive beautiful woman made up forever at my Sup, Dom platforms.
    Hello 👋 to you'll listen 👂 submited submissive male who's here interested and ready to become a truly great and useful sissy slut, sissy bitch, sissy girly, sissy property. Now this is an offer to the right interested reality one's As a great honest Dominant Discipline Mistress I would like to have you in my right training place as my little sissy wife to be, if you are serious, do you have Discord or Telegram? That is where I continue with my subs and claim them properly as my new property. Interesting reality one's aks for the right training attendance and dressd up properly whenever you provide the best and great useful obedience that you are under my Discipline service to become an expensive beautiful woman ♀️ made up forever at my Sup, Dom platforms. 🆔 👗🌈☯️🏳️‍🌈😈👣💅🐾🩱🩲👙👛👠💄👜👘👢🥿
    0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 8K Views
  • Just to prove I can dance in heels (almost lol)
    Just to prove I can dance in heels (almost lol)
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    Haha
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    9
    1 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 3K Views 236
  • A little crossdressing tip I recently learned. If you want to show your legs but you don't want or can't shave them then simply first put on a pair or dance tights(got mine from eBay) then put some normal tights over the top. Legs look smooth and sexy
    A little crossdressing tip I recently learned. If you want to show your legs but you don't want or can't shave them then simply first put on a pair or dance tights(got mine from eBay) then put some normal tights over the top. Legs look smooth and sexy 👍
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    8
    6 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 5K Views
  • dance for you
    dance for you
    Love
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    16
    4 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 5K Views 860
  • #sexy #dance #twerk #trans #crossdresser#booty
    #sexy #dance #twerk #trans #crossdresser#booty
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    Like
    15
    5 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 7K Views 444
  • #blonde #booty #dance #trans #crossdresser
    #blonde #booty #dance #trans #crossdresser
    Love
    18
    3 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 6K Views
  • I love to dance and shake my butt with my sexy short skirts on like I'm at the club.
    I love to dance and shake my butt with my sexy short skirts on like I'm at the club.
    Love
    4
    1 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 6K Views
  • Went to Pride Festival at Sherborne today. Very good lots of entertainment. Lots of nice bodies around. Danced (well stand still hip swinging), had beer. Forgotvto take phone so will add photos from my mate soon
    Went to Pride Festival at Sherborne today. Very good lots of entertainment. Lots of nice bodies around. Danced (well stand still hip swinging), had beer. Forgotvto take phone so will add photos from my mate soon
    Love
    Like
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    5
    1 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 5K Views
  • I'm feeling pretty wild today in my pink little skirt. Want a sexy guy with a nice penis to make his penis dance in my face. Eventually the urge to grab it and kiss away on it would be too much for me
    I'm feeling pretty wild today in my pink little skirt. Want a sexy guy with a nice penis to make his penis dance in my face. Eventually the urge to grab it and kiss 💋 away on it would be too much for me
    0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 5K Views
  • I love to wear my skirts and dance to Justin Timberlake like I'm at the club
    I love to wear my skirts and dance to Justin Timberlake like I'm at the club
    Love
    1
    0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 3K Views
  • I love to dance to boy bands when I have my skirts on. I really am a girl inside. I want to cowgirl a hot sexy guy so bad
    I love to dance to boy bands when I have my skirts on. I really am a girl inside. I want to cowgirl a hot sexy guy so bad
    Love
    4
    0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 5K Views
  • I want to wear my sexiest party dress and go to a dance club with Bryan Hawn
    I want to wear my sexiest party dress and go to a dance club with Bryan Hawn
    Love
    2
    2 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 3K Views
  • #sexy #strip #tease # fun # dance #crossdresser
    #sexy #strip #tease # fun # dance #crossdresser
    Love
    Like
    24
    5 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 7K Views 572
  • #sexy #strip #tease # fun # dance #crossdresser
    #sexy #strip #tease # fun # dance #crossdresser
    Love
    Like
    19
    2 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 7K Views 494
  • #sexy #strip #tease # fun # dance #crossdresser
    #sexy #strip #tease # fun # dance #crossdresser
    Love
    Like
    12
    3 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 7K Views 428
  • I want to dress up like a sexy party slut and go to a dance club
    I want to dress up like a sexy party slut and go to a dance club 😁
    Love
    1
    2 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 3K Views
  • I've always had this reoccurring fantasy that I'm in a sexy dress watching Chippendales dancers at a party
    I've always had this reoccurring fantasy that I'm in a sexy dress watching Chippendales dancers at a party
    1 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 4K Views
  • White Dance
    White Dance
    Like
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    6
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  • Who would like to hook up with me and this here from ohio and this 27 years old or 49 who work in the bar as a dance ING or younger girls who will dating older men my ages on here who t s girl and a single mom or younger girl who wanted to be pregnant with a baby from me in side of them now
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