It matters, yes, but you gotta have the skill to back it up
I've been with both sides of the spectrum, but it's really all about the man and who he is and how you feel about him, etc.
:-)
2006-07-03 07:41:29
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answer #1
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answered by Nonna 3
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I was interested in the issue of Does Size Matter in regards to my own consulting practice. Many of the issues that bedeviled me then still persist.
I started my business 5 years ago (it's roughly 5 years to the day, today, in fact). Starting a solo practice seemed like a necessity (short of temp work) in a really brutal economy, with almost no severance, and a mortgage. It was never the path I had planned for myself, but it was a path I pursued when the situation presented itself. For me, it was the path of least resistance. There are choices we make when we don't think we have choices, and that was my approach.
Five years have seen tremendous progress in methodological skill, relationships, networking, brand, and all that good stuff.
But there's more than this. What is it? How do I get there? What do they have over at a larger firm (be it 3, 30, or 300 people?) that I don't got. And how do I get it? I can feel the need to change, evolve, and grow, in order to keep doing new and great work.
I've made some changes. For one, I have changed the language I use to talk about the business. I have tended to conflate myself and my business, and that's freelancer thinking. Over the past year I have talked about Portigal Consulting as the entity I started, and it frees up some pronoun space to talk more accurately about the collaborators (past and potential) that comprise the larger sense of the practice. I've rewritten copy on my website and in bios at conferences and in proposals, and that has changed the conversation I've had with others about what I do.
I certainly work more with partners on projects than in the early days.
I focus less on subcontracting to other agencies where there's no investment in my business and my client relationships.
I've pondered endlessly about the projects that have come my way that were not necessarily what I've expected to be doing but am thrilled to have the opportunity to contribute to.
I've mused over the seemingly good-fit typical projects that have gone to larger "vendors" and what that could mean.
2006-07-03 07:52:56
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answer #2
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answered by maltese 3
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I'm a lesbian and yes, size does matter. Mine is nice and big, and my fiancee loves it!~
Wmen do not have many nerves in the actual walls of the vagina. most are on he rim and in the back. There is a very sensitive spot (and elusive for some, apparently) in and up. Something small and short has more trouble reaching it. My advice- if yours is small practice with that mouth! get your tounge in shape!
2006-07-10 07:34:18
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answer #3
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answered by lilli b 3
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Yeah it is one of the things that matter. There are others that matter just as much. The problem with extremly well endowed men is they forget that it takes more than size. Try something to please a women penis size doesn't cover it but itsy bitsy teeny weenies need a lot of help.
2006-07-03 08:31:19
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answer #4
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answered by Suesan W 4
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After 4 marriages I got it right this time and yes it DOES matter. But so does technique. They both go hand in hand-no pun intended.
How can you hit the G- Spot if your little thingy cant reach it..
2006-07-03 11:26:35
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answer #5
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answered by ceaceagogo 3
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Not particularly. Too big can actually be uncomfortable and even hurt. Especially if it hits on the edge of the cervix. And the walls of the vagina can stretch only so far and not hurt.
2006-07-09 10:52:58
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answer #6
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answered by Garfield 6
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malstese is a bummer she got no sense of proportion man thtas business not about size and it doesnt matter but women lie about it they like to be challenged but if it hurts everytime they find a new one
2006-07-03 08:15:16
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Its not the size of the boat but the motion of the ocean ;)
Seriously, its all about skill.
2006-07-03 10:23:09
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answer #8
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answered by Jennipoo! 2
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To a degree. My ex was like 3 inches at best and was useless. Fiance is much bigger and loads better :D
2006-07-03 08:42:43
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answer #9
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answered by Sarah G 3
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you know i really wouldn't want to be with someone i couldn't feel...ya know? what would be the pleasure in that? but if you were someone who waited to have sex until you got married and he was small your stuck, at least until the divorce is final
2006-07-08 20:34:01
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answer #10
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answered by tiffani h 3
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