Jump to content
THIS IS A TEST/QA SITE

To Escorts: So far, what has been your best experience with a client?


Cannon
This topic is 2645 days old and is no longer open for new replies.  Replies are automatically disabled after two years of inactivity.  Please create a new topic instead of posting here.  

Recommended Posts

  • Replies 30
  • Created
  • Last Reply
I saw a thread here that talked about the worst experiences so..... I thought it'd be great to uplift a little bit and share our best experiences with a client.

 

I would be very curious about yours, but in order to have your best client experience you still need to meet me.

 

http://33.media.tumblr.com/a460559189b03ea976fd6da13ae33538/tumblr_n7cxc7XPZd1smcbm7o1_500.gif

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I recently met with a guy who sent me a longer email detailing who he was and what he was interested in - which is always so great. While the blind date aspect of escorting can be hot - already having a sense of who he was meant that when we first set eyes on each other it felt like a lot of the getting to know you jitters had been gotten out of the way. We had dinner, he was extremely warm and open about his life and interested in mine. We held hands under the table and definitely looked to the waitstaff like love struck teenagers.

 

When he took me home I just wanted to devour his body but, he took me by surprise and controlled the situation - eating me out until I was shaking then he made me ride him whispering about how he owned my hole. I came too many times to count and while he was dominant and made me go above and beyond to please I always felt like if I needed I could break scene and he would totally respect that because he'd shown so much interest in me as a person before turning me into his hole. It was not only one of my best dates as an escort, it was one of my best dates period.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I tried escorting. For one week.

 

I ran an ad using this picture 74b0d8c6e3798eeb7dbce8dbea77e836.jpg

 

This is my real pictureorc.gif

 

Every guy cancelled immediately after meeting me. And paid me anyway, because they didnt want to be confrontational!

 

Easy Money! Best Experiences!

 

:D:rolleyes::D:rolleyes:;):rolleyes::p:D;);):)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I recently met with a guy who sent me a longer email detailing who he was and what he was interested in - which is always so great. While the blind date aspect of escorting can be hot - already having a sense of who he was meant that when we first set eyes on each other it felt like a lot of the getting to know you jitters had been gotten out of the way. We had dinner, he was extremely warm and open about his life and interested in mine. We held hands under the table and definitely looked to the waitstaff like love struck teenagers.

 

When he took me home I just wanted to devour his body but, he took me by surprise and controlled the situation - eating me out until I was shaking then he made me ride him whispering about how he owned my hole. I came too many times to count and while he was dominant and made me go above and beyond to please I always felt like if I needed I could break scene and he would totally respect that because he'd shown so much interest in me as a person before turning me into his hole. It was not only one of my best dates as an escort, it was one of my best dates period.

 

giphy.gif

 

"That was fucking hot Cyd"...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I would be very curious about yours, but in order to have your best client experience you still need to meet me.

 

http://33.media.tumblr.com/a460559189b03ea976fd6da13ae33538/tumblr_n7cxc7XPZd1smcbm7o1_500.gif

;-) You are such a flirt!.....It's charming! I love it!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I didn't grow up with a father figure or a strong male role model. The guys who would have been my role models were dying in the 80s, so by the mid 90s, the few that were left were grieving, exhausted, and faced with still more struggle. I didn't have any personal connections with other gay men.

 

I wouldn't say I have daddy issues, but I have spent a great deal of my life looking for men that I could admire - not sexually, or maybe sexually, but admire for who they were, what kind of people they were. I've fallen a little bit in love with my friends and boyfriends dads and listened enviously when they would talk about things they did growing up.

 

Now, I'm 39, and I see these guys who are younger than I am and I see them growing up in a totally different world and I want to be the role model for them. I don't want to know that there was a gay kid somewhere in my life who didn't get the message from me that I am here, that I am strong, and that I will support them. They call me big bro and dad and I love it.

 

I've got a whole big gay family now - my friends and lovers, my daddies, my brothers, my sons. I've built this web of people in my life because I couldn't stand the idea of not connecting to my community.

 

My best encounter with a client has not been with a particular client, but rather a group of clients - namely, the men who are 10+ years older than I am. They are surviovors and fighters and laughers and criers, and no matter what their journey is, what their gay life has been like, when they came out - no matter what, they are my connection. They are my connection to my history as an American, as a descendant of immigrants from Syria, as a gay man. I've rarely shared it out loud, but I've got an incredible amount of gratitude and love for the men who came before me, who led the way, who lit the lights, who fought the battles and now, are the men who choose me to spend some time with them. I feel connected and less alone in the world.

 

One time, I shared my feelings with a client as I was getting ready to leave. His tears came mid-way through what I was saying and by the end, I was in tears, too. We hugged for a long time, and though I have never seen him again, I will never forget the experience. I'll never forget how connected I felt, hugging him.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I didn't grow up with a father figure or a strong male role model. The guys who would have been my role models were dying in the 80s, so by the mid 90s, the few that were left were grieving, exhausted, and faced with still more struggle. I didn't have any personal connections with other gay men.

 

I wouldn't say I have daddy issues, but I have spent a great deal of my life looking for men that I could admire - not sexually, or maybe sexually, but admire for who they were, what kind of people they were. I've fallen a little bit in love with my friends and boyfriends dads and listened enviously when they would talk about things they did growing up.

 

Now, I'm 39, and I see these guys who are younger than I am and I see them growing up in a totally different world and I want to be the role model for them. I don't want to know that there was a gay kid somewhere in my life who didn't get the message from me that I am here, that I am strong, and that I will support them. They call me big bro and dad and I love it.

 

I've got a whole big gay family now - my friends and lovers, my daddies, my brothers, my sons. I've built this web of people in my life because I couldn't stand the idea of not connecting to my community.

 

My best encounter with a client has not been with a particular client, but rather a group of clients - namely, the men who are 10+ years older than I am. They are surviovors and fighters and laughers and criers, and no matter what their journey is, what their gay life has been like, when they came out - no matter what, they are my connection. They are my connection to my history as an American, as a descendant of immigrants from Syria, as a gay man. I've rarely shared it out loud, but I've got an incredible amount of gratitude and love for the men who came before me, who led the way, who lit the lights, who fought the battles and now, are the men who choose me to spend some time with them. I feel connected and less alone in the world.

 

One time, I shared my feelings with a client as I was getting ready to leave. His tears came mid-way through what I was saying and by the end, I was in tears, too. We hugged for a long time, and though I have never seen him again, I will never forget the experience. I'll never forget how connected I felt, hugging him.

This is really neat... a wonderful experience! Thank you for sharing. :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

....

 

Now, I'm 39, and I see these guys who are younger than I am and I see them growing up in a totally different world and I want to be the role model for them. I don't want to know that there was a gay kid somewhere in my life who didn't get the message from me that I am here, that I am strong, and that I will support them. They call me big bro and dad and I love it.

 

I've got a whole big gay family now - my friends and lovers, my daddies, my brothers, my sons. I've built this web of people in my life because I couldn't stand the idea of not connecting to my community.

 

....

That does my heart good to hear your approach towards younger gay men. I have only met one or two older gay men whose only motive was to look out for me, and share a bit of wisdom. I knew they were my friends. Most people don't take time for that.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Eric Hassan - us older guys certainly did the hard work - and we are still fighting it. Today in Australia we are still fighting for Marriage Equality, with social media there is so much opportunity to challenge the so called haters - so we are still fighting.

 

I have a nephew in law and a neice in law who are gay and they have a much easier road of it that we ever did, also some friends who are 25 years young than me, and I have always had the feeling that if I leave the world a better place than when i entered it - I have lived my life well. So yes its better -but we still have work to go.

 

 

Appreicate you taking the time to put it into words

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Eric Hassan - us older guys certainly did the hard work - and we are still fighting it. Today in Australia we are still fighting for Marriage Equality, with social media there is so much opportunity to challenge the so called haters - so we are still fighting.

 

I have a nephew in law and a neice in law who are gay and they have a much easier road of it that we ever did, also some friends who are 25 years young than me, and I have always had the feeling that if I leave the world a better place than when i entered it - I have lived my life well. So yes its better -but we still have work to go.

 

 

Appreicate you taking the time to put it into words

And let's not forget the younger generations who "get it" and also are doing the hard work themselves.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.

×
×
  • Create New...