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We started a project to improve sexual health literacy in Singapore. Good or bad, we'd love your opinion!

micromachine

Lieutenant General
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We are a team of 4 who started a website, Shy (https://www.shy.sg/), to educate Singaporean youths on the topic of sexual health. Sex is still a topic that is seen as a taboo in our conservative society and "abstinence is key" is the slogan of our formal sexual education.

We want to change that by being a one-stop platform for localised information people need for sexual health and wellness. We make learning about sex more informative and comprehensive with actionable measure to take.

Shy hopes to encourages more people to join the conversation about sex and raise awareness about the importance of sexual health!

Let me know what you think!

 
Bro, blog is so old school. You must do more Instagram or vlog sex demos to get traffic lah. :thumbsup:
 
They provide special services and happy ending?
 
Just don't normalize or humanize the LGBT stuff in your campaign to 'raise awareness', okay?
 
Get Ginfreely as conslutant, she will bring you to the moon.
 
reddit is ok but not very popular with sinkies, same goes for twitter. you should try facebook, youtube, instagram, and whatsapp.
 
Well, try writing a book ...

Writing my mother's sex scenes

Rumor has it that the best day of a writer’s life is when you get to go home and tell your parents that you’ve sold your book, that it will be in stores for the world to see.
Or I assume that is true, for debut authors who did not call their first book “Good in Bed.”
The year was 1999. I was 29, a newspaper reporter quietly working on a novel. I didn’t tell my friends or colleagues, in case I never finished. But I did tell my mother, Fran. She was not impressed.
“How is your novel?” she would ask, giving the word a breathy pronunciation that evoked a Southern belle suffering an attack of the vapors. It was a happy day indeed when I went home and said: “Remember my novel? Well, an imprint of Simon & Schuster has acquired it in a two-book deal! And foreign rights have been sold in 15 countries, and HBO bought the film rights!”
Fran’s mouth fell open. Her eyes filled with tears. “I’m so proud of you!” she said as she hugged me. For a moment, all was right in the world.

“What’s it called?” she asked.

Um. “‘Good in Bed’?” I said.

Fran’s expression became horrified. “Jenny,” she cried, “how much research did you do?”

The answer was: not a lot. Like many first-timers, I pulled from the raw material of my own life. So “Good in Bed” became the story of Cannie Shapiro, a plus-size female Jewish journalist not-too-loosely based on me. Cannie’s mother, Ann, was not-too-loosely based on Fran, who in her mid-50s, after a long marriage, four kids and a divorce, had fallen in love with a much younger woman.

I handed over the manuscript, sat down and waited for my mom to encounter the parts about her fictional doppelgänger’s new partner smelling like an ashtray and possessing a tongue like an anteater, bracing for her shouts of “Jenny, goddamn it!” when she hit an especially explicit bit.
 
No peekture no videos. Expect us to read a turd of info ?
 
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