Seems like the females can’t survive without some drama in their lives. Sorry to the good faithful guys. [ATTACH=full]131271[/ATTACH]
Kwa sababu ya kuzoeana ama?
women stick to bad guys…those who appear to walk out any minute for better options
As long as a man has a woman, and he actually cares about her overtly or otherwise, he’ll always be attractive to many females(whether you as his woman notice or not)… Then someone goes and plays themselves by posting such shit…
I’ve heard one of those comments from a girl i knew. She told me she can never date a guy who’s not a player; she wants to be the one the player loves the most.
Pre-selection.
damn bitches!, alafu akiwa 35yrs ndiye huyo analia that there are no men!
lol
You cant trust anything a lady says. They cant be trusted, let alone know what they want. I work with mamas who are married but act like they down for whatever, when y’all flirting and shit.
You dont have to be a playa, just be a man. No apologies, no being mushy and shit. Unakuwa mtough and mysterious tu. Like a Ghost. Hatakuelewa, asipokuelewa she is hooked because women love that thrill of trying to figure you out. Its like a fetish.
Being a playa is too extreme. Just be interesting and dont give a fuck. Works like a charm
Pewa.Mbili.Baridi!
Effing gold!
If you’re that dude…‘playing’ is open to interpretation. At that point the women play themselves:D
That playa persona doesn’t work on older, mature ladies, maybe slay queens. Being a sweet and kind gentleman means everything. It’s so refreshing to be in a relationship that works, no drama, no lying or cheating just trust, communication and commitment built on a foundation of best friendship.
why would a lioness mate with a gazelle? we swim out into the ocean with a strap-on in our jaws, find a 70foot shark and fvck its blowhole!
I beg to differ a bit on this one. What you’re talking about is the tv romance which african men are not ‘conditioned’ to. I’d rather use the words ‘considerate’ badala ya ‘sweet’.
Those flowery adjectives wachia telenovela na akina alejandro.
yaani ulianguka hivi,fat bitch
On a light note, back in the day, a local relationship columnist once remarked that only one man should have been described as ‘sweet’: the late Mandiba.
Is it ok to call an African-man ‘sweetheart’ or those words should never appear in the same sentence?
:D:D:D:D:D Describing him as ‘sweet’ is another ballgame altogether!
Sweet sounds condescending.