Brittany Home Alone [PORTABLE]
Futanari babe, Brittany is home alone with her toys and she needs someone to take care of her. Help Brittany reach the ultimate climax and watch her explosive cumshot in this next generation 3DX Game.
Brittany Home Alone
Some breeds bond very closely with their family and are more prone to worry or even panic when left alone by their owner. An anxious dog can be very destructive--barking, whining, chewing, and otherwise causing mayhem. These breeds do best when a family member is home during the day or if you can take the dog to work.
Some breeds are independent and aloof, even if they've been raised by the same person since puppyhood; others bond closely to one person and are indifferent to everyone else; and some shower the whole family with affection. Breed isn't the only factor that goes into affection levels; dogs who were raised inside a home with people around feel more comfortable with humans and bond more easily.
**All dogs are individuals. Our ratings are generalizations, and they're not a guarantee of how any breed or individual dog will behave. Dogs from any breed can be good with children based on their past experiences, training on how to get along with kids, and personality. No matter what the breed or breed type, all dogs have strong jaws, sharp pointy teeth, and may bite in stressful circumstances. Young children and dogs of any breed should always be supervised by an adult and never left alone together, period.
If you're going to share your home with a dog, you'll need to deal with some level of dog hair on your clothes and in your house. However, shedding does vary greatly among the breeds. Some dogs shed year-round, some "blow" seasonally, some do both, and some shed hardly at all. If you're a neatnik, you'll need to either pick a low-shedding breed or relax your standards. To help keep your home a little cleaner, you can find a great de-shedding tool here!
Dogs who were bred to hunt, such as Terriers, have an inborn desire to chase--and sometimes kill--other animals. Anything whizzing by, such as cats, squirrels, and perhaps even cars, can trigger that instinct. Dogs who like to chase need to be leashed or kept in a fenced area when outdoors, and you'll need a high, secure fence in your yard. These breeds generally aren't a good fit for homes with smaller pets that can look like prey, such as cats, hamsters, or small dogs. Breeds that were originally used for bird hunting, on the other hand, generally won't chase, but you'll probably have a hard time getting their attention when there are birds flying by.
A vigorous dog may or may not have high energy, but everything they do, they do with vigor: they strain on the leash (until you train them not to), try to plow through obstacles, and even eats and drinks with great big gulps. These dynamos need lots of training to learn good manners, and may not be the best fit for a home with young kids or someone who's elderly or frail. A low-vigor dog, on the other hand, has a more subdued approach to life.
All dogs like to have "work" to do, but Brittanys are especially task-oriented. You can't leave your Brittany home alone all day while you go to work and then expect him to be mellow and want to lie at your feet when you come home. Not going to happen with this dog! He will have a day's worth of energy and affection pent up, and he'll be bursting at the seams to expend both. Brittanys require an hour or more of exuberant exercise every day, which makes them unsuitable for most apartment dwellers.
The Brittany takes his name from the Celtic area of northwest France that was once an independent kingdom. Brittany lies just across the English Channel from Wales, and for well over a thousand years there was a great deal of commerce between the two countries, with dogs surely being a part of that trade. It's easy to see by their coloring alone as well as other physical characteristics that the Brittany and the Welsh Springer Spaniel probably had common ancestors.
Although an office environment can often be distracting with people taking phone calls or typing on their computers, I have found working from home can be just as distracting. From house chores, cooking, washing and the endless delivery drivers pulling up to my 36-block apartment building.
I work in a casino, and I know many parents who are forced to forgo a necessary wage to stay home and care for their children, because the money they'd make wouldn't cover the cost of child care. In the case of single parents who have no choice but to work, they often have to leave their kids at lower-quality and unlicensed facilities - or in extreme cases, home alone.
A co-worker of mine recently experienced this dilemma. Newly separated, she was unable to find affordable child care to cover her weekend shifts as a casino cocktail server. Turns out, she wasn't alone: Other co-workers offered her their empathy and advice, sharing similar experiences; even our bartender joined in, expressing his own challenges in finding a quality place to take his daughter. In the end, she did what many parents do in the choice between work and family: She took the pay cut and stayed home, a result beneficial to neither her family nor her employer.
Easily the book I gift most often (besides my own!) to people starting out on the spiritual path because Gabby has a way of making you think anything is possible when you trust the Universe. Her personal stories are compelling without being cliche, her voice is no-nonsense, and the guidance she offers is both practical and immediate. You will underline and dog ear the sh*t out of this book, and return to those passages again and again when you need a reminder that you are not alone and the Universe does, indeed, have your back.
Britanny: You know, we had fun with it too. We just flew home, didn't tell anyone, and surprised everybody. And it was a lot of fun. And we recorded most of those reactions, which is awesome. I was able to put it together into a video and I have like this nice compilation of all the surprise reactions. I love that I have that and I'll be able to share that with Ro when he gets older.
Gabrielle: Britanny's question was so valid. Why was her experience with the OBGYNs so different than the short call with the midwife? Coming into NATAL, I had very little knowledge about this larger birth worker community. Let alone midwives. Certainly I had heard of them, but I didn't really know what they did and why they mattered.
Gabrielle: Demetra is a Black woman, wife, and mother of four. She's also a certified professional midwife in her hometown of Colorado Springs. There, she runs A Mother's Choice Midwifery, a private practice.
Demetra: A good amount of the work that I do is for folks who are seeking a home birth. However, the practice itself offers two types of service. So, um, home birth is one, uh, but the other is our prenatal open-access. And the prenatal open access was created solely based on the voices of the community. For folks who were looking for a perinatal care provider, who was of color, or specifically a Black person, um, but fearful to have their babies in the home and wanting to still have that hospital birth experience, but recognizing how important it is to have a provider who looks like them, who can meet them, where they are to have an environment in which they don't need to code switch. And so that's what the prenatal open access is.
And she did give a recommendation for another midwife because of the birth goal that I had, and the midwife that she was recommending previously owned her own practice. And she also had, she had water births at home with her kids. And so I'm like, okay, well she has, you know, an experience similar to what I'm looking for, more on the, unmedicated, less intervention side.
Now, I still have something to tell you about St. Nicholas: I received a very good letter from Etten, and enclosed was some money for a pair of gloves. As I still have a pair, I bought something else with it, another map by Stieler, of Scotland alone. At present I can get them separately at Seyffardt's, but probably I shall not always have such an opportunity. I have copied the map, so I have a duplicate, and as I wished to give a Christmas present to Harry Gladwell, I hope to send it to you so you can enclose it for him in the first box that goes to Paris. One must build the house on a rock; Scotland, Normandy and Brittany are rather rocky, as you will see if you look at that big map of Scotland when you get it. When I compare my studies to the building of a house, with these months as the foundation of it, then these rocks are the base. 041b061a72