Dex was the quiet type. People who didn’t know him thought he was shy, but in reality, he was the leader of our group. He took on the role of the Man of the House that nobody wanted. Leon knew Dex could make him feel safe, comfortable, and pampered. Dex pretended he didn’t know about Leon’s dirty little secret: he liked dressing in and playing with his wife’s undergarments. Leon had to be very careful not to let anyone find out. If they did, his whole reputation would be ruined! Little did Leon know that Dex had his own plan for him. The feminine undergarments weren’t left out in the open for no reason. But would he really have the courage to completely feminize his not-so-innocent friend?
The forced transformation from 18-year-old boy to 16-year-old schoolgirl is humiliating, with his younger step-sister leading his incremental yet unsuspeccted feminization. But does some darker plan lie behind it all? Has his step-father engineered the whole thing? With no sex till the very end, this story explores themes of Daddy Dom, discipline, spanking, slow transformation, hormones, yoga outfits, makeovers, slight age regression, school uniforms, and loss of power and identity.
Are we living in a "post-father" era? This book is a wake-up call to men and women, challenging them to understand the crisis of fatherlessness in the world and to examine its impact on our culture and in individual lives. The author also identifies the different types of father wounds, the specific scars that men and women carry, and provides personal steps for healing and experiencing God's Father Love. As a generation, one of the biggest issues we face is fatherlessness. We have a generation of boys, raised by women, who don't know how to be a man, husband, or father; and a generation of girls raised without the protection, affirmation, or wholesome affection of a father. In this book, Waylon Ward tackles these tough issues head on. Dr. John A. King Best-selling author of It's a Guy Thing: Helping Guys Become Men, Husbands, and Fathers Waylon Ward is an experienced pastoral counselor and life coach who has focused on healing the wounds of father deprivation for more than 30 years. From his own childhood and the life experiences of thousands of people he has counseled, he has learned how to enable individuals to find healing from these wounds by coming home to the loving heart of God the Father. Waylon and his wife, Lynn, founded Mercy Matters, a ministry of counseling, teaching and restoration. The Global Fathering Initiative (GFI) was created in 2008 to address the fathering crisis in our world and to provide healing for wounded men, women and children. Waylon is also the author of The Bible in Counseling and Sex Matters.
All three bestselling books together in one intensely erotic tale of taboo feminisationPart One: Francis is a nineteen year old college boy whose father has left both him and his stepmom for another life. When one day his stepmom returns home to catch him in an embarrassing situation, a misunderstanding ensues that will set him on a path he could never have imagined. Part Two: Francis' first day at college as a girl arrives and his new found sexuality is soon put to the test. As a boy he went through life almost unnoticed, as a girl he is learning what life is like when others desire you in the most intimate of ways. Part Three: Francis' feminisation continues down a road that he could scarcely have believed possible. His new found confidence as a girl drives him on to experiment even further with his blossoming girlhood, leading toward an explosive climax in this intensely erotic tale of male feminisation.Follow Francis as he experiences feelings that he never knew he had at the hands of his beautiful stepmom. A woman that is more than willing to turn him into the young girl of her dreams. The explosive finale sees his swiftly disappearing boyhood overtaken by a new ultra-feminine existence, and there's one final twist in his tale that will cement his new life as a girl beyond any doubt. There really is no turning back now!This erotic story contains explicit sexual content and is strictly suitable for adults on
Upon hearing the news that his father has gone to jail, a six-year-old boy poses the question of this generation: Whos going to take my Dads place? The Daddy Gap takes an uncensored look at the distress so many fatherless families are in and provides desperately needed answers about how God responds to this question and how the Church should as well. Dawn Walker and Matt Haviland build a compelling case that not only are single parent families the widows and orphans of this generation, but that it is the Church, not the government, that should be responsible to care for them. Drawing from their own journeys as single parents, Dawn and Matt give heartfelt encouragement to these often marginalized families by sharing how God really sees them, loves them, and wants to heal and restore them. Full of rich insights and lavish grace, they also offer some hard truths about what redemption and restoration really require. Most importantly, they clear a path to help all wounded sons and daughters discover the Father theyve always wanted and who has always wanted them.
Reflecting on her own working class roots and taking us into the homes and the confidence of working class girls today, Valerie Walkerdine raises troubling questions about television and parental control, about Freud's seduction theory, and the manipulation of little girls and their thoughts and feelings about themselves and their "place" in their world.
Edward Albee, perhaps best known for his acclaimed and infamous 1960s drama Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, is one of America's greatest living playwrights. Now in his seventies, he is still writing challenging, award-winning dramas. This collection of essays on Albee, which includes contributions from the leading commentators on Albee's work, brings fresh critical insights to bear by exploring the full scope of the playwright's career, from his 1959 breakthrough with The Zoo Story to his recent Broadway success, The Goat, or Who is Sylvia? (2002). The contributors include scholars of both theatre and English literature, and the essays thus consider the plays both as literary texts and as performed drama. The collection considers a number of Albee's lesser-known and neglected works, provides a comprehensive introduction and overview, and includes an exclusive, original interview with Mr Albee, on topics spanning his whole career.
A midnight phone call from parents in Virginia to Germany alerts a military man that his four-year-old son, their grandson, has been driven from California and abandoned by his mother. The military man sensed that his marriage has broken down files for divorce and custody only to be told that he cannot get custody of his son because of his military service and that his son has to be torn from his grandparents and returned to the mother who abandoned him. Twelve years later, after a twenty-year military commitment, that military man files for custody again this time in Mississippi from Alaska where he is disrespected and abused financially by a court system that favors custody to go to the mother despite of many shortcomings by that mother. After winning custody the military man discovers that planted in the mind of his son is one last mental entanglement designed to deny him a lasting relationship with his father.
In Soul Babies, Mark Anthony Neal explains the complexities and contradictions of black life and culture after the end of the Civil Rights era. He traces the emergence of what he calls a "post-soul aesthetic," a transformation of values that marked a profound change in African American thought and experience. Lively and provocative, Soul Babies offers a valuable new way of thinking about black popular culture and the legacy of the sixties.
Every person is born with a deep longing for a father. Being Dad deals with the way fathers, and the subject of biblical fatherhood, are treated in modern culture. Dr. Keith brings his experience with family, students, great mentors, and friends to bear on a subject that is crying out for attention. Equally, he brings his Christian faith, a scholarly eye for detail, and an ear for story along on the journey and works with the reader to navigate a path to a better country where the Father blesses His children and is honored. Forgiven fathers are a gift from God, for they have the gospel to proclaim to their families. This approach leads to gracious fathers that can now display a shadow of the love of their Heavenly Father so that children may be drawn into saving faith.