- Joined
- Apr 19, 2010
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- 58
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My first at an AMP: I lived in San Francisco in my 20s and would see signs all over the place for massage parlors. This was in the 1980s and a lot of the signs had a psychedelic look to them as though the places had been around since the 60s. What I discovered is that all of these places were rip-offs--the masseuses would keep stopping and they or their managers would come in and ask for additional tips and nothing would ever happen (I suspect a lot of these places are gone now, victims of boards such as this that expose such places).
Anyway, I visited a more out-of-the way Asian place on a dingier street with a very discreet sign and got a hr that really rocked my world. I visited a few other places and had what I thought was a bright idea: I'd ask the masseuse to take her clothes off and let me kiss and caress her during the hr. And they agreed! I felt like Edison and the lightbulb-I actually thought I invented this particular variation on the sensual massage. But when I moved to NYC a year or so later, I discovered my invention had already been discovered by others.
By the way, when I first moved here--this was in '83--there were a lot of places staffed by college-age American girls that advertised in New York Magazine and elsewhere (there was a great one in the heart of the West Village). In typical NYC fashion, they've been pretty much completely replaced by AMPs and RMPs the way Jewish delis were replaced by bodegas and then by Korean delis.
Anyway, I visited a more out-of-the way Asian place on a dingier street with a very discreet sign and got a hr that really rocked my world. I visited a few other places and had what I thought was a bright idea: I'd ask the masseuse to take her clothes off and let me kiss and caress her during the hr. And they agreed! I felt like Edison and the lightbulb-I actually thought I invented this particular variation on the sensual massage. But when I moved to NYC a year or so later, I discovered my invention had already been discovered by others.
By the way, when I first moved here--this was in '83--there were a lot of places staffed by college-age American girls that advertised in New York Magazine and elsewhere (there was a great one in the heart of the West Village). In typical NYC fashion, they've been pretty much completely replaced by AMPs and RMPs the way Jewish delis were replaced by bodegas and then by Korean delis.