Anyone have any experience with this one.
Reached out replied then stated being very ghostly in conversation. Then replies when I say I guess I'll keep looking. Then again hit and miss on Convo. Jumped back into the game after being out for a gd few years. Man things have changed. I miss Lesley's girls in Madison heights she had some hotties and great service. I swear I message 30 girls before I get replies or replies hours later. How these girls survive is beyond me. I'm not naive its prob the drugs get 50 bucks and get a fix and when they wake up then try find someone. Trying myself to find a reliable regular that gives excellent head. Back a few years ago I found it easily with hot women. Not so much these days. And I'm just shy of 40. Used erotic monkey when it was gd and had a high rep heard that site isn't gd anymore either.
Hotel Hallway vs Exterior Room Doors
[QUOTE=RemoMask;6919153]I been to hotels, one time it was easy as the rooms were walkable without going to front door. Last time I had to walk through front door.
Do you tell room you would be visiting if the front door guys asked you?
Some of those setup don't have the provider with English skills and they won't come to open side doors.[/QUOTE]Your wording is not clear, but I'm guessing that you are asking if there is any risk going to hotels where you have to enter each room from an interior hallway (opposed to entering each room from the outside).
I was never stopped by the front desk (or anyone else), but I did have the same concern when I started doing this. What I used to do was walk right past the front desk, with an empty laptop bag slung over my shoulder, and pretending to be talking on my cellphone. I figured that would prevent them from stopping me.
I haven't bothered doing that for several years. I think it's more important to confidently walk in "like I belong there" and know where I'm going. If it's an unfamiliar hotel, ask the girl how to get to her room after walking past the front desk.
Hotels with interior hallway entrances are usually nicer places, so I tend to dress a little nicer to not look out of place.
Years ago, there was a discussion about the pros and cons of each type of hotel. One interesting comment that I remember was that interior hallway entrances are less likely to have LEO issues, because surveillance is a lot more difficult than monitoring the room door from the outside parking lot. I have no clue if that's true, but it sounds logical.