- No. - We get around 48" per year. I love this shit. - I wish I got 48" every year 😔 - Or at least like 2", once - … that’s what she said… - I’m so sorry. - That was the intention, haha - I overthought this and wondered if a 48" thing can really go all the way in, but I was surprised to know that “The average erect penis is longer than the average vagina. ” and that it’s not really possible to ‘break through’ the cervix and go further. - Even ignoring girth, it’d probably be very painful for her (without training, I suppose) if someone just rams their 40" into her. - I mean even if it was 48" in total yearly, that’d be 8 6-inchers or 9 5-inchers. I’d be fine with that :p - And I forgot that large loads can go by the back entrance. XD - It’s probably has enough to accommodate 48" (with enough training), or even more. 
 
 
 
 
- 2 inchers that last one thrust are very easy to find on lemmy 
 
 
- No, a green Christmas would be extremely concerning - Shrek disagrees 
 
- If it’s not snowing, it’s still not green. It’s just grey. Grey is worse because at least the snow is pretty. - Snow becomes pretty ugly pretty quick, at least in cities. - Grey christmas it is, every year. - I figured it was more about fresh snow. :) fresh snow in the city is at least white, and pretty in a … Chaotic sense. 
 
 
- I live in a northern country with cold winters. The alternative to “white Christmas” is really an icy or wet Christmas. Green would not even cross my mind. - And certainly I prefer snow over sleet or black ice on the roads. - i mean, australia we have summer christmas and it’s kinda amazing… new years and christmas parties and festivals outside are amazing 
 
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- Depends on the person. It sometimes gets into the negative double digits F where I live. Its forecasted to snow around Christmas and I’m hyped as fuck. - I used to live further North and I miss the snow. We still get some here, but it typically melts off within a week or two. 
 
- No. Give me snow. Give me snow year round. 
- I live in the north of Sweden. I always hope for a white Christmas. If there’s no snow, it’s so dark, and gloomy. A few hours of sunlight in a day. No snow usually means it’s cold enough for rain and a little bit of snow, but also warm enough to melt it to turn it into slush. - So definitely, we always hope for a crisp, snowy Christmas. Every year. More opportunities for outdoor activities then, too. 
- I spent Christmas one time in Australia. It was surreal. I don’t think I’d ever get used to that, so, not me. - I often wonder if people who live in Australia feel a similar way considering how Christmas time is typically depicted. - Aussie here, to me xmas = summer time. Xmas movies always felt irrelevant, and the idea of Santa wearing all his gear is mental when it’s often 40C+ and humid af. - Being cold would feel alien that time of year, even more so if it snowed because that doesn’t happen in 99% of the country regardless of the time of year. - Lol yup, total opposite! Plus the prevalence of North American/Hollywood movies/shows usually depict snowy Christmas. 
- also i’ve told some US friends about my new years plans: outdoors, festival, parties kinda thing… they’re blown away by how amazing it sounds for this particular period - Yeah. Sitting by the pool in 25c watching the kids have a swim - I did spend 10 years in northern England from 2000 and a cold possibly white Christmas took ages to get used to - actually the closest thing i think we could probably say to americans is: our christmas is like 4th of july… but it’s the whole christmas and new years… we get 4th of july holiday for a whole month or more 
 
 
 
 
 
- Never. Christmas time should be cold af, dark for most if not all of the day, and in deep snow. 
- No way. Keep your heat, I’ll be snowboarding. 
- Im not in a “cold” climate, but its the pacific northwest. It gets chilly this time of year. People still dream of white Christmases. Its the idealized Christmas. - I’m surrounded by pine trees, blackberry bushes, and ivy. Christmas looks pretty green to me! 
 
- Nope. Who doesn’t love the idea of a winter wonderland Christmas? 
- We can like snow in December. Hate it until next december. We will have brown Christmases some years, and there is a sense of disappointment over it. - Last year I had the all you can eat mexican buffet on Christmas eve. I ended up having a “brown Christmas.” 
 
- We live in cold climates because we like cold climates. 😉 - This; it’s only 3 months out of the year (well, at least the snow) and I like that there’s variety in my year. - Being an adult also means I get to choose when I go out, now, so the cold/snow bothers me even less. - But, like you said, I also live here because I like snow. - Yup. Though I do understand many people can’t afford to move, most that I know wouldn’t want to even if they could. 
 
 











