Let me cut to the chase: getting a fuzoku worker's LINE — the cautions, the techniques, and the keys to keeping in touch.
I'll walk you through it step by step.
My experience and this topic
From my twenties into my forties, I've walked this world the whole way. Over that stretch, this is a question I've had to face again and again.
ElonAs for what the girls really think, I once got to hear it straight from a friend who used to work as a cast member. "The customer I'm most grateful for is the one who looks like he's genuinely enjoying himself." "Haggling over price is the worst." Obvious stuff, but hearing it put into words hits hard.
Points worth knowing
- Nail the fundamentals first — the advanced stuff only stands on top of the basics
- Stacking up real experience is the best teacher — reading alone won't make it stick
- Find a shop you can trust — to cut down on wasted time agonizing
Elon42, single, living alone. When nearly your entire paycheck disappears into fuzoku, you naturally develop an eye for the real thing. That's not a brag and it's not a regret — I'm just putting it down as fact.
The option I'm pushing right now
ElonAfter phimosis surgery and a pearl implant, I now carry a "fully prepared" kind of confidence. My range in the room widened, sure, but the psychological ease is on another level. To anyone agonizing over getting work done: do it, no regrets.
Bottom line, I recommend paying First Class Ruby a visit. The service quality, the ease of booking, and the overall polish are reliably solid.