yes they do because when your in a relationship with someone that's just like you its easier for the other to know what they want you don't have to guess or think hard about it and they get along way better you just have to make sure your the right 1 for that other lesbian.
get two girl sims work up the relationship then you can kiss and woohoo
A fem is the stereotypical girl (acts like the girl and dresses like the girl), just like in a heterosexual relationship there is a girl and a boy, often lesbian relationships work out this way too.
it does just maybe better on others
Try and explain to your parents that you are straight and you just don't want kids. If it doesn't work, just shrug and say, "Okay, believe what you want. I know how I feel better than you do. And I still love you."
No, Toni Morrison did not deny "Sula" as a lesbian text. While she did not explicitly label the relationship between the characters Sula and Nel as a lesbian one, she acknowledged that their bond was deep and complex. Morrison valued readers' interpretations of her work and embraced diverse readings of her characters and their relationships.
In case the relationship doesn't work, you won't know much about them to brag about to your friends. Ladies have secrets and when the relationship is sreious they will tell all or most of it.
You should never live in a relationship that is bad. If you want the relationship to work, consider seeing a couple therapist to help make the relationship better for both people.
If your relationship is shaky, then having a child will probably not make it stronger. You should work on your relationship first, to see if you both want it to continue, and then work on things to strengthen it. Having a child is a serious business and will take up the next eighteen years of your life. So you need a good partner who's with you all the way in this.
Just a work visa
Being a woman myself, I'm pretty sure it would work better if she were a private person.
Robin H. Stevenson has written: 'Social work education from a lesbian standpoint' -- subject(s): Attitudes, Homophobia in higher education, Lesbian college teachers, Social work education, Lesbian college students
Lesbians can work in every job they want