Think you're having a bad day ? | GTAMotorcycle.com

Think you're having a bad day ?

Don't take a wizz outside then!
What happen if you jerk off outside?

Better yet, what if you manage to have sex?

I'm genuinely curious (and am not stupid enough to try!)
 
I'd think my "equipment" will go from an "outie" to an "innie" if I try to whip it out in -62C
What if you start indoors, and release outdoors?

I actually googled what temperature sperm freezes at but all I'm getting are professional services and apparently it needs to be -196 C to live.

What I'm legit curious about is if the stream would just freeze mid air or some **** lol
 
What if you start indoors, and release outdoors?

I actually googled what temperature sperm freezes at but all I'm getting are professional services and apparently it needs to be -196 C to live.

What I'm legit curious about is if the stream would just freeze mid air or some **** lol
Unfortunately I think there's only one way to find out....

As for me...had the pleasure of working in -45C...do not recommend. I was fine as the consultant I'm in/out from a warm truck. Feel for the guys working for hours at a time in those conditions.
 
Unfortunately I think there's only one way to find out....

As for me...had the pleasure of working in -45C...do not recommend. I was fine as the consultant I'm in/out from a warm truck. Feel for the guys working for hours at a time in those conditions.
IDK... part of me thinks how bad could it be? Like either your employer has set you up with proper gear and you're adequately dressed, or you're in the hospital or dead

Edit: This is a rhetorical statement
 
What if you start indoors, and release outdoors?

I actually googled what temperature sperm freezes at but all I'm getting are professional services and apparently it needs to be -196 C to live.

What I'm legit curious about is if the stream would just freeze mid air or some **** lol

Get professional help , and not help with wanking off


Sent from my iPhone using GTAMotorcycle.com mobile app
 
Unfortunately I think there's only one way to find out....

As for me...had the pleasure of working in -45C...do not recommend. I was fine as the consultant I'm in/out from a warm truck. Feel for the guys working for hours at a time in those conditions.
Two of us went to do a repair at an ice cream plant and worked at -40°C all day except for coffees and lunch.

At the end we commented to one of the workers there "You guys are nuts. -40° all day?"

His reply: "You guys are the nuts. We're in for 10 minutes and out for 20."

Another freezer plant had the cable test points on the outside of the building but the problem was inside. On a hot summer +35°C day, sometimes I was outside wearing a snowmobile suit or inside at -40°C wearing a tee shirt.

Interesting point: We didn't work any harder than usual but at the end of the day we were totally beat. Cold sucks energy out of you.
 
When I worked for the railway in northern Alberta we had many days that started at -50 and warmed to -40. We tried to keep most of the work in the shop or surrounding area working large pieces where you could stay fully dressed, but some jobs had to be done, no matter the weather. We were installing crossing signals at one place and had to do the finish wiring. That stuff just can't be done with gloves on, so 40 feet up a pole, 40 mph wind at -40 and your finger-tips turn white as soon as you touch anything. A one-hour job usually took all day due to the constant stopping to put your hands inside your jacket.

With proper gear though, the rest of me was warm.
 

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