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#bubble #change #personality #tea #tg #bimbofication
Published: 2022-01-05 22:58:55 +0000 UTC; Views: 19108; Favourites: 122; Downloads: 46
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Some things never change.
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When Marvin was given a chance to help Suzie do better in school, he agreed to it right away. A guy like him normally would not have a chance with a girl like Suzie, but Suzie was in danger of flunking out and Marvin was fairly smart. If anyone could help her become smarter, it was him.
Despite not being too intelligent, she was kind and attractive. Both of them knew they would do well together. They agreed to meet at the local coffee shop after school.
At the start of their first session, Suzie offered Martin some bubble tea. He gladly took it. With the first sip, he felt his head spinning. For a few seconds, he forgot what he was doing. Then he remembered he was there to help Suzie study.
Martin took another sip. The dizziness returned. He noticed some boys on the other side of the coffee shop, but he could not let himself get distracted. He had a job as a tutor.
As he tried to teach science, he found he could not do it. Then he tried math, English, and history. Each time it was the same result. Somehow he was forgetting what he knew. He continued drinking the bubble tea. Under the circumstances, that was perhaps not the smartest thing to do but he could not think of anything else.
His features began to blur and change as well as his memories, clothing, and outlook on life. One of the few things Melody managed to remember was that she was supposed to be helping Suzie with her studies.
"I have a headache," said Suzie as she drank some of her tea.
Melody went over to those boys on the other side of the coffee shop and started flirting with them. She found it very easy to do. Then an idea came to her. She could make up for her lack of helping Suzie study by helping her meet some boys.
By that time, Suzie had finished her tea. She told Melody she had some studying to do, gathered her books, and left the coffee shop. Melody figured Suzie could handle things on her own and returned to the boys she had just met.
They gave her a seat in the center which she gladly accepted. They all introduced themselves. She forgot all of their names mere minutes later, but it did not matter. She was comfortable being the center of attention. Instinctively, Melody seemed to know the right words to say and the right movements to make.
When their drinks were ready, she rushed up to the counter and got them. There was a big smile on her face as she handed each of them the wrong drink. They returned the smile as they exchanged their received drinks for the correct ones.