Dear Miss MacDonald,
I'm terribly sorry its taken so long to drop you a line. My wife and I have been meaning to write you ever since we first discovered your delightful website several months back.
We have thoroughly enjoyed each and every issue of 'Petticoat Discipline Monthly' and genuinely appreciate the tremendous amount of effort you have put into this publication. Your passion and affection for the application of traditional petticoat punishment, as well as other time-honored, maternal style punishments, on deserving husbands is strongly in evidence, and always conveyed in a most thoughtful and sensitive manner. My wife shares many of your views on both petticoat and domestic discipline. She also shares your passion for equine art and thoroughbred racing.
Having once ran a related business (mail order) we can understand and appreciate the tremendous amount of work you have put into this site. We were sorry to read that the pressure is starting to get to you and hope that you can find a way to continue with the site. I know it would be sorely missed in this household.
Thanks again for bringing
us your 'labor of love', petticoated.com. Let us know if there is
anything specific we could do to help.
Best regards,
Anne & Timmy
Obviously you have a superb marriage, bonded by love and a happy acceptance of female authority, expressed by maternal style punishments with which the hubby happily concurs. There is no better way to read 'Petticoat Discipline Monthly' than with one's partner, but unfortunately this seems to be the exception rather than the rule. I do understand that all too few wives appreciate the deep satisfaction and happiness that petticoating and domestic discipline can give to their husbands.
Yes, I love thoroughbred
racing; for me it is the history, the romance, and the heroism that I especially
love. Like all who have a genuine passion for the turf, I am not really
interested in gambling. With regard to thoroughbred art, I am certainly
not expert in that field, but I do like the paintings of George Stubbs
- in the work of the 18th Century painters you can really smell the horses
(and their attendants!) and I also liked the 18th Century interest in adding
other animals to the work, often a hunting dog. The paintings gave a god-like
magnificence to famous horses like Eclipse, which no photograph could ever
match.
Susan