Gem female falling for Scorpio man

Profile picture of TwinTastic
TwinTastic
@TwinTastic
19 Years

Comments: 0 · Posts: 10 · Topics: 5
Hi all! I have been perusing the boards for a while now and i have finally decided to become a member- a little about me- sun in gemini, virgo rising and moon in virgo, gemini mars, leo venus. Well the reason i am posting is that it seems as though i am falling for A SCORPIO- A SCARY CONCEPT WHAT WITH ALL THE THINGS IVE READ...anyone have any thoughts on this? he confuses me terribly but i am just incredibly drawn to him- more so and in a different way than all my other former loves-who by the way were almost all other gems born on may 25-26th (weird coincidence huh?)well anyway we had met last year and went out on a few dates...the problem was that we lived so far away from eachother...everything seemed to be going great and then he dropped off the face of the earth,,,now i have moved closer and we have picked back up--i am totally falling for him...anyone have any advice? how can i tell if he is really interested?

(p.s. i also posted this in the Gem boards :-)

Profile picture of schoenetanz
schoenetanz
@schoenetanz
19 Years5,000+ Posts

Comments: 0 · Posts: 5663 · Topics: 62
Chapter 12

Violent love:

scorpio mating is dangerous for both parties. Most scorpios are loners because of their cannibalistic tendencies.
When the scorpio meets a potential mate, there is usually fight until one is killed and eaten by the winner. *A twin will always be eaten.* After mating, the scorpio's mate is often in danger of being eaten. As females are usually bigger, it is the male which usually gets eaten. The females are far more vorascious lovers than the males.

The scorpio finds it's mate through pheromones, using their pectines. The male usually makes the first move,although some females do so. He usually has a complex courtship display to ensure the female knows he is one of her kind and not lunch. Some males "judder" (rapid rocking, shaking movements) to advertise his species (Vejovoides, Nebo). Some sting the female, possibly with pheromones, sedatives or other species identificators. Others club the female with their tails. Some males (Hadogenes) have ridiculously longer tails than females, suggesting that the length is important more for mating than hunting.