Anonymous asked: you are realy an good locking boy
Let me ask why do you know how I look.
No tengo ganas
de ponerme a rebloguear fotos de niños bonitos si tengo el mío a mi ladito.
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No. 9, Selections from my brother blogger at tumblinwithhotties:
What movie is this??I must watch ”Summerstorm”One of my fav gay-themed movies.
A Short Story Review: Gore Vidal’s Reflections on Learning Who We Are
Anytime I see pictures of guys enjoying their time at a lake, I’m brought back in my mind’s eye to Gore Vidal’s fantasy-become-reality* about Bob and Jim, two guys discovering each other and themselves at “a large pond made by a stream.” In the course of youthful play—mostly swimming and wrestling, deep emotions emerge: “They clung together a moment wrestling. Jim was suddenly conscious of Bob’s body; he pretended to wrestle and then both stopped moving on the blanket still clinging to each other. Jim was aware of Bob’s body as never before…. Neither moved for a minute, their arms about each other, smooth chests touching, breathing fast and in unison, Bob on his back and Jim across him.”
It is a beautiful story of newly found love: “Innocently they discovered each other with their hands and bodies…. Jim’s movements were natural and familiar, practiced before in many dreams remembered now…. Then, at the most heightened moment, they were both released, one against the other, made complete.”
Bringing us inside one of the lovers, Vidal describes the splendor of this climax: “Jim felt as if his entire body was exploding, was clashing rocketlike in this release. Lights glittered in circles behind his closed eyelids….”
Afterward, both guys wonder about what they’ve both just experienced—done naturally, but contrary to the norms both had been taught in straight society. But the author brings them (and us) back to nature as Jim “put his arm around Bob’s waist. Bob didn’t move for a moment and then, excited again, they embraced on the blanket.” Their natures prevailed.
*Gore Vidal, “A Warm Emotion Which He Could Not Name” in David Steinberg (ed.), Erotic Impulse: Honoring the Sensual Self (New York: Putnam, 1992), pp. 58-63. The book is readily available at Amazon or other vendors.
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