AG31
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Feb 19, 2021
- Posts
- 2,129
...for anyone else with an informed insight, OR,
...for anyone else with an intelligent opinion, OR...
...for anyone else with a baseless, but clever, opinion.
I'll go first.
About three years ago I found my fantasies had shifted from a decades' long female POV to an almost exclusively male POV. I didn't categorize myself as a writer of GM stories, although there are a number I've enjoyed reading. The reason was that, although my MCs were often the recipient of male sexual acts, they were almost as often the recipient of female sexual acts, and they never felt desire for or attraction to men. Hence, not exactly gay.
I once responded to a question over in Reddit about why straight women liked GM stories and my reply was that women liked men and men were so unambiguously clear about when they were aroused. The guy who asked the question thought that was pretty good.
But this doesn't explain we we female authors would be drawn to the male POV. You can spend a lot of fun time paying attention to men's bodies and personalities and unambiguous arousal from the female POV.
What's the attraction of reading and writing from the male POV?
EDIT TWO DAYS LATER
I have to disagree with @VerbalAbuse, who thinks "People here don't know the answer." Au contraire, I've gotten real insights via AH threads over the months, and this one can be added to the list. I have settled into agreeing with @AwkwardlySet who said "Well honestly, I am a straight guy, but more often than not, I don't need a man in a sex scene to be able to enjoy it. Women are all that interests me sexually and I don't even need the fantasy of me joining them in some way - I can simply enjoy their beauty and sexual appeal." The underlining is mine.
I've decided that the interest in reading and writing GM stories (and vice versa for men and lesbian stories) is as inexplicable as a person's sexual desire for a specific sex (or sexes.) It's just baked into our humanity. Endocrinologists maybe be able to explicate it, but for the rest of us such desire is just a given. And, to elaborate on AwkwardlySet's insight a bit, the desire is doubly satisfied when we can contemplate that sex interacting with each other.
And thanks to all the rest of you, too.
...for anyone else with an intelligent opinion, OR...
...for anyone else with a baseless, but clever, opinion.
I'll go first.
About three years ago I found my fantasies had shifted from a decades' long female POV to an almost exclusively male POV. I didn't categorize myself as a writer of GM stories, although there are a number I've enjoyed reading. The reason was that, although my MCs were often the recipient of male sexual acts, they were almost as often the recipient of female sexual acts, and they never felt desire for or attraction to men. Hence, not exactly gay.
I once responded to a question over in Reddit about why straight women liked GM stories and my reply was that women liked men and men were so unambiguously clear about when they were aroused. The guy who asked the question thought that was pretty good.
But this doesn't explain we we female authors would be drawn to the male POV. You can spend a lot of fun time paying attention to men's bodies and personalities and unambiguous arousal from the female POV.
What's the attraction of reading and writing from the male POV?
EDIT TWO DAYS LATER
I have to disagree with @VerbalAbuse, who thinks "People here don't know the answer." Au contraire, I've gotten real insights via AH threads over the months, and this one can be added to the list. I have settled into agreeing with @AwkwardlySet who said "Well honestly, I am a straight guy, but more often than not, I don't need a man in a sex scene to be able to enjoy it. Women are all that interests me sexually and I don't even need the fantasy of me joining them in some way - I can simply enjoy their beauty and sexual appeal." The underlining is mine.
I've decided that the interest in reading and writing GM stories (and vice versa for men and lesbian stories) is as inexplicable as a person's sexual desire for a specific sex (or sexes.) It's just baked into our humanity. Endocrinologists maybe be able to explicate it, but for the rest of us such desire is just a given. And, to elaborate on AwkwardlySet's insight a bit, the desire is doubly satisfied when we can contemplate that sex interacting with each other.
And thanks to all the rest of you, too.
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