- Joined
- Oct 23, 2020
Those are the worst. Nothing kills a boner faster than a deadeyed stare while you're doing it.
I still remember a quote from a forum like 15 years ago about how a guy couldn't enjoy Allie Sinn videos because she always had a stare that looked like a freshly clubbed baby seal.
How do gay guys meet enough people to have tens of thousands of sexual partners? I hear that it's not so uncommon in the gay community, but if I had gone out every night for ten years and fucked a different woman every single night I wouldn't have had anywhere near 10,000. How do they find time to do anything else?
Don't take it from me, take it from Dead Gay AIDS Activist Michael Callen:
"I estimate I've had approximately 3,000 men up my butt ... I estimate that I went to the baths at least once a week, sometimes twice, and that each time I went I had a minimum of four patners ... I also racked up about three men a week for five years at the Christopher Steet bookstore ...Then of course there was the MineShaft; the orgies; the 55th Street Playhouse; the International Stud backroom ...
Let me present my own history of STDs. From 1973, when I came out, to 1975, I only got mononucloeosis and non-specific urethritis, or NSU. In 1975, I got my first case of gonorrhea. Not bad, I thought. I'd had maybe 200 different partners, and I'd only gotten the clap twice. But then, moving from Boston to New York City, it all began to snowball. First came hepatitis A in '76 and more gonorrhea and NSU. In 1977, I was diagnosed with amebiasis, an intestinal parasite, hepatitis B, more gonorrhea, and NSU. In 1978, more amebiasis and my first case of shigella, and of course, more gonorrhea. Then in 1979, hepatitis yet a third time, this time non-A, non-B, more intestinal parasites, adding giardia this time, and an anal fissure as well as my first case of syphilis ... By 1981, I got some combination of STDs each and every time I had sex ...
At age twenty-seven I've had: gonorrhea, syphillis, hepatitis A, hepatitis B, and hepatitis non-A, non-B; intestinal parasites including amebiasis, e. historicia, shigella, giardia; herpes simplex types one and two; venereal warts, mononucleosis, cytomegalovirus, and now cryptosporodiosis, for which there is no known cure.
Crypto- what -siosis? Berkowitz helpfully informs us that cryptosporodiosis was a parasite "previously found only in livestock."
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