Horny Gay O -
Perhaps the deepest part is what happens when the hunger is sated. When the adrenaline fades, and you are lying in the dark, watching the streetlights move across the ceiling. In that space, the "horny" fades, and the craving for something more —true intimacy, companionship, or just tender closeness—often takes its place.
The "o" in that phrase—perhaps representing object, orgasm, or simply the open circle of a craving—is often a void waiting to be filled, not just with skin, but with validation. To be desired, intensely and unapologetically, is a corrective to a lifetime of being told we are "too much" or "not enough." That intense longing is a desperate, valid desire to be seen, consumed, and confirmed as desirable. horny gay o
There is a profound vulnerability in being unapologetically horny. It’s putting your truest, most primal self on the table. It’s saying, "I want, I need," which is a dangerous thing for someone who has had to hide. The "deep" part isn't just the sex; it’s the willingness to be naked—physically and emotionally—before another person and hope they don't look away. Perhaps the deepest part is what happens when
Even in the most fleeting encounters, there is a shared recognition. A quiet understanding of what it means to live, love, and lust on the fringes. The "horny gay" space is, paradoxically, one of the most honest spaces we have. It’s not curated for the public. It is primal, raw, and human. It’s putting your truest, most primal self on the table
We often reduce queer desire to a single, urgent note: horny . It’s a word that’s loud, immediate, and, frankly, sometimes dismissive. But when you strip away the shame and the societal filters, the "horny gay" experience is rarely just about a physical release. It is a profound, kinetic force.
This post is an exploration of the human, queer experience of desire and its emotional depths.
Great post – I am a late-comer to the streaming of music. This is in part because I like the physicality of a CD and now, once again, and more so, the vinyl. I love to read the sleeve notes and admire the artwork.
But you make a great point regards in ‘the old days’ we effectively ‘tried and bought’ via radio and latterly tV shows. And in this respect Streaming is no different.
I have many friends in touring bands and they, at the time they would stop over at our house when on tour in this country, were dead set against streaming, for the reasons you outline.
Now it’s all change. Streaming has become a necessary evil.
Just a shame some people are getting rich off it – and it ain”t the artists.
(Posted as my loudhorizon.com blog and not Cee Tee Jackson as shows here. ) 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you!
LikeLike
Always been a big King Crimson fan – Robert Fripp is a great musician who never sold out.
LikeLiked by 1 person
[…] What you should listen to: My picks for albums would be Red and In The Court of the Crimson King. Update! King Crimson are finally on Spotify! […]
LikeLike