I see...
Hm... I suppose I have never paid attention, as I, myself, have never felt the need or desire to perform such act.
*Obscyra looks pensive for a moment*
[Sun² approached Obscyra and urged him to sit down. They were both situated in the garden. It was well past breakfast and the children were playing with the cats.]
Obscyra.. these.. acts aren't simply things others do for reproduction.
They are, for some, a natural progression of .. affection. Of preference for one another.
To experience one another in pleasure and vulnerability. It's trust, love and .. sharing of passion.
For some, I suppose, it's strictly pleasure. Because it does feel physically pleasurable. I'm not of that ilk, and value it as an expression of adoration, but it still exists as such.
Have you never seen biologically incompatible creatures "procreate" before but still seem to feel satisfied without any egg taking root?
Arp 271: NGC 5427 (top) and NGC 5426 (bottom) // Roger Bertuli
M90 (NGC 4569, center) and IC 3583 (left) // Michel
Sound on 😭😍🐈
I'm an animatronic that was once human, friend.
I was made this way by a ... friend of mine, at my request
But I know all about Sun and his friends~
And you
At least everything that's been shared online.
The internet is a scary place ~
How are you settling in?
Intriguing... I did not know such thing was possible.
Do you now? I haven't been here very long to share anything about myself.
Hm... I am still getting used to it. But I have Sun to guide me. I do enjoy looking at the cats.
Perhaps I should take note of the location.
Sweeping spiral arms extend from NGC 4536, littered with bright blue clusters of star formation and red clumps of hydrogen gas shining among dark lanes of dust. NGC 4536 is also a starburst galaxy, in which star formation is happening at a tremendous rate that uses up the gas in the galaxy relatively quickly, by galactic standards. NGC 4536 is approximately 50 million light-years away in the constellation Virgo. It was discovered in 1784 by astronomer William Herschel.
Image credit: NASA, ESA, and J. Lee (Space Telescope Science Institute); Processing: Gladys Kober (NASA/Catholic University of America)