The scene opens with the narrator asking the audience to imagine what it would be like to be in love with a woman. The narrator tells the audience that he is a "boobs man" and that he has asked the woman out because she is "more voluptuous than voluptuous" . He then asks the audience what made them so concerned that they felt they needed to keep body, and the narrator replies that he does not know what the man said to her, but that he was shocked by the woman's ripped abs. He says that the woman is "the sports minded type" , and that she is too muscular for him. He adds that even if she laughs at him, she could say she is more "brazen than voluptuous." The narrator says that she did not want to be "hated" because she loved the man so much, and now that she has decided to say her goodbye to those thoughts, she feels better. She says that her love for the man is "burned into my mind" and she cannot contain her desire for him anymore. She asks the narrator if he is back doing, and he says that he would not have
The scene opens with the narrator asking the audience to imagine what it would be like to be in love with a woman. The narrator tells the audience that he is a "boobs man" and that he has asked the woman out because she is "more voluptuous than voluptuous" . He then asks the audience what made them so concerned that they felt they needed to keep body, and the narrator replies that he does not know what the man said to her, but that he was shocked by the woman's ripped abs. He says that the woman is "the sports minded type" , and that she is too muscular for him. He adds that even if she laughs at him, she could say she is more "brazen than voluptuous." The narrator says that she did not want to be "hated" because she loved the man so much, and now that she has decided to say her goodbye to those thoughts, she feels better. She says that her love for the man is "burned into my mind" and she cannot contain her desire for him anymore. She asks the narrator if he is back doing, and he says that he would not have