"I've never loved someone so much that I was helpless" , says the narrator. He says he's never asked anyone to love him so much, but he hasn't asked anyone if they'd accept him if he liked them. The narrator says he thought he'd fall in love because they were going out for a walk, but now he realizes that's not the case. He's learned to love someone as if they were an out-of-this-world kind of person, and not as someone who loves him as if he were a part of their world. He compares the narrator to a "man like that" who must have "some strange tastes" . He asks the narrator how sensitive she is, and she says she's had no training to become so sensitive. He then asks her how her underpants get damp, and the narrator says she doesn't have any training, so she gets wet quickly. She's scared, she says, because she feels like her brain is "melting" from sex. She asks if she was virgin the last time she met him, and he says she was, but she never came.
"I've never loved someone so much that I was helpless" , says the narrator. He says he's never asked anyone to love him so much, but he hasn't asked anyone if they'd accept him if he liked them. The narrator says he thought he'd fall in love because they were going out for a walk, but now he realizes that's not the case. He's learned to love someone as if they were an out-of-this-world kind of person, and not as someone who loves him as if he were a part of their world. He compares the narrator to a "man like that" who must have "some strange tastes" . He asks the narrator how sensitive she is, and she says she's had no training to become so sensitive. He then asks her how her underpants get damp, and the narrator says she doesn't have any training, so she gets wet quickly. She's scared, she says, because she feels like her brain is "melting" from sex. She asks if she was virgin the last time she met him, and he says she was, but she never came.