The large prominent lily is a smarter scientist than the average
finger-counting human, who lives in the same three-dimensional space:
whereas the latter species chooses base 10 for their numbers, the lily
chooses base 6.
It has twice three, that is, six, tepals (sepals and petals which cannot be
easily told apart).
Inside the 'trumpet-shaped flower' —it is actually the trumpet which
is lily-shaped— there is a pistil in the center surrounded by no
fewer and no more than six stamens.
The stamens are the stalks that produce pollen.
A smarter scientist than the average Indo-European human, the lily would
never confuse the pollen of the male with seed, in English usually called
"semen" in the case of mammals and birds.
Nonetheless, the lily does not depend on seed germination for its
propagation; in practice, it is mainly propagated by means of the bulb.
The bisexual lily flower does not contain a group of one man and one
female, or one man and two, three or four females.
What it appears to show is a gangbang of one female and six males.
This gangbang of the lily is a much better-organized one than the human
variant of one woman and five or so men.
In the lily there is no doubt: the six filaments of the stamens are the
shorter ones and the one style of the pistil the longer one (with an ovary
at its bottom).
Hence, the 'stigma' on top of the style towers
above all six anthers on top of the filaments.
In the lily it is she that is in power — no man is going to attack
her against her will.
And in the lily not only the woman but also the men will have to stay where
they are — no jumping the queue here!
Some may find the gangbang of the lily ill-organized, because the anthers
of the males are so much lower than the female's 'stigma'.
The males cannot even move up —they are already standing
upright— and their pollen grains, taken away by a bee or other
natural pollinator, are likely to reach, not the female in the center, but
some female in a different flower.
(This actually is a good thing, since the lily is self-sterile and will not
produce viable seeds when pollinated with its own pollen.)
Men that are exclusively hetero will be appalled at the idea that some of
the pollen grains, or, worse, pollen believed to be seed, may reach them
too; or that some of their own 'seed' may be so unlucky as to reach
specimens of the wrong sex.
Could one think of any messier and yet more boring gangbang?
True, the lily's two-sex gangbang may not really deserve the name, as it
deviates too much from a human one, where the man or men can move
relatively freely and be intimate with the woman or women and, perhaps,
also each other; and where the woman or women can be intimate with the man
or men and, perhaps, also each other, so long as those involved consent.
At the same time, it is not the attractive and secluded surroundings of the
gangbang of the lily which distinguishes it: a human gangbang, too, could
have such surroundings, with or without vases full of beautiful blooms to
complete the scene.
The main difference lies rather in the lily's six stalky gentlemen with the
flashy elongated headgear who must remain standing at fixed positions, so
that the even taller stylish lady in the middle can have herself
pollinated, if not impregnated, by one or more men participating in an
equally chaste gangbang elsewhere.
73.CEN
1 To a certain extent, it is most
logical or least arbitrary to use base 2 n in a space with
n dimensions.
For an explanation in a short story see
,
Tale Six of
.
2 The terms seed,
semen and sperm all three basically refer to
something that is (to be) sown.
They derive from, or are akin to, Latin serere and Greek
speirein, which mean to sow.
These, in turn, are related to Sanskrit sīra, a plow used for 'seeding' in the
sense of dropping, throwing or scattering.
No farmer in 'er (f/m) right mind is going to scatter pollen grains
on 'er field.
What 'e (m/f) will drop are seeds, that is, the ripened ovules of a
plant which, under suitable conditions, will develop into a plant
similar to the two (the mother and father) that produced it;
or, similar to the one (the mother) that provided the ovum and
produced the seed, and the one (the father) that provided
the male generative element.
It goes without saying that, in a figurative sense, a male must
also 'drop', 'throw' or 'scatter about' his pollen in order to
cocreate a new plant or animal of his own kind.
From this point of view, the word for the substance 'thrown' may
indeed be a term such as semen or sperm, but in no way
can it be seed, because, clearly, seed is a cross-sexual
product with the generative elements of both parents.
3 The word stigma to refer to
the top part of the pistil is a dubious term, which, at least in its
etymology, probably manifests a human sexist sexual inhibition or
other exclusivism.
4 I hasten to add that i did not
intend to stigmatize nor to antherize anything or
anyone, with the exception of the use of one purportedly
'scientific' term which, i fear, is shamefully ideological because
of the exclusivist origin of that term.
* The picture of the white lily at the top of this page
can be found on at least three different websites for
free down­loads, among which www.transparentpng.com/[
]download/lilies-flower-free-cut-out_18547.html.
I reduced it to 10% of its original size
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