Ubar Reflects


by Keats

Gor is about so many things, but surely one of them is furring.

How we train our slaves to need to be furred, to ache with a constant need to have their bodies stimulated and touched! How we hold them in a rapturous agony of constant stimulation and only on occasion allow them release!

And yet the chief complain of slaves on Gor, heard over and over again, is, "My Master doesn't fur me."

Now, either this is because in the heat of her slave body she could not possibly get enough or that she does not get the attention that she has been trained to crave.

One response is that a slave is property and may be touched or not touched at her Owner's discretion. This is surely valid.

Another feeling is that when most rooms banned public furring, that its level dropped significantly. I think this is also true. But when furring was public, it dominated the activities of the room to the extent that we looked like animals in the heat of an endless orgy, rather than Goreans doing the things that they do other than with their genitals.

As I read the books of Norman, I notice that the incidence and explicit nature of the furring increased as the years went by and then dropped off towards the end. This can be attributed to the mores of publication and the subjects of various books.

Where are we in the continium of the scrolls? What are the social mores on the way that we handle this activity?

The FWs, of course, do not wish to see public furring and I undertand their position. But Gor is a man's world.

This is a subject for discussion and decision and one which I consider endlessly, particularly when I wish to use two of My slaves in conjunction.


August 25, 2001