The moment of revelation came as a shock. It was
almost beyond belief, because I and everyone else on
the planet had been brought up to believe that the
past was absolutely fixed and never could be changed.
Suddenly, poring through Professor Morrison’s notes
suggested that maybe, just maybe, I could affect
something in my past.
My housemate and I had both been born 50 years ago,
and like most other American boys born at that time,
had been strapped down and circumcised, routinely,
thoughtlessly, and irrevocably. One of the many
feelings Matt and I shared was deep resentment over
our mutilations. Each time we had sex or saw each
other naked, we were reminded that ever since we could
remember we’d had those thick brown scars on our
pricks instead of foreskins. We’d heard of some of the
thrills, such as docking, available to those lucky
enough to be natural, and we envied the natural guys
more than we could ever express.
Our pricks were about the same length, six inches,
and about five inches in circumference. This made us
pretty average. One difference between our pricks were
that mine had a large helmet-shaped glans with a high
flaring rim, while Matt’s was slightly smaller and
mushroom-shaped, with a flat rim. Matt’s orifice was a
long slit, while mine was a slit when soft and a
teardrop-shaped orifice when swollen.
Matt’s circumcision scar was thinner than mine and
about an inch back on his shaft, connected to the
vee-groove under the head by a thick frenulum, or
gee-string. My scar was thicker and darker, and right
behind the head. The doctor who had removed my
foreskin had also stolen my gee-string.
Matt and I enjoyed stroking each other’s pricks,
anointing them with Astroglide because our
circumcisions made lubrication essential. We also
enjoyed sixty-nine and Princeton, in which one would
slip his condom-covered prick between the other’s
thighs.
Matt worked as an insurance adjustor and I was a sort
of administrative assistant to Professor Morrison,
head of the physics department at the university.
Morrison was widely known for ground-breaking
theoretical work, especially in refining the concept
of the space-time continuum. He’d published a
theoretical paper on time travel, a collection of
equations I found incomprehensible, but never done
anything practical.
Continued…