Flashing Jungle is more than just a collection of stunning imagery; it’s a bold artistic statement crafted by the talented RicMay. This series dares to challenge conventional standards of beauty by celebrating the raw, unfiltered allure of nude mature masculinity. Through striking compositions and an unflinching lens, RicMay redefines what it means to be desirable and powerful beyond youth. His work invites viewers to question their preconceived notions and embrace the complexity, vulnerability, and strength that come with age. Flashing Jungle is not just erotic art—it’s a celebration of diverse male beauty that provokes thought and ignites conversation, inspiring us to see maturity in a new, captivating light.

8 thoughts on “Flashing Jungle

  1. Dear HaPenis team, you know I love you! But this post does nothing to challenge “stereotypical beliefs about the beauty of nude mature masculinity.” The lovely staged beach shots by The Gorgeous RicMay show us a very attractive, well-preserved, shaved 55-ish year-old with an EXTREMELY LARGE UNCUT COCK in various relaxed poses. He’s well-fed and enjoying his summer. These photos EPITOMISE stereotypes that abound in your pages about how “beautiful” men ought to look, all of whom are invariably well-built and well-endowed. Don’t get me wrong, I LOVE looking at HaPenis men! They make me happy! I drool and cum over them! Mr. Georges RicMay’s amazingly youthful naked body, with his amazing 10-foot uncut (oh I adore foreskins) cock, fits right into the HaPenis stereotype. But these images create an ideal “look,” which has turned instantly into a stereotype, about how “beautiful” older men should look, i.e., exactly like, if just a teensy bit flabbier than, all the gorgeous younger men who are displayed in your posts.

    I take you up on your offer to include a picture of “my own beauty below!” My own beautiful mature-age self has just gotten out of the shower. My hair is standing on end after I’ve dried it. I have a stupid, concentrated look on my face and am wearing my glasses as I attempt to focus the phone on my “beauty.” In the background you can see my bath towel and my wife’s creams on a shelf. In the foreground is the edge of the sink. There is a certain, random yet artful play of shadow on my torso, and the light seems to fall on my belly button, which serves somewhat to draw the eye away from the slight overhang of my midriff on the left side, which conceals the long scar which was somehow necessary for the surgeon to make when he removed my appendix when I was in my third year at university. I rather like my right “love-handle” wrapping around my waist on the right, and I love the mole place right above the middle of the base of my cock, above which lies my pubic hair. I think that pubic, chest, arm, leg, not so much back, but definitely crotch and ass hair in men is EXTREMELY beautiful. Alas, I have very little body hair, due I suspect to Swedish ancestors on my father’s side. He was also not very hairy. My cock, all 3 inches of it in its dormant mode (possibly I exaggerate), looks very relaxed. I may have masturbated in the shower, I can’t remember. Nor do I remember why I took the picture in the first place. Probably because I love my body and love to surprise myself by taking pictures of it from time to time that I think don’t make me look all that unappealing. But I can’t be objective about this.

    So, chaps, there it is: An example of a very un-stereotypical, not exactly ugly but hardly “beautiful” in a “Gorgeous” sense, naked, mature masculinity, photographed in a Central European shower at around 7 am on an ordinary day in the life of a skinny, 78-year-old intellectual who is naturally athletic but never goes to the gym.

    If HaPenis wants to challenge stereotypes about male beauty of men of any age, it needs to show us more photographs of men like this one. Perhaps some of them could even have penises that more closely resemble the tiny ones you see on all those glorious Greek and Roman statues of pagan gods in American, European and British museums that should be returned to the countries where they were stolen. Ancient Greek and Roman sculptors knew a thing or two about male beauty. Maybe some skilful photographers, with a desire to shatter rather than reinforce stereotypes about male beauty, can capture the beautiful, in an un-stereotypical way, of ordinary male bodies in ordinary settings. I’m pretty sure it can be done. xoxoxo AJ

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