I’m a 21 years old student. Always first of my class I wanted to investigate a cure for pancreas cancer, but everyone knows scientific foundation is not cheap. While searching for money I found this ad for making an only fans account that said “don’t worry! easy money but no one will recognise you!”. So I decided to join. I always have been a shy gay nerd, but I needed to make this investigation. Two days later a box arrived to my house and said “for your videos”. What should I do?
You open the package with your hands sweating, and inside you find only a pair of red boxer briefs. You pick them up and immediately feel that something is off: they don’t smell new, they carry a warm, humid, human scent, as if someone had already worn them for hours. You drop them onto the bed, say “I’ll never wear these,” but then you think about the money, the reagents, the cancer—and you put them on.
At first, nothing. Just the fabric, loose, too loose, and a warmth rising from your waist like a fever. Then the tingling begins. Inside your muscles. You look down and see the boxers filling out: your thighs are swelling, your quadriceps pushing against the red fabric like they’re carved from marble. You stand up and walk to the mirror. Your arms—your biceps grow as you watch, the curve rising, rounding out, becoming hard as stone, veins surfacing thick and dark like ropes. You touch them—they’re warm, pulsing. Your shoulders widen, you feel your bones crack, and your chest—God, your chest: two round, heavy, solid masses pressing your shirt until it tears at the shoulders. You stand there in front of the mirror, fabric hanging in shreds, staring at a body you’ve never seen before: wide shoulders, massive chest, eight carved abs, a damp lock of hair falling over your forehead. You’re big. You’re built.
Then you feel something under the red boxers: pressure, lengthening, heat rising from deep inside. Your penis is growing, stretching longer, thicker, heavier. You look down and the red fabric tightens, bulges, lifts like a tent. The erection comes hard, unstoppable, the tip dampening the cloth.
You grab your phone. You don’t speak. You open the camera. Framing your body in the mirror, you slide a hand over your hard chest, fingers pressing into the flesh, reaching a nipple, rubbing it, pinching it. A shock shoots from your chest straight down. The other nipple, the same. Your hands move to your biceps, you flex them in front of the camera—they swell, huge, as big as your head, veins throbbing as you squeeze and feel their hardness. Then down to your stomach, your fingers tracing each of your abs, one by one, down to the waistband of the red boxers. You pull it, release it. Finally your hand presses over your penis through the fabric, feeling the hardness, the shape, the damp heat, your fingers moving slowly up and down. Your breathing grows heavy, ragged. A low sound escapes you. You stop. You post. The money starts coming in.
Then the itching. Under your skin. You look at your forearm: dark hairs pushing through, one after another, growing in real time—short at first, then longer, coarse, thick. Your chest: hair sprouts around your nipples, then a dark line trailing down to your navel. Your stomach: those perfect abs now covered by a dense layer of dark hair. Your legs: thick, dark hair spreading over your thighs. Your back: a carpet rising from your lower back to your shoulders. Your armpits: dense, damp, already carrying a musky scent. Your beard: spreading across your jaw, your chin, thick and rough, fully grown.
And your muscles keep growing, slowly, deeply. Your biceps swell further, your pecs expand, stretching the hairy skin, your shoulders broaden even more, your neck thickens. You are huge. A wall of muscle and hair. And beneath the red boxers, your size has grown again—still hard, still damp.
You go live. You don’t speak. You frame your hairy chest, running a hand through the dark hair, stroking it, tugging lightly. A low sound. Your hand moves to your beard, fingers sinking into the thick hair of your face. Then lower: you grip the red fabric, pull it slightly down—just enough to reveal the start of your dark, thick body hair—then let it snap back. Your hand presses over the tight fabric again, feeling the pulse beneath, moving slowly up and down. The damp lock of hair on your forehead, the dark beard, your large, hairy body trembling slightly. Messages flood in, money rises.
You don’t think about the cancer anymore. You don’t think about anything.
You’re big. You’re hairy. You’re hard.
And you don’t want to stop.











