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Libido varies across individuals due to genetics, hormones (testosterone, estrogen), sleep, stress, and overall health. A “strong” libido is not a pathology but a normal variation. However, when emphasized as tsuyo tsuyo , it signals intensity that may require active management.
I should also consider the context in which the phrase is used. If someone is expressing that they are "seiyoku tsuyo tsuyo," they might be humorously emphasizing their extreme hunger. In casual conversation, Japanese people might use such a phrase to convey that they are very hungry, adding "tsuyo tsuyo" for effect, similar to how in English someone might say "I'm so hungry I could eat a horse."
Every morning, it's the same. Before the alarm, before coffee, before the first blurry thought of the day—there it is. That heat. That pull. A hunger that doesn't ask for permission.
This phrase has become a popular tag on Japanese adult blogs (Ameblo, Note) and Twitter (X). It separates the "normals" from the "beasts." It is self-deprecating yet proud, problematic yet honest.
This article explores high sexual drive — not as a disorder, but as a dimension of human variation.
Seiyoku Tsuyo Tsuyo
Seiyoku tsuyo tsuyo.
Libido varies across individuals due to genetics, hormones (testosterone, estrogen), sleep, stress, and overall health. A “strong” libido is not a pathology but a normal variation. However, when emphasized as tsuyo tsuyo , it signals intensity that may require active management.
I should also consider the context in which the phrase is used. If someone is expressing that they are "seiyoku tsuyo tsuyo," they might be humorously emphasizing their extreme hunger. In casual conversation, Japanese people might use such a phrase to convey that they are very hungry, adding "tsuyo tsuyo" for effect, similar to how in English someone might say "I'm so hungry I could eat a horse." seiyoku tsuyo tsuyo
Every morning, it's the same. Before the alarm, before coffee, before the first blurry thought of the day—there it is. That heat. That pull. A hunger that doesn't ask for permission. Libido varies across individuals due to genetics, hormones
This phrase has become a popular tag on Japanese adult blogs (Ameblo, Note) and Twitter (X). It separates the "normals" from the "beasts." It is self-deprecating yet proud, problematic yet honest. I should also consider the context in which
This article explores high sexual drive — not as a disorder, but as a dimension of human variation.
Seiyoku Tsuyo Tsuyo
Seiyoku tsuyo tsuyo.