The upside-down hearts tell the reader that this is an inconvenience. Its topic, lust, reveals it to be from one of the inconvenience writers focusing on the seven deadly sins.
This particular inconvenience has been extensively studied by convenience scholars because of its implications.
Convenience scholarship has never shown itself to be particularly prudish or unaccepting of different manifestations of physical desire.
Most scholars support the passion of these words and phrases: impatient, no shame, and very natural performance.
The problematic issue, to many convenience scholars, is the use of the word demanding, and the comment that it seems wrong to cut physical desire off ever.
They consider the words demanding and ever to be too broad, to be potentially abusive (to the self and to others), and to be misleading.
License Lust
Yes! Yes! Yes! Yes! Yes! Yes!
An impatient desire for the natural clasp which blooms
No shame
Be demanding
It is a very natural performance
It seems wrong to cut it off EVER
Yes! Yes! Yes! Yes! Yes! Yes!