SexualWill introduction · 10 min read
SexualWill: my little sexy corner on the internet
A complete start-here guide to SexualWill: the adult sexology, sexual wellness, gay sexuality, erotic self-expression, consent, boundaries, nudism/sexuality, obstacles, and personal journey behind this site.
Welcome to SexualWill 😈
Hi, I’m Will. Thank you for coming here, whether you found me through NakedWill, YouTube, search, social platforms, adult creator platforms, old video spaces, or simple curiosity.
SexualWill is my adult, sex-positive corner of the internet. It is where I write about sexuality with honesty, humor, vulnerability, and care: sexual wellness, sexology, pleasure education, gay sexuality, erotic self-expression, fetishes, sexual behavior, sexual function, mental and physical sexual health, consent, shame, and the long process of understanding desire.
Older drafts of this introduction spent too much time explaining access mechanics and old platform arrangements. That is no longer the way I want to introduce the space. The current site works through clearer doorways instead:
- NakedWill is for naturism, nonsexual nudity, body acceptance, artistic nude work, health reflection, and body freedom.
- SexualWill is for adult sexology, sexual self-expression, pleasure, erotic identity, adult creator work, and sexual wellness.
- About explains how both can belong to one person without becoming the same thing.
- Contact keeps links separated so visitors can choose the right context before reaching out or supporting me.
Clear labels are not walls against curiosity. They are a form of respect, and they are part of the ethics of this site.
NakedWill vs. SexualWill: the simple difference 🚪
NakedWill says: nudity is natural and does not need to be sexual.
SexualWill says: sexuality is human and does not need to be shameful.
Both are true for me. They are not enemies. They are two rooms in the same house.
I do not want people who came for nonsexual naturism to feel ambushed by adult sexual material. I also do not want adult sexual writing to hide behind vague language. Context matters. Consent matters. Audience expectation matters.
That is why this site lets you choose the doorway before the journey.
The difference is not the body itself. The difference is context, intention, audience expectation, consent, and care. A nude body can belong to art, health, nature, friendship, rest, vulnerability, equality, or ordinary daily life. A sexual body can also be honest and consensual, but it belongs in a clearly adult space.
What SexualWill is for 🔥
SexualWill documents my sexual adventure and exploration: interests, behaviors, functions, fantasies, fetishes, sexual questions, sexual health, and the emotional landscape around all of them.
It is not only an adult entertainment page, although adult creator work is part of it. It is also an educational and reflective space. I want to connect, learn, document, and strive toward a healthier relationship with sexuality.
Here, I want to talk about sex without treating it as dirty, silly, dangerous, or unspeakable. Human sexuality is an integral part of life. It touches mental health, physical health, intimacy, shame, pleasure, loneliness, confidence, identity, and care.
Some topics may be playful. Some may be awkward. Some may be taboo. Some may make people blush. But silence does not make people healthier. Honest conversation can.
Why I use humor and personal storytelling
Sex can be serious, but it does not always need to be solemn.
Humor helps people breathe. A little laughter can make difficult subjects easier to approach: sexual health, fetishes, performance anxiety, shame, body discomfort, masturbation, desire, or loneliness.
I want SexualWill to feel like a digital confidante: warm, curious, sometimes funny, but not careless. I am not here to mock people’s desires or pretend I know everything. I am here to make space for open dialogue, education, entertainment, and support.
If you are experienced, curious, shy, confused, sexually confident, sexually inexperienced, or still learning what your body means to you, there should be room for you to read without immediate judgment.

My attitude toward sex: playful, but not careless 😌
Sex is a natural and beautiful part of life, but that does not mean “anything goes.”
For me, healthy sexuality requires:
- Consent — people choose freely and can change their mind.
- Respect — nobody is pressured, mocked, exposed, or used.
- Communication — people can say what they want, what they do not want, and what they are unsure about.
- Context — adult material belongs in adult spaces, with clear expectations.
- Care — pleasure should not depend on someone else’s discomfort, coercion, or harm.
- Exploration — curiosity can be healthy when it is honest, safe, and consensual.
Sex-positive does not mean boundary-free. It means sex can be discussed and expressed without automatic shame when consent, respect, and care are present.
How can I be a nudist advocate and also express myself sexually?
This is the core question behind SexualWill.
Naturism helped me separate nudity from sexuality. It taught me that a naked body can be ordinary, peaceful, natural, artistic, vulnerable, funny, and body-positive without being erotic.
But naturism also helped me become more honest about being a full human being. Full human beings may have bodies, shame, desire, curiosity, fear, pleasure, contradictions, and sexual selves.
At first, when some audience messages became sexual, I felt uncomfortable and even offended. Over time, I asked myself why. I realized that sexuality is also an integral part of life. Sexual expression, when it is consensual and respectful, is not automatically wrong.
The goal of nudism is to separate sex from nudity. It is not to deny that sex exists.
So my answer is simple:
- NakedWill protects nudity from automatic sexualization.
- SexualWill protects sexuality from automatic shame.
- Consent and context are the bridge between them.
That is why separate spaces are necessary.
How I try to hold both values responsibly
To be a sex-positive nudist without undermining naturist advocacy, I try to follow several principles.
1. Consent and respect first
No exception. Sexual expression must be consensual and respectful. Being sex-positive does not excuse pressure, harassment, boundary-crossing, or non-consensual behavior.
2. Separate nudity from sexualization
Nudity is not automatically sexual. NakedWill exists to protect that message. SexualWill exists because sexual expression deserves its own adult context instead of being projected onto every naked body.
3. Educate and repeat the distinction
Many people will not understand the difference at first. I need to keep explaining it: nudity can be nonsexual; sexuality can be healthy; the two should not be collapsed into one assumption.
4. Lead by example
If I ask others to respect context, I must also respect it. That means clearer labels, separate pages, separate links, and a consistent explanation of what belongs where.
5. Build community carefully
I hope to build spaces where people can talk about body acceptance, sexuality, consent, diversity, and empowerment without turning everything into objectification or judgment.
Obstacles I face 🙃
Being a nudist and expressing myself sexually online can feel like walking on a blade.
Some people assume I am only a horny exhibitionist. Some call me names. Some use my content without context to promote porn sites. Some use images of naked men to attack gay people or sexual minorities, as if the logic is: naked male body online means gay, gay means horny, horny means dirty.
That kind of thinking hurts both naturism and sexuality. It reduces bodies to stereotypes and people to insults.
There are also platform problems. Nude and adult-hosting platforms have been abused for years, and after crackdowns they often become restrictive, inconsistent, or context-blind. Accounts can disappear. Videos can be removed. Educational, reflective, consensual, or nonsexual material can be treated as if context does not matter.
My own website has also faced spam and hosting difficulties because some systems react badly to anything involving nudity or sex, even when the content is thoughtful or educational.
I am not a big institution. I am a normal person trying to build a clearer space, learn in public, and make a small difference.
My personal starting point
One important part of my story is that I did not come to this from being sexually experienced or socially confident.
For a long time, I was sexually inactive. I had never fallen in love. I had no sexual experiences. Even masturbation could come with guilt.
Naturism helped me relearn myself as a human being. It helped me feel happier, more authentic, and more able to connect with people without hiding so much. SexualWill grew from that same process of relearning: not because I have everything figured out, but because I wanted to stop treating sexuality as something that must live only in secrecy or shame.
That vulnerability is part of the site. I am still learning.
Personal questions and honest answers ☕
Does your family know you are sex-positive?
No. They do not know this part of me.
Are you afraid your family or people close to you might know you are a nudist or sex-positive?
Yes. Being different can be hard, even when nothing is wrong. Many people struggle when their life, identity, beliefs, relationships, body, sexuality, or choices do not match what others expect.
Do you have sex or show yourself sexually in public places?
No. If a place is public in a way that makes consent impossible, then it is not appropriate. Legality, consent, and respect matter.
Do you have sex-positive friends?
Not many. I wish I had more people around me who could talk about these things openly and kindly.
If sexual spaces such as a cruise, swinger club, or adult venue allowed public sexual expression, would you consider it?
Maybe. If it were legal, consensual, and clearly within an adult space where everyone understood the context, I could consider it. Online adult expression is already a kind of public-facing sexual expression, but the key is still consent and context.
Do you have funny or dramatic stories from sexual self-expression?
Not many. SexualWill is still developing, and I am still early in this part of the journey.
Would you want a partner to be sex-positive or nudist?
I would love a partner who understands or shares these values, especially body freedom and openness. But I do not want to force my views on someone I love. We can talk, discuss, persuade each other, be persuaded, or sometimes agree to disagree.
Have you had sexual experiences with people your age?
No. I would like to, but I am also honest about where I am starting from.
What do you do to share your sexual message or sexuality?
I use this website, SexualWill, social platforms, video platforms, and adult creator platforms. Current links are grouped on the Contact page and the SexualWill media page, including OnlyFans, Fansly, JustForFans, adult video profiles, X/Twitter, Bluesky, Telegram, and other social spaces.
Older platform references from my history may no longer be active, but the purpose remains the same: to connect, document, educate, entertain, and support more honest conversations about sexuality.
Are you proud of your body?
I am more comfortable with my body than I used to be, and I accept it.
I do not always use the word “proud,” because to me pride can imply achievement. A bodybuilder may feel proud of a body shaped through years of training, diet, discipline, and work. My body is not perfect or heroic. It is mine.
Acceptance matters more to me than perfection. I want to live in my body with less shame.
What SexualWill is not
SexualWill is not individualized therapy, diagnosis, or medical advice. It may be informed by sexology and sexual therapy interests, but it cannot replace care from a qualified professional who knows your personal situation.
SexualWill is also not a claim that every sexual expression belongs everywhere. It exists because adult sexual expression needs adult context.
Where to go next 🧭
If you want nonsexual body freedom, go to NakedWill and the NakedWill gallery.
If you want adult sexual writing, sexology, and creator links, stay in the SexualWill lane.
If you want to understand the whole person behind both spaces, read About.
If you want links, support options, social platforms, Telegram, or adult creator platforms, use Contact so you can choose the right context.
Thank you for choosing the right doorway. I hope SexualWill can be honest, warm, curious, responsible, and human: a place where adult sexuality can be discussed without shame, and without losing consent, care, or context.