Abberation is in the eye of the beholder.2% is commonplace? More like an abberation.
Abberation is in the eye of the beholder.2% is commonplace? More like an abberation.
My mother still tries to convert me to Everybody Loves Raymond.I can only imagine the stress a parent must feel when their son or daughter comes out and says they are....a Star Trek fan.![]()
There was a lot of crying, denial and guilt. Something about how I should've liked Law and Order. I've tried my best to repress those times.![]()
I'm sorry to hear that, kitsune. Everybody should be able to love themselves. I hope you find a solution to this.Unfortunately.I'm always confused and depressed about it.
So do I, kitsune.
Know? When I was 15. Accept? When I was 18.
There were earlier hints, in retrospect, before I knew.
I can only imagine the stress a parent must feel when their son or daughter comes out and says they are....a Star Trek fan.![]()
At 6 or 7 I thought I had no other choice in life but to be a teacher.I'm not gay, but I certainly remember wondering what kind of girl I would end up marrying when I was 6 or 7 years old. So I think it's safe to say I knew I was straight at that point.
I'd imagine gay folks start knowing around that point, but it's likely that they'll take a few extra years to be certain, depending on their environment and what they've been taught.
Know? When I was 15. Accept? When I was 18.
There were earlier hints, in retrospect, before I knew.
This is true for me as well.
Thinking back, I earliest moment that I look back on and think, "Duh! How could I have missed that?" was when I was 10.
I remember when they were showed the episode again, my parents took me shopping with them. I was very anxious and wanted them to finish their damn shopping so i can watch What You Leave Behind.
Well, I was a late bloomer... I realised it at about the age of 18 but accepted it a few months later.
But it wasn't until after the week of my 23rd birthday that I actually had a sexual experience with another guy (there's a typical Trek-fan for you)
Know? When I was 15. Accept? When I was 18.
There were earlier hints, in retrospect, before I knew.
This is true for me as well.
Thinking back, I earliest moment that I look back on and think, "Duh! How could I have missed that?" was when I was 10.
I think that's actually about the same for me. I can remember when I was about 10 hanging out with a friend of mine and spotting his then 13-year-old older brother changing while my friend had already ran upstairs and realizing that my gaze lingered a bit too long...
I remember when they were showed the episode again, my parents took me shopping with them. I was very anxious and wanted them to finish their damn shopping so i can watch What You Leave Behind.
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Well, I was a late bloomer... I realised it at about the age of 18 but accepted it a few months later.
But it wasn't until after the week of my 23rd birthday that I actually had a sexual experience with another guy (there's a typical Trek-fan for you)
Trek fans - the original late bloomers.![]()
If it can make you happy, I've on occasion assumed you were.And he didn't append, "but I'm straight, you know that?" to it like so many people did when I was coming out (that irritated me no end - I wasn't telling them because I wanted into their pants).
I hate that. In this very thread, and in the thread where people are asked what they think about two dudes kissing, it seems any guy who says he doesn't have a problem always has to add. "but I'm not gay." The very need to express that in any situation discussing homosexuality is indicative of something.
I'm not gay, by the way. Just saying.
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