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Do you actually enjoy being gay?

Just so you know, it's not like straight people are just living "easy". Most people all face the same problems in the long run. The only thing thats really different between gays and straights is that straights can get married.

But marriage isn't what life is based solely around. It's just a part of life.




And I love being bi. I'm glad I didn't turn out straight and I'm glad I didn't turn out gay.
 
Being gay and out kicks so much ass, you can't even comprehend. :)

And no, "coming out" didn't mean dragging out a soapbox and megaphone. It didn't mean ditching my straight friends. It didn't mean hooking up every night (or every hour). It didn't mean free rainbow short-shorts and a Cher CD.

I still have plenty of gay friends and plenty of straight friends. (Just about to leave to grab dinner with a straight couple, in fact.) I'm happy to have both punk musicians AND drag queens in my circle of friends. I dress in T-shirts and jeans, listen to rock music, and hold season tickets to a contact sport.

And I'm gay. And totally out of the closet. Everybody knows - from the drag queens to the punk musicians. My boss, my parents and my cousins in rural Wisconsin. Hell, we often meet the athletes from the contact sport at a bar after each game, and they know. And you know what? Nobody cares. They like me, they like my partner, and they know we come as a set. And they treat us like any other (straight) couple.

Like I said, it kicks ass. :)

Lex
 
@Lube:
Yup, you're right about pretty much everything. And your blog is great :D

@Telstra:
True. I think I have a really nice life, except for that little big problem. I think I'd have practically no problems if I were a straight guy :lol:

@TX-Beau:
It's completely not like that. We joke about them being gay just like how we joke about many other things. Seriously, it's not like that, I know when people are highly homophobic and hate everything gay-related.

@boiseboy:
Again, I know being straight doesn't automatically erase every potential problem you might have. But not being straight is a problem itself.

@G-Lexington:
That's just how I want my life to be. I don't want to change my current lifestyle at all! I love it, I don't want the gay-ness to dominate every aspect of my life. I hope I can eventually say those exact words :D
 
2- I don't like most gay people I've met online. They're almost all dumb, superficial, way-too-girly, way-too-sex-driven, promiscuous, and overall boring. I've met a couple of gay guys in person, and it's just the same. Now, I know I can't simply generalize like that, but that means finding a potential good gay friend is absurdly difficult. Finding good friends regardless of their sexuality is hard enough, trying to find a good gay friend looks practically impossible. If I can't find a gay friend, it's safe to assume I won't find a boyfriend anytime soon. That means I'll be virgin for a long, long time.

You're looking at all of this from a completely wrong perspective. ..|

Apparently you're approaching this from a stereotypical perspective of what it means to be "Gay". :rolleyes:

You said that you're 21, and good for you, it will only happen once for you in this life time! :D

But OMG! :bartshock

You're already completely limiting yourself to any chance of finding any truly "gay friends" by basing every experience that you have with a few online *cough* friendship/potential hook ups. :rolleyes:

Do I personally enjoy being "Gay?"

It gives me some freedoms that being "straight" but liking dick can't offer.

I don't have to hide behind some anomaly of "bisexuality."

I like Guys!

I like how they fit into a pair of jeans, the way that they smell, the way that they taste.

I love my Gay friends because they would be my friends EVEN if we didn't share an attraction to Men.

Do I enjoy being Gay?

It has it's draw backs, especially when I'm looked upon by family and friends as something "other."

And even more confusing when I encounter another equally attractive guy such as yourself, who's yet to encounter the liberating freedom of celebrating who you love.

As opposed to slapping some oppressive label on them, and declaring them un-happy because you've yet to discover that happiness within your own life, based upon your own (or other's) preconceived definition of what it means to be "Gay."

Do I enjoy being gay?

Yep!
 
you're right about gay being the "hard mode" and straight being the "easy mode". But I think that's why I enjoy being gay. In the game of life, being able to play the "hard mode" just make you that much better and you know how to survive :)
 
It's all about acceptance - and confidence.

You can't change what you can't control - you can only be yourself.

Life is only as easy/hard as you make it out to be;

I LOVE being gay, and I rarely even get the intimacy, nor do I date. I just adore men! I have no gay friends, but I just apprecaite MEN.
 
I just feel being gay is like playing life on "really hard" mode, while everyone else is playing on "very easy"
You said you like video games right? Well the try looking at life this way: On "very easy," you get all the best stuff with very, very little effort. It's kind of fun but not really, sort of exciting but mostly dull, occasionally interesting but mainly pointless, and in the end, after you've beaten the game you realize that the experience in easy mode really wasn't all that enjoyable at all and that you probably just wasted your time. Now try "hard," where it takes far more effort to succeed at the same goal, but with an end result that's significantly more satisfying and, more importantly, a gameplay experience that you'll remember long into the future. Which one sounds more fun? Take that answer and apply it to real life.

Sure, straight life probably is easier for SOME, but (to reference video games again), some people can't even get through "easy mode". You can't generalize that to be straight is to live an easy "normal" life and that to be gay is anything otherwise. Frankly, life is (cliche alert) what you make it. With the exception of marriage, you can, and deserve, to have everything in a gay life that you could in a straight one, and in no way does that take away from your "normality".

Trust me dude, I know exactly where you're coming from. I'm your same age with what seems like very similar friends to yours (minus the gay jokes) and my gayness was a shock to everyone. Less than a year ago, I still hadn't come to terms with my "gay thingy," and not too long before that I quite literally hated myself for it (to the point where I was willing to give up living altogether, totally counter the type of person that I had always been before then and am now). Even now, after spending time here at JUB (which helped to degree far beyond what words could even express), the realization that I'm not what everyone expects of, and assumes about, me hits hard. At times I still do wish i didn't have to be different, but then I'm reminded that it's something that I can't change, and would honestly never want to. I'm happier than I've ever been and do like being gay, not because I am gay (does that make sense?) because now I know how to love all of myself, not just the parts that fit into the future everyone had planned out for me. It's never going to be easy to accept that you are not what society considers typical. You are a minority and that's okay. As lube said, we all are minorities in one way or another and that's what makes us all great.

I have a request of you: please at least try to love yourself for who you are, and not worry so much about what you are. And come out when you're ready in the way that you see fit, no dramatic Facebook status updates necessary.

When you say you feel like your the only gay guy "like yourself," I assume you mean not effeminate in the sense of stereotypically gay men. If that is the case, you are very much mistaken. I'm like you, as are soooo many of the guys here. That said, the guys not "like yourself" are just as great. Stereotypes are what they are. If you fit one, then that's who you are, if not that's cool too. Don't limit yourself in the types of people you associate with or I guarantee you'll miss out on lots of opportunities for great friendships.

Keep in mind, we're here at JUB too, so we understand you.(*8*)
 
Personally, I wouldn't want to be anything else.

And, it's the last thing about myself that I'd ever want to change.
 

i know, you are thinking oh shit he's back.

But I've been thinking (scary concept) the summary of this thread is:

gay or bi or straight or lez or trans or whatever, ENJOY your life, all that other stuff is peripherals and accessories, ones life on earth is but a nano-second to father time...so go out kick ass, laugh, love, cry, hate...but live live live.

Oh yeah, and enjoy it ..|:=D:..|








 
>>>I love it, I don't want the gay-ness to dominate every aspect of my life. I hope I can eventually say those exact words.

Well, you need to start by not insisting on some sort of divide between "straights" and "gays". Or between "straight-acting gays" and "flamers". Being straight-acting might make things a bit easier, but it doesn't make me any better than effeminate gay guys or drag queens. It's just who we are, and who we like being. The key components of enjoying being gay are "accept you for who you are" and "accept everyone else for who THEY are".

Lex
 
I'm enjoying being gay at this moment. I ascribe it to sleep deprivation, though. Not only am I enjoying my executive faggotry, I'm also feeling a little saucy.
 
Yes I love being gay without a question. This is how I was born and I'm going to take advantage of it.

I've gotten so far and I know being gay has been a big part of it. Who else is going to pay for my things? Straight horny women or Gay horny men?

I don't care about stereotypes, I don't care what people will think about me. I have my reasons for living my actions and I'll do as I please.

When I came out I was reborn and I was true to myself. Each year since then as been a better year than before. I will keep on evolving and my sexuality is a part of me that I will always be proud of. I don't need to rub it in peoples face but I will not hide who I am for other people.

I can't picture being straight or worse hiding in the closet living my life for others.

I'm independent, i'm smart, and i'm beautiful inside and out and I won't let anything stop me from what I want to do or who I want to be.
 
This really is an awesome thread you have started here.

Im pretty much in the exact same situation you are, right now. Its hard right? I feel like my logical side is trying to outdo my emotional side, and "I" end up in No Mans Land, battered and bruised.

In essence, the way to end it is to stop hating, and get on with life, accepting to myself and others that I like men. It wont take over my life. Ill still be a massive geek first and foremost, and I love that.

One of the biggest things is imagining how the people around me will change when they find out Im gay. I know people say that those who matter wont care, but that doesnt mean things wont change. It might change for the better, it might change for the worse, but both of these things add to the stereotype that you (and I) so detest. For example, girls might generally accept gay guys, but once they discover that a guy they previously thought of as straight turns out to be gay, they suddenly become a little more open with you, a little more comfortable in the potentially awkward situations, as if you have become less of a threat to them. I just want to say to them "Oi! Im still the same person! Back off!" However I might feel like this because Im threatened that getting closer to girls in a friendly way like that, will cause a change in myself to adhere more to the stereotype.

Theres two sides to every story unfortunately. There is no clear cut answer to these things. For example, those people who love being gay may do so because they have experienced being closeted and the relief of coming out and living a life where your not limiting yourself is ten times better, even if a "gay life" is worse/harder than a "straight life" overall.

The best thing to do might be to let go of all the thinking about coming out, the trivialities and questions you have floating around your head 24/7 and just do what you love as when you will. I overanalyse everything and its gotten me nowhere. Im in the process of trying to let it go, but as you can see from this ranty message, it can be a long, slow process.

Hope things turn out well for you dude.
 
oh ,yes I enjoy being, as i call myself , semi-gay(since i am not out, i call myself that.It's a joke. A sad-one , but it;s an effort!)
. although i am not totally out, and all lonely and sad, i still beleive that once i will be totally out, the prejudices and the sterotypes would come a handfull. but still, this is life. you either move on or you cry. the choice is yours.. take the pill. and enjoy it's side effects!
 
This is the hand you were dealt, so you need to make the best of it. You only have so many options: 1. pretend you are straight and marry a woman, 2. pretend you are straight and never have a relationship, 3. stay closeted and live a double life, 4. be honest with yourself and others and fully live who you are. There is no way in hell I would keep myself in the closet to avoid offending relatives or risk losing friends. You are 100% responsible for your own happiness and the road you choose. You are still very young and I suspect your views will change. The process of accepting who you are takes time. Fortunately you have a ready-made community (other gays, lesbians, bisexuals, etc) to support you. We have all gone through, or are going through, the very same process. Take advantage of this forum and other supportive groups to become more comfortable with who you are.
 
I don't think I can add much more, you guys speak the truth :lol: It's just that sometimes it's kind of scary. I think I'll slowly get over this, I'm in no hurry even if I'm 21.
 
This is kinda like asking me if I'm happy being black. Yes I am, It's apart of me. In theory I could play house and find a woman but that will be fake. I'll feel incomplete and I'll be playing with an innocent persons emotions. So yea, I owe nobody an excuse for my sexual-emotional preferences, who in the blue fuck are you?:grrr: lol.
 
Playing life in the hard mode is tough, but you when you concur and succeed you get waaaaay more out of it!!

I know this is kinda of mean but when im feeling down with my sexuality, i always imagine how much harder it would be if i was gay, handicapped and ugly at the same time. But even if i was all those three, i would imagine being, gay, handicapped, ugly and no friends... etc. You begin to appreciate life a lot more. I'm not saying this is the best way to deal with things, but I find it helpful in my life.
 
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