megustamyn
Porn Star
- Joined
- Jul 17, 2005
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- 392
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I agree. The most comprehensive study ever done on male sexuality, nearly 60 years ago, concluded this very point. Kinsey wanted to follow up his work with a similar study on female sexuality but his funding was withdrawn because his findings were too controversial.Sexuality is a fluid thing. Some people are truly 100% gay, while others are truly 100% straight, and some other number fall somewhere in the middle...ranging from experimentation to full blown bisxuality which is where I sit).
If we weren’t so hung up on labels, we’d all be happier. People don’t fit into neat categories. Some like women, some like men, some like both and others aren’t interested in sex at all. Some have the same likes all their lives and others change. We need to accept people as they are and stop trying to classify them.
We are conditioned into believing that straight is better from the moment we’re born. Many people find it hard to rid themselves of that notion and carry internalized homophobia within them most of their lives.
I decided about 20 years ago that I would not date a man who wasn’t out and comfortable with his sexuality. I learned from experience that it’s too much trouble. I can appreciate and admire an attractive man regardless of his sexuality but I’m not interested in anyone who identifies as straight.
I spent a great part of my life in the “straight” corporate world where I knew many men who had sex with men, some out and others not. I moved into the not-for-profit world several years ago, now work primarily within the gay community and I’m known as a gay activist. My observation is that the diversity among men who identify as gay is the same as that among those who identify as straight – looks, presentation, education, race, social class, etc. – we are all just people. I’ve known many effeminate men, both gay and straight, but I think that the majority of men just come across as regular guys regardless of their orientation.

