you're pretty harsh. honestly i think it is ok to say straight acting for me, because i am and that is who i am being. myself. i just have gay feelings. thanks a lot for the encouraging words brian. and also, i don't mean to sound so fatalistic, but you can't really call me fatalistic until you walk in my shoes. if you only knew the family i have grown up in, and the school i am out. i love it here, but it is probably the most conservative school in the country. gay people are NOT really accepted, nor tolerated.
I'm sorry you think common sence is being harsh, it's not, you're just reading it that way. I'm just keepin' it real. You won't find pity in my posts, just a sharing of my experiences and the truth.
I cannot accept your argument that I have not known the kind of family you have nor the kind of school you go to, because I have, and I do.
If you read my post again, I grew up in Alabama. What more validation do you need that I can relate to your experience? Most of my family are Pentecostal. Believe me, I can relate.
I attended Auburn University, at a time when there was no gay & lesbian union on campus, and it seemed every redneck fratboy was out to get me. But it was mostly in my mind. I ended up only knowing 5 gay people at Auburn before I left, and being gay at Auburn is still a feared reality, even with all the openness and the fact that there is a gay & lesbian union now.
I agree with others that there are deeper issues at play here than just your surroundings. You argue that you
are straight acting. Again, straight acting men are straight. Accept the fact that you can be a masculine gay man, and don't have to hide behind the straight acting phrase. Again, I'm not being mean, just real.
Once you are comfortable with yourself you will see the wisdom in the advice that others have posted that when you accept yourself, others opinions do not change who you are, and you will not care, because people who really care about you will accept you just the way you are.