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Trite Best Friend Story ... With a Twist - Help?

gaytxn09

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So I know I've come here before asking for help about falling for a (gay) friend and that this is a well-traveled topic, but I feel like my situation is different enough to merit further discussion. Here goes nothing....

My best friend is honestly the only person I know who I feel truly gets me on a deeper level. We met at university, where we were thrust together as roommates for a semester before I went abroad (which was the source of my previous post in this forum...funny that). At any rate, our friendship started off pretty bumpy, honestly. He's straight and VERY (like...insanely) good-looking. So I understandably thought he was hot and tried not to get in his way. We've never seen each other naked, but our friendship soon progressed to a pretty intimate level. I didn't really fit in at all with the other gay guys on campus for one reason or another (one actually spread a rumor about me "stalking" him after I sent him a Facebook message wishing him luck on his Chinese exam the day I met him through friends in the library - I was just trying to be nice). Needless to say, I felt isolated. I stuck to myself, whether in the library or in the dining hall. And this really bothered my roommate. He confronted me a couple times when I had gone to the dining hall alone because I often find the hassle of making plans with people more frustrating than eating alone. That changed my mind about him, and we started hanging more. We sang along to musicals while in the room together (yes, I am aware that's pretty gay), and things were generally pretty great. He also confronted the gays on campus who were basically bullying me when one of them disinvited me to a party my roommate wanted to take me to - it was a cast party for one of the theater groups on campus who put on a play he was in (horrible grammar...bear with me). It really felt great to have someone care that much about me. Anyway, that was 2007-08.

Looking back, it's hard to pinpoint exactly when we became "close" in the way I feel we're close today, but the feeling is apparently mutual. He likens our relationship to a familial one, and we frequently say we love each other. Things haven't been so easy because we've lived in different states since he graduated (he's now in the military, and I am in law school), but he visited me my first year while he was doing training at a base a few hours away. In retrospect, I feel like an awful friend for not driving the several hour drive at least twice a month. He's worth it; he's one of the VERY few people who can instantly cheer me up just by saying hi. I feel like our friendship is unusual in that we don't talk every day, but we talk enough - it's understood that we're very close. He was so excited about seeing me again that he told pretty much everyone he knew (including his gf, who, immediately after they started dating, apparently knew who I was and wanted to meet me).

This "problem" is about the recent trip when we both drove to New Orleans to see each other (it had been about a year and a half since we'd seen each other last). NOLA is much closer to him (3.5 hours) than it is to me (8.5 hours), but I'd never been, and I figured it would be worth it. To make a very long and complicated story short, we got wasted, as one usually does in New Orleans. At one point, I got really upset at something very, very stupid (having to wait 20 minutes to pay for shots and a round of drinks - and a drink for the pushy waitress - and then coming back to find that my shots and drinks had been drunk already). I left the my friend, the friends he brought with him from Florida, and the bar in a huff, really disappointed and frustrated with the way things turned out. I ended up texting really depressing/self-destructive things to my friend and a random assortment of friends. (Yes, this is an issue, but it's not really what I need help with.) My best girl friend from college (who knows my best friend/roommate) made me go back and find him and talk to him.

Miraculously, he was still at the bar I left them at even though it had been almost two hours. I had sobered up a little bit, and we had a discussion, during which I cried cuz he kept saying that his goal was to make sure I'd be okay and on the right track if something ever happened to him - I think this is because he knows how depressed and anxious I get, and he actually, genuinely cares. I was crying because I couldn't handle him dying and didn't like the analogy - he's already been to Iraq once. After the discussion, we went to find the gay friend he brought to meet me (tacky, I know, but he knows I don't meet gay guys, and the guy was admittedly very hot and quite my type) to continue drinking. We ended up at a gay bar, and about an hour in, my best friend's friend leaves, and it was just us. Things quickly escalated to a level that our relationship never had reached in the past 4 years (or in the 5 years I've known him). He kept mentioning that he had given his underwear to a bride-to-be, and at one point he was grinding up on me. He became quite aroused, at which point there was really no mistaking what was going on. I grinded back, although I was not erect, stuck my hand in his pants a couple times, and we kissed. Outside the club, we held hands and talked to a few people who remarked how cute a couple we were. He never corrected them--he just grinned.

At this point, he clearly showed inner conflict. Earlier that day, he had told me that his brother had recently come out to his family (his brother is a year younger than us). His family's reaction was to say "We always thought you were the gay one!" to my best friend. He has a lot of gay friends and has a lot of stereotypically gay interests, but he really had none of the usual reasons to be closeted: he's from the Northeast, he had a loving mother (no real father figure), he's reform Jewish, and he went to two top-tier, liberal universities (he transferred to mine my sophomore/his junior year). After this happened between us, he remarked to me something to the effect of, "I love you and this, but I also love girls a lot and my gf." And I didn't really try to persuade him one way or the other. I just steered him towards pizza. We continued to hold hands, even at the pizza place, we shared a drink, he FED ME PIZZA, and continued to be openly affectionate in other ways in which we hadn't been before. We went back to the hotel, but we couldn't talk about what had happened because his friends were awake, so we went to bed.

I was okay with this progression of events mainly because it seemed to make sense. My best friend is one of the only people I connect with on an intellectual level, we talk about anything and everything and are interested in the same things. We also do genuinely love each other. This just seemed like a logical progression in our relationship if he actually were gay or bi.

The next morning, we didn't get to talk either because we were constantly with his friends. He seemed a bit distant, freaked out a bit that he called his gf the night before, but he clearly remembered the events of the previous evening - when he was telling what we did after his friend left the club, he had a good understanding of the timeline and clearly glossed over the events I'm concerned with. I found this a bit frustrating, but it made a lot of sense. A lot of my friend's silly/goofy behavior (giving the bride-to-be his underwear, etc.) can be seen as macho, "proving his straightness" behavior. I didn't really think anything of it, though I was worried. When I left, we hugged for a few seconds, and I asked him, "We're good right?" He said, "Yes," and I left.

Later that week, I was drunk after happy hour (oh the life of the graduate student), and I texted/called him. His take on what had happened was that he loves his gf, we were just "two best friends having fun," that he missed his gf, "loves attention," and was generally having a "selfish indulgent time." All of this was really out of character for him and really upset me. Throughout all of this, I never saw myself as the instigator of what happened. I wasn't even hard (he groped me at one point, and that didn't get me hard either). I think I was more shocked than anything. I do love him, and now that this has happened, I can't think of anyone else I want to be with or a situation that could be more right. Yet his reaction was to essentially pin the blame on me and walk away.

I'm not willing to accept this justification for a number of reasons. First, it makes no sense - our relationship had never progressed to physicality before, and there was no added reason this time. We've been wasted together plenty of times, and nothing funny ever happened. Also, he was ROCK hard. Second, his justification calls into question the foundations of our friendship. If he craved attention and was being selfish and indulgent, he didn't think enough of me to not go there with me? I was nothing more than a sex toy? He knows I've never had a bf, he knows how hard it is for me to meet guys (and people in general), and he knows how my personality can be a bit excessive for some people and it's one of the reasons he loves me: that I care with all my heart and that I'm sensitive to other people's feelings. And third, if he was really questioning his sexuality, why would he do this while drunk and then run away sober? I understand that he could be scared, but his brother is gay, I'm gay, and his close friend from Florida is gay.

I just really don't know what to do with this situation. I've asked several people, and the advice has been all over the place. It's been a month since the "incident," and we really haven't talked at all since our argument after it. Our interactions are now brief and emotionless. Then, out of nowhere on Monday, while im'ing (at my instigation) and discussing his Thanksgiving break, he tells me he broke up with his gf and that it was amicable. No explanation. I'm not one to jump to conclusions on my own behalf, and I know that their relationship was long-distance, but they'd been dating for almost two years, and then he dumps her right after this happens? The timeline seems sketchy to me. I'm not assuming he dumped her for me (I have far too low an opinion of myself to see that as likely), but I do think he dumped her because he might be questioning his sexuality.

Basically, my problem is: how do I get my best friend back? I was happy before with a brother I would never otherwise have (I'm an only child). I didn't want sex to come between us at all, and I am still really unsure whether I think of him that way. Romantically, I can see us together, but sexually, I'm still really uncertain. And I feel like that's telling. I love him with all my heart, and I do feel like he's my soulmate. Yet...... His (over)reaction blaming me is really unacceptable, as is basically ignoring my attempts to reach out. I haven't been texting every day, but if it's been 4 days since a reply, I check in. I haven't broached this topic since our argument, and I'm not going to unless he brings it up. Am I right to just let him come to terms with this on his own? I have to say I'm concerned that he either won't deal with it, that he won't get over it and will continue to blame me, and that his gay friend there will pounce on him and steal him from me. Yes, the last one is jealous, but I still feel it.

The trip was supposed to rejuvenate me, as I'd been feeling really blue and lacked confidence in myself because I haven't been too successful in law school. And my friend is always really supportive and has such faith in me it can be inspiring. Instead, I went off the deep end after this. My thoughts have verged on suicidal an uncomfortable amount (no worries - I'm (a) in therapy and (b) not capable of self-harm in reality because I'm super squeamish), and I've been really reckless in sex (more promiscuous than usual and often not safe) and my finances.

Any suggestions?

Thanks, and sorry for my longwindedness.
 
The situation that you describe also happens with gay men- they may have a female friend that comes to the club and things get a little out of hand. However, this does not change the situation- a gay man is still gay even if he has an erotic night out with his female best friend.

Sexuality isn't always black or white. And feelings that two very close male friends have for each other can be very complicated.

What's clear is that you want your friend to be gay. He probably wants you to be straight. In the end, you accept each other- as is- because your friendship is important.

You have a very close friend who you care about and who cares about you. Unfortunately, he's not going to be your boyfriend. It's time to move on and find a gay guy who is both a lover and a friend.

The best thing that you can do at this point is think of this as "What happens in New Orleans stays in New Orleans". It was a one-time thing. And it's better to move forward with your friendship instead of dwelling on something that can't be and will probably never be.
 
I hope you are taking this story with all it's complication to therapy. It needs sorting out with a professional. Introverted, passive people with few friends tend to "put all their eggs in one basket" out of social necessity. You seem to spend more emotional time on him than you do on yourself and that's how your story matches similar one's found in this forum. No one can will another person to fall for them in all the ways needed for a romantic relationship.

You are obviously in emotional pain and you are using two drugs to treat it, alcohol and sex. Used to excess they may become addictive and lethal. These should be your first piority rather than your friend's feelings towards you.

Based upon your story I would give you the following advice:

Examine if you ought to be in law school or choosing another career path about which you feel more passion.

Look at excessive alcohol consumption and unprotected promiscuity as slow forms of suicide and realize that you are capable of self harm.

Explore the reasons why you haven't made more social headway with gay peers.

In the end you control your own happiness regardless of how loved ones behave or talk (or don't talk). We may not be able to control feelings but we can control what we do with those feelings, always remembering that they come and go. I see a therapeutic agenda in your future which has the potential of giving you a healthy emotional and social life. Best wishes.
 
Did or didn't you have sex? Sound to me like he went a bit to far and didn't realise what he had got himself into? Straight guys are less emotional and with you being too emotional, you might have scared him off because it started to feel more like a relationship than a potential bit of fun ( experiment).


My advice is leave it, the damage has been done. Don't give yourself sleepness nights. People change and as much we would like them to be the people there were in the past, it never happens.

These are wise words....

Dont make someone a priority if they only make you an option
 
Wow, Seasoned is the best advice-giver on this site!
 
hmmmm. Well first off I don't know how you are going to survive a Law Firm if you're that introverted. You need to work on that.

OK stop with the binge drinking. you're not a Freshmen anymore and you have some kind of social dysfunction that makes me think you drink too much socially to self medicate it. That never works, you just end up with maudlin drunk dialing and every other kind of sloppy inebriated, over exaggerated drama. Like this one.

Would you have had quite the theater piece if both of you had moderated your drinking? Probably not.

Since we don't know what his take on this is - and you could be seeing very different things - and probably are, since you've been friends that long and that close and you say he's not phobic - move on, if anything were going to happen between you on an emotional level it already would have.

I had a drunk straight guy shove his hand down my pants and his tongue into my mouth at the back of a titty bar once, why did he do it? Curiosity, availability, horniness, and alcohol. The great experimentation recipe.

You don't live near each other, you're not going to, he's not a viable choice to spend all of this emotional energy on.

Most likely he's embarrassed and doesn't want to think about the incident, so fair enough, leave him alone and let it blow over.

In the mean time, you need to find someone to spend all of this emotion on that's not him.
 
Yet his reaction was to essentially pin the blame on me and walk away.

I never really saw where he implied that. Maybe he has real, confused feelings for you, but denying them doesn't mean he blamed you or made you the bad guy.
 
Okay, a few answers:

Yes, I am in therapy.

No, I'm not an alcoholic. Those two instances were the only times I've gotten drunk (or had a drink at all) in the past month and a half. And before that, it'd been another month. I don't go out much, not because I don't like going out (I do). Mainly it's because I don't like the people I meet out.

Why don't I make headway with gay friends? Most of the people I find actually compelling as friends have boyfriends or are otherwise unavailable. I need someone as smart as, if not smarter than, me and who actually wants to be friends and not just acquaintances who sporadically do things together. Trust me, it's not for lack of trying, and I've pretty much given up. On paper, I'm a catch, but in real life, I'm kind of not. So more often than not, I just don't try. It's not worth it. And, before you jump on me to say, "They're FRIENDS, not BOYfriends," just let me ask how many of you with boyfriends spend any significant amount of time with anyone other than your boyfriend? Even if all I wanted was a friend, it's not like the guy's boyfriend would see it that way. But I don't think the answer to my problem is my going to find a random, vapid, self-interested, and/or immature twink at a bar or club.

No, my social dysfunction isn't self-medicated through alcohol - we were in New Orleans, that's what you do in New Orleans. I actually make acquaintances/social friends very easily. I'm really easy to talk to, and I say outrageous things and am otherwise entertaining. My problem is bridging the gap between that kind of relationship and actual friendship.

And to the comments about law school and being unsuccessful at a law firm (which were really not helpful comments btw): it would be incredibly stupid of me not to finish, as I have one semester left. And it's not that I'm not passionate about certain aspects of the law. I'm not SUCCESSFUL in it. Grading in law school can be pretty arbitrary, and it's often not indicative of whether you actually understand in a practical sense the way the law works in a given area. So I haven't done well, grades-wise. I had a great internship last summer, where I loved what I was doing and loved the office dynamic, but I have a snowball's chance in hell of actually doing that because of my grades. I didn't really give much insight about that part in my life because I didn't want help with it. That's something I have to figure out for myself.

I'm regretting posting now, as this has been really unhelpful.
 
I'm regretting posting now, as this has been really unhelpful.

In threads like this, the people who respond have only your description of your life and the events that took place to go on. They give advice based upon the circumstances as your present them.

You're never under any obligation to take advice. We only ask that you listen and give it thought.

Some of the advice given may have been based upon a misread of comments in your post- or at least comments that you made that came out in a different way from what you intended.

There is a self-destructive bent to what is going on in your life. It's good that you're getting therapy.

In the end, this thing with your friend isn't going to be what you hope it will be. Most of the advice that you've been given is focused on encouraging you to move on and find day-to-day friends and eventually find someone to date.

But there's still a lot of work that you've got to do one yourself before you can be an equal in a relationship. You may not like that advice but it's given with the best of intent.
 
What does his career and drinking have to do with this? He was asking about his relationship with his best friend?

I am don't have gay friends. Don't want to deal with the bitchiness or other things. The is no law living up to a stereotyping or doing things just cause the majority of gay people do it.
 
I thought I was clear that I wasn't sure what I wanted my relationship with him to be. Again, I was not sexually aroused by our actions that night. I love him, and I'd love to spend my life with him, but I don't know what it would be or how it would be? And I can't tell him any of this because I don't know how he'll react. His comments on this thus far have seemed to point the blame on me. One thing he said was that I had emotional expectations from the weekend going in. Which......is a lie. I just wanted to see my best friend.

Yes, I am introverted, but I can also be very social. My main problem being social is, I can't be social on the surface without expecting something even just a little deeper. I always want the people I like and care about to actually care back. And it's really dangerous. Because then I start to value myself based on whether or not the people I call my friends actually make any time at all for me when I go out of my way to make time for them. It makes me wonder whether I should have stayed painfully introverted because at least I wouldn't have to deal with shitty situations like this.
 
As long as you want to make changes as to how you interact socially and have help of some kind doing it you have a good chance of success. Yes it can be scary and painful. I was hugely introverted and it's still my basic nature, but when I have told new friends that I am they have burst out laughing in my face. I've made changes that large.

So, please continue to take those social risks. The trick is to reprogram your internal self-talk. With enough experience you'll be better able to see your progress. Intensity can be a great asset, but understand how that might be off-putting until someone gets to better know you.

By the way, your friend is blaming you in order to be dishonest with himself and that's not being very friend-like. Take good care.
 
gaytx, I find myself confused with the type of love I am feeling for someone. You can still love someone and be friends for the rest of your lives. But give it some cooling time and as seasoned said, you are going to feel pain.

It is okay to love someone who you may never be with don't beat yourself up on it.

Personally when I am in an emotional fucked up place, I keep to myself ( not going out e,t,c) if I know I am going to be a danger to myself (sex, drinking). And time is a healer, when your ready, then go out. But it is always good to keep in contact with close friends.
 
I thought I was clear that I wasn't sure what I wanted my relationship with him to be. Again, I was not sexually aroused by our actions that night. I love him, and I'd love to spend my life with him, but I don't know what it would be or how it would be? And I can't tell him any of this because I don't know how he'll react. His comments on this thus far have seemed to point the blame on me. One thing he said was that I had emotional expectations from the weekend going in. Which......is a lie. I just wanted to see my best friend.

So, in other words you have conflicted feelings about him.

And he apparently has conflicted feelings about you. And he feels pressured by your conflicted feelings about him.

There's little to be accomplished by trying to find blame (which is what you both are doing without realizing it). The only blame that can be made is shared by both of you for drinking so much that you let the alcohol cloud your judgment (blame New Orleans if you must but NOLA didn't order the drinks :p).

But what is done is done.

Back to something in my first response... Feelings between two guy friends are complicated. Two close male friends can love each other much in the same way that a couple love each other. Sometimes it can be even more intense than romantic love. This makes for a lot of very complicated feelings, especially when one or both of them identify as straight.

In the end what this comes down to is that your friend identifies as straight. That limits what can be and what will be.

All that you can do at this point is to assure your friend that his friendship is important to you and that you would not do anything to endanger that. And then give him space.

Keep in touch with your friend but don't make him feel pressured to talk about things until he's ready to talk about them. In the meantime, work on yourself. Focus on your own life and school. And the next time the two of you see each other, you will be in a much better place to deal with the issue.
 
I thought I was clear that I wasn't sure what I wanted my relationship with him to be. Again, I was not sexually aroused by our actions that night. I love him, and I'd love to spend my life with him, but I don't know what it would be or how it would be? And I can't tell him any of this because I don't know how he'll react. His comments on this thus far have seemed to point the blame on me. One thing he said was that I had emotional expectations from the weekend going in. Which......is a lie. I just wanted to see my best friend.

Yes, I am introverted, but I can also be very social. My main problem being social is, I can't be social on the surface without expecting something even just a little deeper. I always want the people I like and care about to actually care back. And it's really dangerous. Because then I start to value myself based on whether or not the people I call my friends actually make any time at all for me when I go out of my way to make time for them. It makes me wonder whether I should have stayed painfully introverted because at least I wouldn't have to deal with shitty situations like this.


I don't understand. You're a man, aren't you? I know attraction is more complicated than "would you or wouldn't you hit that?" but at the end of the day.. if homeboy isn't getting you up, then what's the point of being down?

It sounds like this guy's an extreme "bro". All my experimenting with straight friends growing up were all with this kind: young, attractive, hedonistic attention-seeking males. The mindset these guys have developed all seem to peak during late adolescence, but it fizzles out in reality far sooner than egos can acknowledge it. He was drunk, with you (his close friend who clearly adores and worships him), talking about how he wants you to be okay despite that he's never seen you with someone. Then you start crying when the idea of him "no longer being there" comes up.

You're right, it's a cruel and selfish thing to pull but honestly, I'm guessing he probably thinks you're in love with him and this was his way of throwing you a bone. I would probably do the same thing if I were him. If only in case something (god/whatever you choose to believe in forbid) does happen to him, he might have wanted you to remember that if he could "love" you, then you are worthy of love and someone else will too.

Maybe?
 
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