neruda
Ex isled
I mean... i know a lot of gay men who are more masculine than me.
you should hear me scream when I see a tarantula in the wild.
Tut Jasun, its just another hairy thing....
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I mean... i know a lot of gay men who are more masculine than me.
you should hear me scream when I see a tarantula in the wild.
Tut Jasun, its just another hairy thing....
I also find it interesting not that so many gay men vigorously reject characterization of themselves (nobody likes to be summarized, we'd prefer to introduce ourselves, thanks) but that they so vigorously deny what I know they all see and encounter everyday. Namely, that the statement "a gay man chosen at random is likely to be more emotionally sensitive than a straight man chosen at random" is true, and you will make money if you bet against someone insisting that they are equally likely to be sensitive.
How can you generalise a category (in this case, homosexuals) when everyone is an individual? That's like saying every banana bread recipe you find on the internet will make an identical loaf of banana bread.
Thank you foe a logical, dispassionate comment. Bravo.Okay, reading the other responses, I can see that this OP needs a champion. I hope people respond to my post in which I defend the OP.
Firstly, it's always, always foolish to look at an individual and say "why don't you fit the stereotype?" Nobody has to explain themselves; people just are the way they are.
However, generalized observations about members of a certain category can be beneficial if done carefully. We make them innately because they helped our ancient ancestors survive and reproduce. Unfortunately, we evolved to do our innate generalizations very uncarefully. Okay for a snap judgment in a real emergency, but bad if you want to know the truth in sober, everyday civil society.
Researching the characteristics of members of categories, in particular how their traits and tendencies differ from the population as a whole, can be enlightening about what that category and membership in it is all about.
It would be hard to test in a truly scientific way, but I suspect that if you could, you would find that all of the OP characterizations are more likely to be true of gay men than straight men. I redundantly reiterate: this does not mean every gay man has all the traits, and it does not mean no gay man exists with very few of them.
The gendered implications of our natures, identities, and behaviors as gay men is most interesting to me. And trends are more compelling evidence of underlying truth than anecdotes or biographies. I also find it interesting not that so many gay men vigorously reject characterization of themselves (nobody likes to be summarized, we'd prefer to introduce ourselves, thanks) but that they so vigorously deny what I know they all see and encounter everyday. Namely, that the statement "a gay man chosen at random is likely to be more emotionally sensitive than a straight man chosen at random" is true, and you will make money if you bet against someone insisting that they are equally likely to be sensitive.
Perhaps a better term than "generalize" is "search for patterns."
I'm simply astounded at how my assertion that gay men have some effeminate traits turns into femme-bashing (really? I just asserted that it's ok to have feminine traits and one should embrace it), or as others have said that I think every gay man is a diva.Please.
I'm probably one of the most pro-femme guys around here. It pisses me off when I see femme-bashing. Everyone has a right to be who they are.
The problem is you seem to think every single gay man falls into a stereotype and that any straight man that does is in the closet. It's childish and stupid.
When you had the nerve to say that no straight man is sensitive (or that all gay men are), I couldn't read any longer. This is drivel. Plain and simple.
There are feminine gay guys. There are masculine gay guys. There are a plethora of shades in between. Such is life.
At best, you might make the proposition that non-closeted gay men, not being bound by the same social/gendered constructions of masculinity as straight men, are more likely to display their emotions a certain way, because they don't have the same expectations for behaviour. Even that, I think, is a tenuous proposition, dependent on a very simplistic evaluation of human emotion. But one should not confuse obvious displaysof emotion for actual emotional sensitivity. Some people are very gifted at displaying emotional reactions without actually feeling it themselves.
Then search for patterns which exist in every single gay male.
(You won't find any. Trust me on this one.)
It's you who seems to think that everyone is just gay and in denial. Like I said... we're not all losers at the game of life.
Straight men are as emotionally sensitive as gay men. The majority of expression differs, and not necessarily across the lines of division. But it would be more telling to examine the social demands that push, pressure and mold straight and gay men into the beings they are.
It makes it impossible to have a rational discussion when everything I say gets exaggerated beyond recognition.
Ha! Hilarious example.
Answer: because you can. Perhaps a better term than "generalize" is "search for patterns."
I'm simply astounded at how my assertion that gay men have some effeminate traits turns into femme-bashing (really? I just asserted that it's ok to have feminine traits and one should embrace it), or as others have said that I think every gay man is a diva.
It makes it impossible to have a rational discussion when everything I say gets exaggerated beyond recognition.
But you are wrong that there are no important patterns of behavior that are differential between straight and gay men. As to your idea about closetedness, that's impossible to be ethical and scientific about, because theoretically we have no idea who's closeted. (But we do, and we know it.)
All differences between people are ultimately explained by both biology and environment/social context/culture &c. If it weren't for both acting togther, there would be no differences between people at all.I am not wrong because I never discounted the possibility of any patterns of behaviour. I certainly deny any biologically-originated extrapolations, but I am open, if highly skeptical to ones based in cultural programming. And I am skeptical because there's enough global cultural dissimilarity in homosexuality to throw most of the assumptions under the bus.
And please, don't try to invoke science and then throw in definitives about 'knowing' who is in the closet when you actually don't. It undermines your overall persuasiveness.
And I am skeptical because there's enough global cultural dissimilarity in homosexuality to throw most of the assumptions under the bus.
Quote it or it didn't happen.Yes, by all means, keep digging the hole.
The only person thus far who has ascribed any negative traits to effeminacy has been you. Repudiating your arrogant worldview and your stereotypical assertions about gay and straight men is my only theme. You can harp about 'femme-bashing' all you want, but you're just making it more clear that you don't really have any substance to your statements.
I will say this:
Obviously, the stereotypes are at least somewhat true, or else the sports forum wouldn't be so fucking dead around here.![]()
