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Hello Silver. Hopefully I can give some pertinent advice, as being a black guy myself, I have dealt with what you have said plenty of times during my short time as an out gay guy.
I believe I'm very fortunate to look the way I do. I have gotten nothing but compliments about my appearance, every I go. I've been called beautiful countless times, really attractive, sexy, handsome, all of the physical compliments there are. And they have come from people of all ethnicities, all nationalities, both genders.
However, I have not let the fact that my appearance has been complimented on cloud my knowledge and realization of the fact that for many of those people, I'd be nothing more than the exotic lay of the day. For even more of those people, I'd be akin to a museum piece "look but don't touch">
For an even smaller sub-set, I wouldn't even be invited in the house, solely because of my skin color and where most of the ethnic heritage is from (I'm also part Seminole and Irish, but African dominates my ethnic lineage). And you know what? That's fine. My family told me from a young age that there'd be times when I'd be treated differently solely because of how I look. With that discrimination, you have to take the bad with the good.
We forget that discrimination is not a wholly negative thing. I'm sure we can all point to times when we've gotten something, or have been able to do something, because we were discriminated FOR, not against. A guy takes us out on a date, pays for everything. Why? He found us attractive, he discriminated FOR us because of our appearance. We do it all the time, but the word discrimination has a pejorative connotation so we use other times to describe what we do, how we act.
From your initial post, I can understand why you'd be upset. I've been in that position countless times. That being said, I think you might have been too hasty to blame race for the reason the guy never called you back. You don't know what might have come up in his life. He might have lost his job, a family member, or met a guy who whisked him away on a jet plane. Those are all uncertainties, just as your race being the factor is.
Maybe he drove off, thought about the date, and just said to himself things didn't mesh. Yes, he kissed you. Yes, he paid for stuff. Yes, he gave off the impression that he was interested in further things. But guess what, you have no idea of his mind-frame before, during, and especially after he dropped you off, and you probably wont. That happens to us all: black, white, purple with spots, short, tall, ugly, sexy. Sometimes, things just happen with the other person, and it's not because of anything about us or we've done, the issue is with them.
Now, onto the race issue. Something I've noticed is that the perception of who constitutes a "black person" in the physical sense is very different because a black person and other ethnicities. I saw your picture, and to me, you're look is not typical of most black people. I would guess you'd have some Latin in you, or (like almost all non-African black people) European heritage. However, for other ethnicities, their conception of a black person is much different than our own, and I've realized this.
No matter how hard you try, no matter how you think, the way that the non-black ethnicities see and view you is going to be that way REGARDLESS of how you think of yourself. You especially have to understand seeing as how you have not done anything with a non-white guy. To put it into a metaphor, you can't go to a Klan meeting and be mad they discriminate and view black people differently.
You'll be ok. This is just one guy in a long list of guys who will be in your life. Like I told my dear friend who was going through a breakup. "Think of all of the guys you have met during the course of your life. Thousands of them, and thousands more will follow. Most of those guys didn't enter your life, a few did, and even a smaller few made an impact. Your ex made an impact, both good and bad. But guess what? In the long line of guys you'll meet, straight or gay, he was just another guy. Yes, you spent a bit more time with him than most, but at the end of the day, you'll meet thousands more"
Look at things under that prism, and a lot of the emotional anguish you put yourself through will go away, I'm sure of it.
happened to come in an check out this thread and what a great post this is. thanks for sharing.




















