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Heavy Times

Thoughts and ramblings about sex, love, kink and people from a pansexual misfit. Maybe I'll even update this from time to time!
2 years ago. January 12, 2022 at 12:48 AM

Everyone remembers getting called names when they were a kid. Some names were meant to hurt, others were not but did anyway. Some were lighthearted and some were mean-spirited. I've probably been called every name under the sun.

Growing up as a little boy who refused to cut his hair, I was always a subject of fascination for the other kids. I had weird mannerisms too, at least weird for a boy my age in the minds of others. I played with dolls and action figures alike. I was sensitive. They called me plenty of names; every name you can imagine an adolescent boy on the playground leveling at another, I was the recipient of at one time or another. I hated it, I hated every minute of it, and I remember how upset I would get, even though I knew it was coming. Still though, for years, I kept my hair long.

I wouldn't get a proper short haircut until I was 13. The peak pressure of middle school had finally taken its toll on me and I gave in. I cut my hair, I tried to act more like what I thought a "man" should act like. I knew in my heart that I was different but, I thought, maybe that was a problem with me? Maybe that could change? Maybe if I tried hard enough, I could position myself firmly into normality that I would just be like everyone else. Regardless, the names kept on coming.

It took me years to figure it all out again. It didn't matter what I did to appease my peers, I would still be the object of some peculiar fascination because every bit I fought against myself and my nature, the more uncanny the outcome would be, and the further I would alienate myself from my feelings. So little by little, I stopped appeasing. I began to grow my hair back out. I started dressing outrageously flamboyant in skinny patterned pants and pointy shoes. I stopped fearing what people thought about me and focused on what made me feel comfortable. The names got worse, the homophobic remarks both pointed ands casual were coming harder and faster than ever. The nasty comments people made seemed to get more and more laser accurate to pinpoint my insecurities. With that came the paranoia, 'do people know I'm gay?', 'how can they know I'm sensitive about that?' etc. Everything seemed go be escalating, but one thing stood out even amidst all the ridicule: I actually felt better about myself, for the first time in my life. I came to wear the names I got as a badge of pride, a testament to my will.

It would still be years later, well after high-school ended that I would formally come out as pansexual. Self discovery and self confidence is a lifelong journey, one I'm sure that I'll never complete. But as cliche as the advice sounds, being yourself is truly the ultimate form of happiness. The names may still come, but you will be you, on your own terms, and no one can take that away from you. Names are just names after all, and they are a dime-a-dozen, but there will always be only one, authentic, you.

 

This is a little out of character for me, writing like this about myself, maybe it'll be helpful to someone, maybe it won't. Maybe it's corny, maybe its not insightful, but thank you for reading all the same.

2 years ago. January 7, 2022 at 8:04 PM

There seems to be some form of entitlement unique to men (obligatory not all men before someone takes this the wrong way). Sure, there are plenty of entitled people of all genders around the world, but no one knows how to lay it on, in and around the bedroom like men do. Straight men, gay men, and everyone in between or outside those lines; we all grew up internalizing the same things, the same misogyny, the same media, all telling us that men are entitled to certain things and that strong men get what they want.

Even after years of working to deprogram myself, I'm sure I slip back into these bad habits every now and then. It doesn't matter that I've come out as queer, because somewhere down the line, I was taught the same things everyone else was. That doesn't mean that we can never learn though, or at least try to do better. What good is embracing the fact that you're different, kinky, gay, or anything else, if you're going to bring all of the toxic bullshit from the vanilla, cis-het world with you?

I had to cut ties with someone I considered a friend (with benefits) after he threw a tantrum about his sexual dissatisfaction, demanding I pay for the entirety of the motel room we agreed to split, simply because I couldn't bring myself to top that day.

This entitlement doesn't end at the line in the grocery store, or on the end of customer service line. Certain men feel entitled to everything, your time, your attention, your body. You can see it in how they act when they get horny. You can read it in the DM's they send you that waste your time, immediately cross a million boundaries, have zero effort put into them or some combination of the three. Everyone remembers that guy or those guys that got horribly nasty upon rejection, or the guy who demanded so much while offering so little.

 

I've had some bad experiences with men, and I know that not everyone is like that, but we owe it to ourselves to do better.

 

Rant over, take care of yourselves ya'll!

2 years ago. January 7, 2022 at 5:22 AM

Writing about myself has always been hard for me for some reason. Maybe by doing it a little bit, I'll learn something?

Hello all, I'm CV. I'm 24 years old, but sometimes I feel like I'm 50. I'm a student, a construction worker, a musician, an artsy fuck and a loving partner. I've always known, since a very young age that I wasn't going to fit into a lot of the places that I was, perhaps supposed to and so, I've spent 24 years trying to make sense of the world and my place in it.

Exploration is part of who I am; I would never have found the happiness I've managed to if I just stayed in the same box all my life. Albeit exploring the city, food, art, music and of course, my sexuality, expanding my horizons seems to be part of who I am.

I've been so blessed to share the past four years with a caring partner whom I cherish and who loves me for who I am, and supports me in this exploration as I support them in theirs.

I don't really know what else to say at the moment other than, hello again to anyone reading! I think it's time for me to creep a little further out of my shell!

Hopefully I won't forget about this blog, stay tuned for more drivel!