tallslenderguy(other male)
|
4 years ago •
May 1, 2020
4 years ago •
May 1, 2020
Wow, love this question.
i ascribe to the spectrum theory on sexuality and believe it is multidimensional and fluid. Having said that, i think there are parts of us that are more static than others? (all anecdotal and speculative on my part).
i grew up in a conservative religious culture that conditioned me to believe homosexuality is a "sin" and the result of a "fallen" or "broken nature." i believed it, whole heartedly and wanted to please "God" (or my ideas of God), i believed it so thoroughly that i spent most of my life trying to change, starting at about age 14. i remember standing up in church at 19 and "confessing" that i am sexually attracted to guys. my future wife was even there, yet she still married me two years later. None of us really knew what my being gay meant, we believed it was just brokenness. my life was daily, often hourly, torture (not the good kind, for you S/m peeps).
i could go on, it was a lifetime of stuff, but my point is, i was very motivated to change my identity, and couldn't. i cannot convey in a few paragraphs the daily hell i went through sincerely trying to change. i was able to function as an apparently straight guy. To this day, the only people who know i am gay are those i tell (i.e., i am not stereotypically 'gay'). i even was able to find some pleasures and happiness. i have awesome kids, i love/loved my former wife. Looking back on my marriage relationship, i compare it to a prison relationship, kind of like how some straight guys have sex and relationships with men in prison because that's all that is available. i don't think my wife was the 'prison,' but my beliefs, though she didn't help (she was convinced i am broken too).
When i finally realized i was not going to change and accepted myself, i lost everything, but gained peace and happiness. i'm one of the happier people i know.
Sorry, long story, but i do think there are some things about our identity that can change, and others that are unlikely too. i don't think it's a yes or no answer. i think what is more important is to understand how to know your self and "to thine own self be true."
|