our subject isn't cool, but he fakes it anyway
Yes, I Chose to Be Queer – I Was Not Born This Way, And Here’s Why That’s Okay
everydayfeminism.com/2015/11/queer-not-born-thi...
I don’t remember the first time I found a boy attractive.
I do know that in my earliest memories, when I was four or five, this attraction felt natural and innate. I know, too, that there was a first time I found a girl attractive, and I know that in each of those first moments, there was nothing I would describe today as sexual.
I used to claim those memories of craving intimacy with other boys were proof of my timeless gayness. They are certainly proof of a kind of queerness existing within me at a very young age, if queerness is a non-normative way of relating to gender and intimacy.
But they did not erase the alternative, normative ways of relating to gender and intimacy which I overwhelmingly embraced, nor define on their own a complete “queer” identity. They certainly weren’t proof of any kind of sexuality, which I had no concept of at that age.
Cognizance of sexual attraction came later, but not much. I explored sexual touch and had my body explored by others perhaps far too early, with both boys and girls, my same age and old enough to know that I wasn’t old enough.
These acts coupled with, admittedly, a probable influence of biology and other things in my environment led me to a more complete understanding of my sexuality. Physical intimacy with male identified persons felt different, somehow. Terrifying and freeing.
Terrifying because they were freeing.
I was physically intimate with girls through high school. I didn’t disdain the corporal feeling, but by then I had begun to sense the freedom I experienced while intimate with boys was directly tied to a type of constraint I felt when I was with girls, shackling me to a particular kind of performance of masculinity that was violent to me.
My experience with masculinity was such that the most painful expressions of it were exemplified by a forced intimacy with women. The shackles broke, or at least were damaged, when I expressed a tenderness forbidden and denied to me in any healthy form my entire life prior – a tenderness between men. And I loved it.
And I hated it.
Or, at least, I hated what it would mean for my relationships with family and friends if they were to know. I hated that I could not find the same kind of freedom outside of it, thereby salvaging society’s contentment and my own safety. I hated that keeping it in “the closet” did not bring the same freedom, that it was refused to me if I did not brand myself “different.”
But I loved it, too, and more than I hated those things. And so I chose to brand myself different.
I chose to be queer.
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everydayfeminism.com/2015/11/queer-not-born-thi...
I don’t remember the first time I found a boy attractive.
I do know that in my earliest memories, when I was four or five, this attraction felt natural and innate. I know, too, that there was a first time I found a girl attractive, and I know that in each of those first moments, there was nothing I would describe today as sexual.
I used to claim those memories of craving intimacy with other boys were proof of my timeless gayness. They are certainly proof of a kind of queerness existing within me at a very young age, if queerness is a non-normative way of relating to gender and intimacy.
But they did not erase the alternative, normative ways of relating to gender and intimacy which I overwhelmingly embraced, nor define on their own a complete “queer” identity. They certainly weren’t proof of any kind of sexuality, which I had no concept of at that age.
Cognizance of sexual attraction came later, but not much. I explored sexual touch and had my body explored by others perhaps far too early, with both boys and girls, my same age and old enough to know that I wasn’t old enough.
These acts coupled with, admittedly, a probable influence of biology and other things in my environment led me to a more complete understanding of my sexuality. Physical intimacy with male identified persons felt different, somehow. Terrifying and freeing.
Terrifying because they were freeing.
I was physically intimate with girls through high school. I didn’t disdain the corporal feeling, but by then I had begun to sense the freedom I experienced while intimate with boys was directly tied to a type of constraint I felt when I was with girls, shackling me to a particular kind of performance of masculinity that was violent to me.
My experience with masculinity was such that the most painful expressions of it were exemplified by a forced intimacy with women. The shackles broke, or at least were damaged, when I expressed a tenderness forbidden and denied to me in any healthy form my entire life prior – a tenderness between men. And I loved it.
And I hated it.
Or, at least, I hated what it would mean for my relationships with family and friends if they were to know. I hated that I could not find the same kind of freedom outside of it, thereby salvaging society’s contentment and my own safety. I hated that keeping it in “the closet” did not bring the same freedom, that it was refused to me if I did not brand myself “different.”
But I loved it, too, and more than I hated those things. And so I chose to brand myself different.
I chose to be queer.
читать дальше