Anyways, it's all a work in progress.
The sometimes confusing but always exciting journey toward finding my place in the world.
Thursday, November 11, 2010
Following up
Thanks guys for your comments on the last entry. I was second guessing myself after posting that but decided it was how I felt, so it needed to be said. It's pretty crazy how one's mindset can change. Some days I am almost to the point of declaring myself gay, other days (like the last couple) the doubts come back and paralyze me. It doesn't make it easier that I'm going back and forth between dealing with this and my career issue. The difference there: that issue I can actually openly talk to people about. I spoke to some coworkers today about my high school teaching idea, and the lingering doubts about whether turning away from academia was the right move. They agreed with my assessment: it's more important to do what you WANT than what you think you "should" do when it comes to choosing your career. The time pressure on that one is more intense though. I've signed up to take the CBEST in December. I'll need to ask for letters of rec very soon. So it looks like time might just make that decision for me, haha.
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
Frustrations
I am extremely frustrated. I just wish I could experience "sexual attraction" the way that (nearly) everyone else does. I can look at a guy and think, "He's hot." Or I can talk to a girl and think, "She's nice." But there's hardly any sexual feelings, ever. What does sexual attraction even feel like? How would you describe it? If I only had more intense feelings I would have been able to define my sexuality a long time ago. Perhaps it would have been strong enough for me to identify as "gay." I feel that my conservative nature requires quite a large amount of justification before I do that, though, and without intense sexual feelings I don't see myself reaching that threshold of justification. Which leaves me trapped in this purgatory . . . not straight enough to date girls, not gay enough to date guys. I know I'm just going to have to choose, even if it doesn't feel perfect in the end. Yep, maybe for people like me it really is a choice, in the end. I don't have my libido telling me what to do, so it's all up to my head.
You might be thinking, "But B, in the last entry you posted pictures of Taylor Kinney and talked about how hot he is!" Yeah, I did. He is hot. But do I want to have sex with him? Can't say. He's easy on the eyes, that's all I know. Is that enough to go on?
Anyways, I just needed to vent. I know I've been struggling with this question for a long time. Why is it so hard to figure out? I think like with anything it's hard to imagine unless you've experienced it. My cousin didn't even realize intensity of sexual attraction was something that varied between people until I told him about my issue.
Another frustrating incident: I had a conversation with a friend of mine earlier. He's a bit eccentric and socially awkward. He can come across as arrogant and egocentric at times. But he's a loyal friend and a nice guy, so I've been friends with him for quite some time now. Several times he's mentioned this guy in his class, who is apparently gay. Each time he has referred to the guy as "he/she." I let it slide the first couple times, but tonight I had had enough and corrected him. We argued for several minutes, and I was shocked at how reluctant he was to refer to the guy as "he." He tried "they," hoping that would be some kind of compromise that I would accept, but I didn't. I told him that just because a guy is attracted to guys doesn't make him any less of a man. I argued that since gay guys are attracted to each other, by his reasoning that would make them essentially two women. So is he saying that gay men are like lesbians? He's stubborn, but he finally acknowledged that there are different types of gay men, some more feminine than others. We ended with an "agree to disagree." I warned him that thinking of gay men as "women in all but body" was a position that would be very offensive to a lot of people. Hopefully he learned something.
Saturday, November 6, 2010
Werewolves > Vampires
I very nearly became a viewer of "The Vampire Diaries." Not only does it star Ian Somerholder, who was part of the main cast of "Lost" (but for only the first season), but it also features a plethora of other very good looking individuals. Tops was this guy.
His name is Taylor Kinney, and IMHO he takes over the "Hottest Guy Named Taylor Who Portrays a Werewolf" title. But, apparently they killed off his character recently. Phew, dodged a bullet there. It's already embarrassing enough that with "24" and "Lost" over with, the only shows I watch are on the CW ("Smallville" and "Supernatural" -- both good for eye candy as well).


Friday, November 5, 2010
Signs from the past, and politics
Recently I remembered a thought that had entered my mind a long time ago, I think back in high school. I had dismissed it at the time, though apparently it has been living somewhere in my memory since. I had the image of a guy with big, strong arms embracing his girlfriend. I don't remember exactly, but the sentiment that flashed through my mind was basically, Damn, too bad I'll never get to experience that, meaning being in the girl's position. Note that I had no desire to actually be a girl, and never have. But the thought of the closeness with the guy appealed to me in some way.
Another clue: there was a nickel arcade in the city where I grew up. My favorite game there: Altered Beast. It's a pretty stupid, repetitive, and frustrating game. But I loved playing it. Why? Well, you start off as a guy who has been summoned from his grave to rescue Zeus's daughter. Periodically you'll get attacked by these two-headed wolf things. If you kill a white one, it leaves behind a floating orb that increases your strength if you grab it. This is accompanied by the hero losing his shirt and getting a dramatic increase in muscularity. Another orb increases his musculature to ridiculous proportions (especially considering his head stays the same size throughout). Only after you get the third orb does your character transform into a beast (werewolf, dragon, weretiger, etc.) The idea of the hero being transformed into this buff hulk captured by interest. At the end of every level you would lose your powers, so you could go through the transformations again in the next one. Suffice it to say, this game has been ridiculed as being homoerotic. There's even a Facebook group I found called "Altered Beast made me gay!"
Evidence for the other side . . .
Well, other than the girls that I've had crushes on over the years (pretty much exclusively emotion-based), I can't really think of any instances. If I remember anything I'll be sure to post it.
Sooo . . .
In other news, apparently three judges who played a role in gay marriage being legalized in Iowa have failed to be reelected. Apparently a bunch of "family groups" got together and campaigned against them. I still fail to see how gay people marrying affects straight families. Or how a vote against gay marriage would be considered "pro-family." I can't stand it when groups use language to obscure instead of clarify. If you're against abortion, you're "pro-life." If you're for abortion, you're "pro-choice." Supporters of CA Prop 23 called it the "California Jobs Initiative." Opponents called it the "Dirty Energy Proposition." And any judge who makes a decision that a particular partisan group doesn't agree with is labelled an "activist judge."
I talked to my dad on the phone today and actually had a pretty calm political discussion with him. I asked him about his reaction to the election results. To convey where he stands on the spectrum, I'll just say that he attended two tea party rallies in a single week. He said that he's really disappointed that California elected Jerry Brown and Barbara Boxer. He considers them the worst thing for the state and feels they'll drag the economy down even further with spending. However, I've found some articles online that argue that the economy actually improves during Democratic administrations, and that government spending is actually good for the economy. I'm no economist, but it definitely seems that it's not a clear cut issue.
Ok, bed time.
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