Post #155906
February 01, 2021, 06:09:18 PM
Being someone who has spent a lot of his life online, it's not surprising that most the experiences that defined my sexuality were online as well.
My first real crush on a guy was someone I met online when I was 17. It was actually my then online girlfriend's best friend's friend. We'd have group chats together, and at some point he started messaging me alone. Then he started flirting with me, telling me I should practice things on him so I'd be better for my girlfriend. We never actually did anything, but I realized that I kinda liked the flirting, and I thought he was a really awesome guy. I'd talk him up with my other friends, to the point that they realized I was into him and told me. I was like...huh, I guess so. I was naive back then I didn't even know liking guys like that was a thing, lol.
Fast forward a decade later, and some of my friends thought it'd be a good idea if I checked out some gay communities, cause up to that point I'd rarely interacted with other gay people (I identified as gay at the time), so I ended up at gaygamer.net (defunct now). It was an...interesting experience, lol. It was the sort of website that had a public "post a picture of yourself in your underwear" topic, and I heard that most of the real-life meetups ended up turning into orgies. I spent a few months there and made a few friends, but I never felt like I fit in (surprising, right?), so when there was a community schism I left with a portion of the community to a new site called gay-nerds.com (which I think is still up but no longer has a community portion). That was my first experience with an exclusive NSFW area, although I wasn't the sort of guy most of them were into (again surprising, right?). I made a few friends there (especially Daxev, which you guys may remember from Wintreath's early years), but again I never felt like I belonged so I eventually got bored and left. Actually, now that I remember, the entire popular clique on that website ended up moving into the owner's apartment and living together...like 5 or 6 guys.
Actually, Wintreath itself may be the first time I felt like I fit in with a group of people in the LGBTQ community...I don't now if it's because we're a healthier and less dramatic/catty community, or if it's just because I'm the leader of it, or both, lol. But this is the first time I've met and known a lot of LGBTQ people in a community rather than just a few fellow people on the fringes. It's also where I've done a lot of exploring, going from identifying as gay to bi to pansexual to demisexual. So I suppose in terms of LGBTQ websites and interactions, it's Wintreath itself that has meant the most to me.