Post #142589
October 30, 2019, 05:02:33 AM
Well, it's not that I have more LGBTQ friends (well maybe I do, though I can't tell) I think it's more so that the culture of the people I've been around has been very accepting and tolerant. It's not a big deal to be out, and well my friends aren't my gay friends, they're just friends.
As for how I see myself; I know a lot of people see being gay as playing a huge role in their lives, outside of just the romantic/sexual relationships they can have (granted, it can be and is a massive part of our lives). As for me, well, it isn't something that plays a super significant role for me. I don't find myself at home with the LGBTQ community, and I don't think being Bi/Pan plays a substantial role in who I am as a person. It doesn't affect the way I express myself both outwardly and inwardly, particularly significantly. Neither does sexuality, not in the orientation sense, but more so as a sexual being.
Like, take the way you describe yourself in x amount of words or sentences. For me, being Bi wouldn't show up within the first paragraph, although there was a time when I was figuring this stuff out where it would have been front and centre lol. I know an increasing amount of people who feel that way amongst my peers.
I mean like you could write a whole essay about identity, sexuality, and what drove a lot of people to the LGBTQ community, and how the culture that surrounded it shaped the identities of people. For me, I didn't have to go through a lot of that because I was mostly accepted without anyone being like "oh, you're gay". I mean, you did say something to that line Moot, but that was more along the lines of helping me figure out the whole weirdness which comes with discovering a whole side of my sexuality which I was in denial of.
It's also 1am and I've had a long day, not all of this is coherent or well worded.