Sounding Circle: In Favor Of Sexual Pluralism

 In Favor Of Sexual Pluralism37 comments
picture 14 Jul 2003 @ 00:06, by Raymond Powers

Leif Ueland, Nerve.com
An ambivalent heterosexual comes out in favor of sexual pluralism...

Trials of a Gay-Seeming Straight Male

By Leif Ueland, Nerve.com
August 5, 2002

I am sitting on her lap as she plays with my hair. I've got a longish late-70s do, and the strands are blond and baby-fine. She runs her fingers through them, massages my scalp.

She is a beautiful girl, probably sixteen, with white poreless skin, full eyebrows, a disarming stare and the naturally red lips for which Snow White was famed. At our performing arts school, run by a renowned theater in the Midwest, we wear black karate pants and gray t-shirts with a bluebird on the front, but she has cut a small V in the neck of her shirt. It's thanks to the V and the way her arms are raised to work on my scalp and the angle at which she is holding my head and the fact that she isn't wearing a bra that I can see her breasts, study them, without worrying that I'll be caught.

Her voice is smoker-gravely and she speaks with flawed grammar and an ease with profanity that to my suburban ears is very cool.

"Leif, you're not going to be one of them, are you?"

I laugh, it tickles.

"Huh? Are you? Leif? Listen to me. Promise me. You're not . . . won't . . . be gay. Promise me."

I turn back to her. Inside the shirt, her nipples have stiffened, extended.

My cheeks flush deeply, feverishly.

"I promise."

I am apparently not the straightest-seeming guy you could ever meet. I don't know what it is about me – my pierced ears and pageboy haircut, perhaps, or maybe I'm just too clean. For whatever reason, my heterosexuality is frequently called into question. It happens all of the time. A total stranger will approach me, usually in a straight bar, and say "My friends wanted to know if you're gay or straight?" I feel like I'm in a Kafka novel as adapted for the screen by Woody Allen. How am I to respond? If I say I'm straight, isn't that exactly what George Michael used to say? And if I indicate that I am a practicing heterosexual, won't they then assume that I am headed toward an inevitable sexual epiphany, akin to the great John Cheever's? Most recently I joked, "I'm totally straight, but I can't resist sucking the occasional cock." It certainly ended the conversation.

When I told a good female friend I was writing about the topic of my misunderstood sexuality she said without a second's hesitation, "Oh yeah, everyone thinks you're gay." To the best of my knowledge I'm straight, but the question is hurled at me so frequently that I'm beginning to think everyone knows something I don't.

Sometimes, if there's a point, I'm willing to go along and play gay. Last summer, I was doing research in a Carnegie library in a small Midwestern town, a place best known for hosting the national lumberjack championships, when I noticed an adolescent boy between rows of books fixating on me. Taking in his delicate features, ivory skin and black clothes, I thought to myself, town loner, doesn't yet know he's gay, feels a connection with the effeminate stranger.

Not wanting to interrupt my work, I was relieved when he disappeared. Fifteen minutes later, though, he was back and bearing a gift. Blushing to his ears, he presented me with a scalding café latté from the town's new and only gourmet coffee joint. There was no point in explaining the misunderstanding, so while I drank the coffee, we cryptically discussed the difficulties of being different, talked around the terrifying subject. Gay-and-understanding-me encouraged him to hang on until eighteen and then get the hell out of town.

Until being sworn to heterosexuality by that suburban Snow White, the possibility that I might be gay never even occurred to me. I'd always had girlfriends – from the vixen in first grade who, after some discussion, let me go so far as kissing her index finger, to the girlfriend in seventh grade who sanctioned a visit to "second base." I spent more time wondering if I was a vampire.

Only in high school, when a trusted older friend and homosexual told me, "One morning you just wake up and you know," did I start to suspect that homosexuality was not a question of choice. This was an explosive, frightening thought, with one unavoidable implication: I might be gay! Me, the kid with all the girlfriends, the reacher of second base, the suburbanite with loving parents and a great family, I might be, I might . . .

That was the beginning of a lot of adolescent soul-searching. But even now when I replay every kiss, grope, or penetration of my first thirty-two years, all I see are females. Even leafing through the scrims behind my countless solo sexual efforts, I only come up with women, just one depraved fantasy after another. Granted, throw dreams into the mix and we may have something there; I am willing to concede that I may have had a handful in which it suddenly dawned on me, "Hey, that's no woman, that's the guy who fixes my car!" just as I would have to admit there have been relatives, minors, family pets, inanimate objects and a brief but very kinky cameo by a genderless character who called himself Satan.

The doubting continued until one morning in tenth grade when I woke up soaking in what I initially misdiagnosed as a bed-wetting relapse. As the dream came back to me I felt something akin to what Zora Neale Hurston described as the pride of finding a first pubic hair when I realized that though the vision had not been Farah, it was a woman, and a relief on so many levels.

Finally, at seventeen I had a serious girlfriend. Fellow neophytes, we would fall deeply, crazily in love, lose our virginity together and be a couple for the next seven years. Like all males, I couldn't wait to tell my friends after the first time, and was thankful that the issue was apparently settled, but mostly I was just overwhelmed by the power of emotional and physical love that converged when I was with her. It seemed it would vaporize me. I have to think that those feelings at least make me bi.

To be frank, I am sick to death of this topic. I have been suppressing my homosexuality for so long it cuts too close to the bone. Just kidding! The fact is I don't particularly mind that what everyone's really trying to say is, "Leif, you are a gay man in denial." What drives me crazy is that they say these things with an air of not having their own secrets, aspects of their own sexuality that don't conform to whatever the cookie-cutter conception of normal sex is.

I feel a strong bond with my fellow gay-seeming straight males. I especially treasure the virtual queens who exhibit the mating habits of the homo sapien heterosexual. Strange as it may seem, there is such a category. I'm tempted to propose we all start a club or a support group and print up t-shirts that scream, I LOVE THE VAGINA EXPERIENCE!

I prize my gay-seeming straight male friends so much that when one of them crosses over to gay-seeming gay male, as not infrequently happens, I go through a little mourning, realizing as I do that they have just made it a little harder for the world to buy my sexuality. Most recently it was an old college friend. Talk about gay-seeming – tall, handsome, former male model, voice well-suited for the fading matriarch of a clan in a Tennessee Williams play . . . He announced recently that he was divorcing his wife and was not, in fact, straight. In hindsight, there was always something forced about his collegiate stories of female conquest, like a teenage boy feigning enthusiasm for the taste of beer. I think I wanted to believe almost as much as he did.

I feel the same way about the other side: straight-seeming gay males. I sometimes go to a dance club where they are everywhere – young guys I could swear were straight, except for the fact that they are all kissing each other. A woman I'd brought once cut in on such a couple and started making out with one of the guys. He took a pause and said, "You know I'm gay, right?" To which she responded, "Of course."

The shocking thing is that I think of myself and all my mixed-signal comrades as the normal ones. I wonder about everyone else, all the people who seem compelled to keep their mannerisms, interests and selves marching in step with the mores expected of their sexuality. How scary is that? And to be honest, I harbor the sneaking suspicion that my team represents the future, when the masses, including homosexuals, come to honestly accept the full range of sexual nuance.

In the meantime, I think I know what might help. There's a scene in a movie, or perhaps it was a comedic sketch, where the obviously gay character is accused of being gay. He nervously laughs, "Well, well, if I'm gay, well they're going to have to change the definition." Maybe what my people need is a new definition, a nice user-friendly label. Something that says, "not gay, but not straight in the way to which you're accustomed, and maybe not even willing to rule out the possibility of being gay in the future." I've been using "gay-seeming straight male," but since that's unwieldy, perhaps we could go with the abbreviation: GSSM. I guess that would be pronounced "jism," as in "No, I'm not gay, but I am jism." On second thought, maybe labels are not the answer.

(Leif Ueland received a Master's Degree in the Professional Writing Program at the University of Southern California. He has written for public radio's Marketplace and several newspapers, and had a play produced in Minneapolis. His first book, Accidental Playboy, will be published by Warner books in November 2002


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37 comments

2 May 2005 @ 23:40 by crazyrain @67.149.74.107 : labels
What's wrong with the term 'bisexual' ?  


3 May 2005 @ 01:11 by Dan Gendron @66.82.9.25 : Sorry
What I mean is that I'm sorry that the world make you feel that way......but
from what I see women seem to like + love gay men. Use it to your advantage.... let the women of the world convert you to the hetro life style at evey chance you get.
Hell if you play your cards right you might get converted on a regular basis.

Good Luck
Dan  



3 May 2005 @ 02:00 by Hank @69.136.63.208 : Homo
You ARE a fag.  


3 May 2005 @ 04:17 by lilith @65.122.209.206 : WHY......
Why do you have to make thier problem your problem? The next time some one asks just smile and say;"Guess!" People really take this crap way too seriously!  


3 May 2005 @ 10:42 by AvAiL @206.174.13.45 : WTF
Yahoo sends me to this place for cruel site of the day? I deal with fags everyday in AK, you dont seem like THAT much of a flamer, maybe a little bi...  


3 May 2005 @ 10:52 by Skully @68.227.251.70 : GSSM
GSSM could also be (GueSS e'M). but I am a straight acting hetero male, and i am quite aware of the GSSM's in the world. It's not that uncommon. geez...
It's probably only unknown to the HP's (HomoPhobics). lol!  



3 May 2005 @ 15:29 by Mandarinn @69.155.188.135 : LOL
Ignore them, they're just jealous. Gay-seeming straight men are every girls dream man. Dresses well, keeps self well, naturally pretty. There's a reason so many fag hags are in the world! Maybe your straight-seeming straight male friends could pick up a trick or two!  


3 May 2005 @ 17:16 by TMX @69.106.48.46 : Bisexuality is OK
I went through the same thing; everyone tells me I'm a lesbian. Whatever. People want to fit you into the tiny slots in their tiny heads. Labels suck. You don't have to pick "straight" or "gay." You can say you're bisexual, but that's just another label. When anyone, male or female, asks me if I'm gay, I reply: "why, are you asking me out?" They get flustered. And hopefully they realize that they've been rude, and that it's none of their business.  


3 May 2005 @ 17:35 by bizarro @66.65.53.209 : on switching
having been married once, divorced, and now clearly gay, i'll comment that i knew all along that i was gay, i didn't just wake up and realize it. but i couldn't deal with it for many of the reaons you mentioned, until i moved to the big city and realized it was no big deal. glad i did, my life finally makes sense. maybe some people wake up and know they're gay, but in their secret heart i think everyone knows very early on... nice article, thanks!  


3 May 2005 @ 19:26 by Michael Wayne @204.128.192.8 : You don't know until you try
I think you should try sucking a little dick (or a slightly large one) just to be certain. Who knows? You just might actually like it. But, looking at your picture, I kinda don't think so.  


3 May 2005 @ 20:12 by Brian Bulkowski @69.109.172.42 : comebacks
"I could explain, but I'd rather show you." (If she looks interested, follow up with a deep passionate kiss)

"Are those the only two choices?"

"If gay means washing more than once a day, I'm gay"

"Shouldn't you ask whether I'm a boy or girl first?"

"I like taking it in the ass, but only from girls."

In terms of labels, the answer is to broaden the label. If they know people like you are hetro, then hetro gets expanded. Keep on keepin' on.  



3 May 2005 @ 20:43 by Bren @69.34.151.65 : Hey, GSSM's are awesome!
Reading this, I realized my husband could easily have written something similar. He too deals with people always being unsure of him, and he wonders why it matters so much. He is pure hetero, but poeple wonder about him because he dresses well, always smells nice, takes care of his body and clothing, his cars, and his wife, matches his clothing and his jewelry and his scent to express his mood...what's wrong with that?! I'll take a GSSM any day over a macho-man guy!  


3 May 2005 @ 22:18 by Gwydion @209.30.181.29 : Me too
I have two stories to relate, so I will tell them in seperate entries. One of my best friends in high school, who was patently gay, and I played chess on the stairs every day during lunch. What he didn't know was I was having an affair with his sister. Twelve years later she and I hooked up again and made a relationship of it. She mentioned me to her now married brother who said,"Yeah, I remember him. He's gay." She said, "Not in my experience." We started playing chess again and he's still gay.  


3 May 2005 @ 22:25 by Gwydion @209.30.181.29 : Acting
Once upon a time, I was a renaissance faire performer and was hired to play an effeminant Duke. One day after close, one of the other performers, a young man wanting to show off his macho to his friends, Stopped me and asked if I were gay or what, to which I responded, "Why, did you want to bed me, boy?" He spluttered "No, of course not." I replied, "Then it's none of your damn business." And walked off swishing my kilt. Yes, kilt. By the way, where can I get one of those 'vagina experience' shirts?  


4 May 2005 @ 02:57 by gokarm @67.85.157.243 : groovy
Conformity; a fascinating topic. Everyone seems to conform to an image because we are so intent on labeling people. This is because we like the familiar, we need to be able to understand another person. But hey, here's an idea...why don't we ask? Are you uncomfortable with the concept of homosexuality? Of course you aren't. And yet some offense if someone assumes we're gay because of our appearance. I don't think appearance has anything at all to do with sexuality. It's all a matter of fetishes. If you like women so much that you want to look like one, more power to you. It's nobody's business but your's and your lover's. Keep being yourself. You're an admirable thinker.  


4 May 2005 @ 04:35 by Scott @24.6.55.163 : Can relate all too well...
I guess I have never been a “man’s man”: never watched sports, was a science nerd, loved literature. Indeed, as the years have past I have learned to ballroom dance, regularly go to Shakespeare festivals and have found I really like being a caring, emotionally involved person. Since high school people have accused me of being gay and although I can’t say I never could be homosexual, all of my thirty-two years I have never found myself attracted to men and do enjoy the vagina experience. Although they pay much lip service to it, I have yet to find a woman who truly wants a GSSM.  


4 May 2005 @ 08:51 by indndreamctcher @161.156.99.14 : Does It Really Matter....?
Ok, so does it REALLY matter what people think? If Americans would actually look at the BIG picture, they would see they we are so anally retintive we can't even sit down for fear of sucking up the funiture. This entire country needs to GET A GRIP and realize that there is NO SUCH THING AS "NORMAL". Be who and what you want to be and to hell with what anyone else says or thinks. Only then will you be true happy & free. That lesson took me a very long time to learn, but once I did I became happier, healther, and free. I've alwayz been an outside/outcast and never fit in any where. Then one day I stopped and took a long hard look at myslef and asked a very simple question. "Why do I even care?" If I like my dark and mysterious manner then pleasing myself is all that matters. IF someone can't deal with my beliefs or view of things then screw 'em. They are NOT worth my time and energy. Since then I've been happier than I have ever been in my entire life. I family and friends that will love and support me no matter what I do and that's the stuff that life is made for. Live for you. Do what it takes to make you happy and to hell with what any Ignorant Hypocritical Suburban Redneck has to say or think.  


4 May 2005 @ 09:14 by Ken @69.240.139.26 : The next time someone asks if you are
gay or straight, look that person in the eye and answer, "it depends. are you male or female?"...  


4 May 2005 @ 13:21 by Amanda @12.75.84.110 : GSSM or SSSM? Does it matter?
My husband is the epitome of macho-male. But a guy that works for him is a GSSM that tries too hard to be macho, and fails miserably. I'm going to direct him to this page and tell him its okay to be gay-seeming. (But honestly, we wonder if he really just seems gay, or if it's possibly the real thing.)  


4 May 2005 @ 13:39 by Christropher @65.190.210.8 : So many closets so few hangers
Labels are tough. I've always hated "bi" because you're not straight enough for the straights, not gay enough for the gays. I spent my high school and college years as a closeted hetero. It was just easier to let people believe I was gay. Everyone was pretty shocked/pissed when I crossed the line officially and got married, had a child and my ex-boyfried was my best man and God-father. Thanks for proposing that we can just be us.  


4 May 2005 @ 17:52 by Pierre @201.135.50.195 : GSSM
So far, it seems all the comments have missed what to me is a very sensitive and enlightening experience. Your piece is too valuable not to share with adolescents in Jr. High and High Schools everywhere. You may not know it, but your piece is a real gift to men (and by extension) women everywhere. Thank you for your courage in your writing and in your life.
Rev. Pierre G.  



5 May 2005 @ 03:14 by tk @69.105.143.8 : im bi
this year i noticed i had a huge crush on one of my best friends who happened 2 b a girl and we have been dating. i love her so much but i still like guys. guess i should just say keep your mind open to new things. if u want a label try meterosexual  


5 May 2005 @ 05:59 by Hmm @129.219.68.142 : Hmm...
Why are you all so angry?  


5 May 2005 @ 14:07 by XerdoPwërko @201.130.199.247 : Gay seeming Hetero
I had the same problem all the way through college - and, indeed, everybody always assumes I'm gay, which I'm definitely not. It's also ... the way one moves, talks, that sort of gives people the impression.
My girlfriend has asked me like 4 times if I'm not gay - half joking. My ex used to say "why are all the things I like SO gay?". Another female friend just described me as a "homosexual who happens to like women".
It's rad.  



6 May 2005 @ 04:29 by Olav @142.59.173.54 : I'm right there with you
Seriously … Why should they even have the right to question someone's sexuality? What business is it of theirs if you, myself or any of the other gay-seeming straight guys like girls or not?
I really enjoyed your article because it articulated the stereotype that I've been fighting against.
It's a constant source of rage for me.  



6 May 2005 @ 13:58 by Will @64.247.122.86 : The kid in the library
Taking care of the kid in the library without any "woah, hey, that's not me kid" was a mitzvah. Glad to see that you're using your heteroeffeminate powers for good and not evil.  


6 May 2005 @ 16:24 by Vic @148.87.1.171 : Who cares?
I have to agree with all of the posters here who think that other people are making far too big a deal of this.
It strikes me that it is most important for you to be comfortable in your own skin. It seems that you would agree.
You allude to the salient fact that human sexuality is a continuum, rather than a series of frimly defined "states". And like any such, some will fall squrely into a specific area, while most occupy some sort of "borderland".
Finding a label is sort of fun but ultimately self-defeating. There is always another subdivision, and the definitions of behavior as belonging in one category or another changes with time and culture. "Effeminate", "masculine", "butch" etc., etc. are highly mutable terms. Any reasonably educated person can point to contradictory examples of each, yet are unarguably "correct" given a specific historic or cultural context.
So let's toss out the labels and get on with life!
Another human being is either sexually compatible with someone or they are not. Period.
I enjoyed your piece, and I wish you the best of luck!
 



6 May 2005 @ 19:42 by PalePhoenix @4.240.138.199 : don't be Cruel...
You'll probably piss off every other red-blooded [full-bodied, and with a light bouquet] straight man you meet or speak to. Good for you. They need more pissing off.

Since when did you ever have to pick a label? It sounds, though, as if you do somewhat enjoy accentuating what are not stereotypically "masculine" features, which makes you a tad responsible for the attribution errors. So what? Be responsible.

If a heterosexual man looks at you, or reads your words, and becomes upset, angry, or a little turned on, I'd say that's his magazine rack of issues, not yours. Self-awareness is good, but no one should have to question himself THIS much. If you're happy and people want to talk to you, they usually don't care who you fuck...unless they're hoping it's them.  



10 May 2005 @ 10:45 by Lyn @194.237.142.7 : DEAL WITH IT
Its a wonderfully written piece.

VIC its easy to say toss out the labels and get on with life. Unfortunately thats not how the world works. We like to define things be it colours, races, food groups...it makes life easier: "Vegetables are on Isle 3. Oh i'm sorry tomatoes are you hurt? I didnt mean to insinuate that you were a vegetable coz we all know you are a fruit". We'll never stop trying to put things in a box. Its what we do. The best thing we can do is try to live with it. I don't know why people have such issues with labels. Its a fact of life so deal with it. Like you've done by creating a new label, if the shoe dont fit - create a new shoe.  



13 May 2005 @ 04:34 by Derek @24.205.64.93 : haha
Dude, you're so totally gay.  


13 May 2005 @ 15:20 by Bryant @24.147.19.127 : what if....
....you're straight but willing do to things with guys
so your girlfriend will let you fuck their girlfriends?!?!  



13 May 2005 @ 20:26 by Anne Sharp @198.111.161.114 : Awwww, pull my daisy
This guy isn't gay, he's just into creative nonfiction.  


14 May 2005 @ 09:27 by blackmamba @198.108.4.105 : a question
have you tried pegging?  


14 May 2005 @ 09:43 by christopher winters @198.108.4.105 : bareback
Why hasn't anyone said the word metro yet? Listen: What you are experiencing is actually common and even popular right now. It is a backlash to the conservative 'moral values' bullshit.

When i was in LA there were metros EVERYWHERE. It is fast becomming the norm. Soon enough, straights and gays and bis (bies?) wont get laid, only metros and homometros. Most of my friends are femmetros and homofemmetros. They get laid tons.

Then, a few hundred years go by, and evolution will create a perfect hemaphroditic metrohuman, like The Gospels of Doubting Thomas say. You know, when Jesus said that 'two become one' crap and 'create a new kind of people' - 'without man or woman?'. The J man speaks. Virgin birth? Metro birth. Bump Set Spike.

So really, you are the new human, the postmodern man. And guys like me are out dated. Outdated because we just like to dress in drag and get pegged by silky sexy BBWs with punk bitch attitudes, pale pierced DDs and a 12 pack of Miller High Life.

Honestly kiddo. You should try it at least once! It will make you a real man and not just a crybaby metro. :P  



15 May 2005 @ 00:48 by Colin Daye @24.222.194.164 : disgusted
when did men stop being men, all of a sudden everyone has to be the clean cut pretty little boy that every girl wants, when did it change so we did everything in our power to be with them, even if it means almost becomming them. stand up men, your more than a vagina seeking missle. the only excuss for a man to be a metrosexual, or pussy as i would call him, would be that he is so fucking desperate for some ass that he has to become what he wants, just to weasle his way into her pants. shame on you, if you have to stoop that low you don't deserve to be called a man.  


27 May 2005 @ 15:49 by bennyb @71.101.202.45 : why label
My friend Sam used to always use the line, "I don't subscribe to any sexual orientations". It left people pretty confused. Now I have come to rip it off in similar situations, because labels suck. This line comes from the same Sam that dumped salad dressing all over Pat Buchanan recently.  


5 Jul 2005 @ 15:34 by Boomerverlee @68.187.33.63 : sexual pluralism
This happpens to women, too, and is even harder for our culture to accept. I was the jock and really good at...gasp...math & science. Tons of people just "assumed" I was lesbian, tho' I was never attracted to a woman and just loved men. I spent my life trying to Learn To Be Feminine. I raised the pitch of my voice, wore too much make-up, dumbed-down my vocabulary, giggled and dolled up my very ample bosom with lace. Wow, am I glad I finally got old enough to not care! Keep on keepin' on. (And you butch women out there--beat them at their own game; become an aeronautical engineer, a stockbroker, a police chief. If you're "one of the guys," use it.)  


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