It's odd you should say that, as i seem to have the flipside of it in some respects. It goes back to what Shadow was saying about being called weird. I've been called weird for literally as long as i can remember and to be fair i was an EXCEPTIONALLY odd child (he says sitting cross legged on a swivel chair wearing dungarees and a rollneck jumper, cigarette in one hand, knitting to one side, purple curls scraped back, held in place with clips that have wee fabric covered buttons on them, pastel coloured heart-shaped bead necklace catching the glint form his desklamp - not much has changed) and to be perfectly honest i really don't see it as very much of a criticism. I AM weird.
I think there will always be certain people who have problems with anything a bit different and i refuse to stop trying (and dare i say managing) to be myself, which is, i think, what we're all after, and still be taken for the person i am on a much more personal level than "you're gay and i'm fine with that". I get recognised wherever i go and generally get an instant reputation. But again i don't see this as a bad thing. I see it as an opportunity to challenge the labels people give me. The thing is the very people who seem to have problems with me are the one who, when we get talking, are the one who ask all the questions. Questions which i am happy to answer. Admittedly, generally they ask me if all gay men are like me (a question met with indignation), then what it is i see in men (which 8 times out of 10 is accompanied by 'is it the security??) and so on but by the end of it people like that generally come away feeling that they've 'learned something' (their words not mine)...
Far be it from me to proclaim that i'm better than everyone else (i AM, but it's not really my place to say it
) but there are some aspects of this debate that worry me. Everybody seems to have this feeling that it's all about 'us' and 'them' in terms of scoiety, as though gay and straight people are intrinsically different somehow and don't all live in the one, plural, society. Really rather than stating ourselves that we have our own society and that we should be 'accepted' or 'tolerated' (i HATE that word, why should someone put up with the way gays are, though it burdens them??) we ought to argue, as well we can, that really we're not any different at all. Gays are people, gays fall in love, gays have sex, gays get their hearts broken, gays are too readily classified. Same can be said of any group, whether it is a majority or a minority.
Ewww, i sound like a yucky preachy holier than thou 'look at me i'm all enlightened' type, huh??
But seriously, i don't see why we don't just argue that we're essentially the same. Because we are. Though i think this mindset has a lot to do with how i grew up. Being gay in a family where my parents are in a mixed-race, age-gap relationship, with a younger brother who has learning difficulties has meant that nothing is really that different to me, so i just think everybody's just the same and if people could see that life be SO MUCH easier. And they won't see it if nobody points it out.
Thus endeth part 1 of my thesis : How To Cope With Being Less Brilliant Than Me. (a title i'm considering should i ever write an autobiography, such is my modesty...)
xxx