11-11-2015, 05:52 AM
i'm reading a book by Richard A. Isay, called Being Homosexual -- Gay Men and Their Development. the author is a psychoanalyst. i've never really been interested in the subject, and not sure how much i buy it all, but i started reading him because he writes on gay men, and he makes a lot of sense with a lot things.
there's this interesting idea that he put forth, namely that some homosexual children will take on characteristics of their mothers (i.e. feminine traits) in order to attract their fathers. whether you believe we are attracted to the parental figure of our preferred sex as children or not, is beside the point. assuming we are (and in my own case i'd have to say it was true), the way Isay argues gave me a new point of view on this. the logic here is that the child wants his father's (or whoever the father figure is) attention and emulates his mother in order to get it. and that some of the childhood gender atypical behavior and traits have this root to them.
i didn't have this. but i had it in exact reverse, in fact. i did want the attention and company of men as a kid, i remember that very clearly. i yearned for that attention and loved interaction with men. i also had sexual/erotic feelings towards men ever since i was five. but in my case it was the reverse, how i went about achieving the attention/company of men.
i grew up in an environment where there was a lot of camaraderie between men, and male friendships stood out in that environment. that was the ideal to me from the start, that interaction between men. and in my case, i was aware that when i was being my young boyish self there was something in the way men looked at me that felt rewarding to me. it was like a light had gone on in their eyes, and i loved it... i still remember all of that to this day. and once i figured that out, that men loved me acting like a boy, that strongly reinforced the traditional masculine behavior in me.
at the same time, i don't think i could ever have become anything other than what i am, environment this or environment that. but when i look back on it in this perspective, it makes a lot of sense. i was simultaneously also aware that feminine behavior and traits were unrewarded, maybe i suppressed some type of behavior in me as a result of that, i will never know. but this fact that i wanted the company and attention of men from an early age, and that i felt rewarded when i acted masculine, this is something i realize i did back then, that i didn't really consciously admit to myself when i was doing it.
now, Isay doesn't claim that this gender atypical behavior (if it's there) lasts beyond childhood years. he actually mentions that as the boy enters adolescence he usually forgoes these tendencies as peer influence starts to dominate over the parental.
this isn't a thread trying to qualify or explain feminine/masculine behavior and traits in men. my opinion on this subject is known, and i am not trying to make any judgment with this. i was just reading this book, and this one chapter was very interesting, and i wanted to post this insight here. it might make sense to someone else, or maybe you have experience that agrees/disagrees with this speculation.
it does make sense to me in my own case, albeit in reverse. at least i realize some things about my childhood that i didn't think about before at all.
there's this interesting idea that he put forth, namely that some homosexual children will take on characteristics of their mothers (i.e. feminine traits) in order to attract their fathers. whether you believe we are attracted to the parental figure of our preferred sex as children or not, is beside the point. assuming we are (and in my own case i'd have to say it was true), the way Isay argues gave me a new point of view on this. the logic here is that the child wants his father's (or whoever the father figure is) attention and emulates his mother in order to get it. and that some of the childhood gender atypical behavior and traits have this root to them.
i didn't have this. but i had it in exact reverse, in fact. i did want the attention and company of men as a kid, i remember that very clearly. i yearned for that attention and loved interaction with men. i also had sexual/erotic feelings towards men ever since i was five. but in my case it was the reverse, how i went about achieving the attention/company of men.
i grew up in an environment where there was a lot of camaraderie between men, and male friendships stood out in that environment. that was the ideal to me from the start, that interaction between men. and in my case, i was aware that when i was being my young boyish self there was something in the way men looked at me that felt rewarding to me. it was like a light had gone on in their eyes, and i loved it... i still remember all of that to this day. and once i figured that out, that men loved me acting like a boy, that strongly reinforced the traditional masculine behavior in me.
at the same time, i don't think i could ever have become anything other than what i am, environment this or environment that. but when i look back on it in this perspective, it makes a lot of sense. i was simultaneously also aware that feminine behavior and traits were unrewarded, maybe i suppressed some type of behavior in me as a result of that, i will never know. but this fact that i wanted the company and attention of men from an early age, and that i felt rewarded when i acted masculine, this is something i realize i did back then, that i didn't really consciously admit to myself when i was doing it.
now, Isay doesn't claim that this gender atypical behavior (if it's there) lasts beyond childhood years. he actually mentions that as the boy enters adolescence he usually forgoes these tendencies as peer influence starts to dominate over the parental.
this isn't a thread trying to qualify or explain feminine/masculine behavior and traits in men. my opinion on this subject is known, and i am not trying to make any judgment with this. i was just reading this book, and this one chapter was very interesting, and i wanted to post this insight here. it might make sense to someone else, or maybe you have experience that agrees/disagrees with this speculation.
it does make sense to me in my own case, albeit in reverse. at least i realize some things about my childhood that i didn't think about before at all.
''Do I look civilized to you?''