06-24-2016, 11:31 AM
Asking someone directly if they're gay is a sensitive question, even among people who are supposed to be close to you. It all depends on comfort zones and circumstances. I remember telling my mother when I was in my twenties that I was having an affair with a young man, she didn't want to hear about it. I clammed up. Later I had a four-year period of being straight going out and living with a female partner (who is still a friend, mind you). My mother didn't take gladly to my being with her either (for different reasons) but at least we could talk about it. I had a long run of being single after my girlfriend and I broke up (for circumstancial reasons more than because we'd fallen out of love), and then my gay brother got really sick with AIDS. We were in some very difficult circumstances when my mother asked me "Are you gay?" I don't know what she expected to hear me say, and I don't know how she would have taken an honest answer. Those were words I was no longer able to say, all the more so as I wasn't in any kind of relationship, gay or straight. I remember my answer to be : "I don't like to consider myself as that." My mother and I were going through extreme emotional pain at the time with my brother dying so I was not going to bring her pain to overflow by announcing that I too might be affected by the disease, now was I? At the time, being gay might have implied being HIV positive and potentially becoming an AIDS victim.
Today if someone asked me if I was gay directly, I would still feel uncomfortable, but again it would depend on circumstances and how I perceived the reasons for the question to be asked, and how the asker might process a positive answer.
I can also assume that people realise that a person who isn't gay might be offended to be asked a perfectly benign question, but it hasn't always been benign, has it?
Today if someone asked me if I was gay directly, I would still feel uncomfortable, but again it would depend on circumstances and how I perceived the reasons for the question to be asked, and how the asker might process a positive answer.
I can also assume that people realise that a person who isn't gay might be offended to be asked a perfectly benign question, but it hasn't always been benign, has it?