Sometimes, like
when a male student from the colleges shows up at Quaker meeting, and I can’t
keep my eyes off him during worship, I wonder why I’m gay. Why am I attracted, so very attracted, to
men? What was it that got me to get
turned on when I see certain guys?
It’s not really
about or only about dick. It’s not like, when I see a guy, all I see, or
imagine, is his dick. I can’t deny that
it’s there, that it’s a factor, a big factor, but there is so much more to
admire and love about the male body, the male physique. I can get aroused when I see a guy’s back, a
guy’s smooth, tanned shoulder blades. I
know they are a guy’s, even when they’re all I see, and I get excited.
I remember when
Harvey Milk was murdered, and when thousands of gay men and lesbians rioted and
marched, especially when his killer got off with a lighter sentence. I was a young teenager, and it was decades
before I came out, but I felt like I could relate to their rage and sadness, to
their being made outsiders – no doubt because I was an outsider, shunned and
made fun of, because of my disability and impaired speech.
Fine, but this
doesn’t explain my same-sex love. It is,
perhaps, an important backdrop to what came later.
Sometime in my
teens, I was made aware that I tended to avoid looking at myself in the
mirror. Was this true? Did I not like seeing myself? Was I repulsed by what I saw? I didn’t know. As far as I know, I hadn’t
thought about it. Being so advised, I
made an effort, a real, conscious effort, to look at myself in the mirror. At first, it was an exercise, a chore. After a while, though, perhaps like Narcissus
looking into the pond, I began to like what I saw. Indeed, soon enough, I admired and loved my
crippled, spastic body.
Around this time, I
discovered masturbation and was exploring ways that I could, with my limited
physical ability, masturbate and enjoy and have fun with my dick and my body. I
discovered that wearing overalls helped in this process – and it was a process.
I soon
found that I liked seeing myself doing this. Seeing myself having fun with
myself in the mirror was even more fun. Whether or not I would have said so at
the time, it was hot, my body was hot, and turned me on.
Soon enough, I was
thinking and wondering about other guy’s bodies, and I began looking at other
guy’s bodies and enjoying it. For many
years, I couldn’t say I was turned on by them – I would tell myself that their clothes
or hair were cool or something. At the
same time, I kept relating, and strangely feeling comforted by, all those gay
guys protesting and marching for justice for Harvey Milk and later for their
lives during the AIDS crisis and then against discrimination and unjust
legislation and for the freedom to love and marry who they wanted. When I finally came out, finally admitted
that I was one of them, at age 39, it was a huge release, a great
liberation.
There are probably
other factors, like the fact that I liked writing poetry and going window
shopping with my mom when I was a kid.
Then again, my brother didn’t really like playing sports and played
French horn when he was growing up, and he didn’t turn out gay. Those who are into Freud might say that I’m
stuck in some childish phase, infatuated with myself. If I had not been
disabled and if I had not been encouraged to not avoid looking at myself in the
mirror, would I be straight? I have no
idea. All I know is I love it that I
love my crazy, twisted body, and I love it even more that I love guys.