Alright, so if you'll look over in the right hand column down to recent comments, you'll see a few new comments on
When you realize you're a lesbian and I thought I better write something on this.
Of course this is a complicated, personal issue fraught with personal baggage, religious guilt, fear of family judgment and who knows what else. But let’s try to keep it simple, shall we?
Here’s how I knew I was gay:
I fell in love with my best friend. I’m talking, love at first sight - the rest of the world dropped out of focus and all I could see or hear was her, in slow motion, moving towards me in the dark room on campus late one night. (Can someone say run-on sentence?!)
But at that point I was clueless and thought I was straight. So was she. So what’s a naive, confused,
maybe lesbian supposed to do? Make this chick her new best friend.
Which wasn’t hard since we had this undeniable connection that we both felt and admitted. However this would prove to be the single most painful relationship in my life to date.
Why? Because being in love with your straight best friend is
no way to live. After I came to terms with my gayness I began to branch out and focus my newly found lesbian eyes on available women, aka
other gay girls. Don’t get me wrong, I spent years and years pining away for her .... but that’s a long and too painful story for this little blog. I also did the whole,
“I’m just bi” routine and got my toes wet with other
“bi-curious” girls. Big mistake!!! Because while I thought I was
bi but was
really gay, they all seemed to think they were
bi but were
actually straight. Usually leaving me trying to mend my little gay heart while they ran back to their boyfriends.
Basically, what I’m trying to tell you is that most of us have a pretty rocky road to navigate from the All-American girl who’s supposed to grow up, get married to the man of her dreams and have children, a career and an SUV to realizing your future is never going to be what your mother dreamed of for her little girl.
It really is a big adjustment, it was for me. I had to wrap my brain around a whole new culture. And as silly as it sounds, things like who pays, who drives, who initiates intimacy, who asks who out were all things I had to figure out along the way.
Huh,
a new culture.