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2006-06-29 03:32:20 · 30 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Cultures & Groups Other - Cultures & Groups

I have some great hetrosexual male and female friends that understand.

2006-06-29 03:42:44 · update #1

30 answers

I'm straight and I understand - :-)

2006-06-29 03:42:26 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 3 3

Because all people do not understand all people.

Most don't understand out of ignorance. They just don't know.

Hetro is natural, it is the way that we were created, it is the way we are to continue so it is undertandable by everyone.

Being gay is not natural, it is not the way we were created. It goes against the very fabric of life. If being gay were right or natural then the human reace would end. No one would ever reproduce and life would cease.

that is why most people don't understand gays. Why would a person take everythig that is been given to them and go against it? It does pose a very interesting question.

You could ask the same thing about religion.

Why don't Christians understan Muslims, Mormons, Athiests, budhists etc

2006-06-29 04:37:22 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Because a lot of people still feel that being homosexual is a choice and that you choose to be gay. A lot of people still do not understand that you are gay because you were born that way. Even if you were fighting it growing up, everyone who has homosexual tendancies knew it from when they were young.

Being a gay man is worse, I think, because you get a lot of added stress and critisisum. Being a lesbian is a little easier because people are more willing to accept to women making love then two men.

Since I am bi-sexual, I try to stand up for my gay and lesbian friends, even though sometimes, even I am an outcast for not 'picking' sides. But hopefully, over time, more and more people will understand and be more open minded about our lifestyles and understand that it is not a choice that we are gay, but it is our choice to live our lives the way we should, with happiness and joy and finding someone who will love us for us.

*hugs*

2006-06-29 03:37:53 · answer #3 · answered by *meh* 3 · 0 0

This question isn't as simple as "walking in someone else's shoes" or an individual-to-individual understanding of human nature as the previous posts elude to. It has to do with psychological development, as well as societal norms, and, even, governmental restraints and freedoms.

As a society we aren't as progressive as we might think - we defend the status quo and make assumptions that limit our ability to understand someone's perspective - we all do this, we have been conditioned to create parameters in which the world exists. (This is how we survive.) But, what heterosexual people don't seem to understand is that Gay and Lesbian people are also encoded within the heterosexual society and therefore have to understand themselves outside of the society. (Coming out is a good, but partial example of this because of it's many meanings and functions.)

Normative society is generally understood to be "the way things should be," so, when we say that we live in a heteronormative society it reflects both the character and psychological justifications for the social fabric. Which brings me to heterosexual privilege. It is understood that only heterosexual relationships are valid, and therefore, belittling, or demeaning non-heterosexual relationships is part of the social fabric. You are allowed to distrust the "love" of non-heterosexual relationships, (in fact, even you, as a gay man, are expected to have shallow, meaningless lust rather than love), but as soon as you talk about heterosexual marriage falling apart it's accepted that heterosexual relationships are not perfect. In all honesty, it's much easier to scapegoat some "other" group, like Gays and Lesbians, than deal with the real problems and actual issues in the society - such as Poverty, Global Warming, a Conglomerated Media, and Industrial Strength Corporatism.

So, it's this perspective - one in which parameters are defined by the status quo, from an "entitled" insider, who does not value non-heterosexual intimate relationships - that limits the heterosexual's ability to "understand the gay life style"... or more specifically, gay love.

2006-06-29 04:03:48 · answer #4 · answered by truist 1 · 0 0

Some hetrosexual people do understand your life style. I love gay people, one of my best friends are gay. I love shopping with him.
Dont worry about other people. If you are happy....who cares what others think or if they dont understand. People are always afraid of whats differant. Rock on man.

2006-06-29 03:38:29 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Craven, I understand this much: If you're a bag of crap, as a person, I'm pretty much not going to like you. I also understand that if you love someone, truly, it shouldn't matter if its a member of the opposite sex, or the same. Your heart gets happy for many reasons, and that's what's really important. This has nothing to do with what goes on in your bedroom. I think society, as a whole puts too much interest in people's sexuality, and not enough interest in how a person's character is put together. I'm sure you're a fine person, I'd like to get to know you. Hell, I'd like as many friends as I can get! But rest assured, not every heterosexual is as close-minded as those that have forced you to ask this question!

2006-06-29 03:43:45 · answer #6 · answered by illustrat_ed_designs 4 · 0 0

As a gay man with many hetro male friends I think that most of them do understand the life style we live. The only thing that seperates both sides is who we sleep with.

2006-06-29 03:40:35 · answer #7 · answered by romenphila 2 · 0 0

Most of us do understand it. It's just that very vocal minority with their ancient religious writings that make us look so bad. They're always talking about those few verses that say being gay is wrong, and manage to forget about the ones that say selling your kids into slavery in a pinch is OK, you can rape women so long as you marry them afterwards and that when we go to worship, we have to sacrifice a goat or a pigeon.

2006-06-29 03:41:57 · answer #8 · answered by Bartmooby 6 · 0 0

that is bodily accessible. it would want to take some mind's eye in order to manage to finished (ie., imagine being with a guy even as making like to a woman). In prisons, this is the different situation. There are likely "immediately" men who've been in there a lengthy time period who would lay or tape a mag with a woman's image on a guy's back. So the guy is pretending to be with a woman even as doing a guy. The psychological part of pretending to be immediately is the huge difficulty. maximum gay men are bodily able to having heterosexual sex, or maybe generating little ones, yet there is often no favor to attain this. that is amazingly annoying for someone to stay a double existence. in view that this kind of guy would maximum in all chance be unfullfilled in this kind of courting, he would have gay sex on the part. that is a project to keep the gay existence and the pseudo-heterosexual existence separate. yet another project will be preserving others from interpreting them as gay. There are little diffused issues about someone who would enable others comprehend they're gay. Oh, they could overcompensate in a stereotypical "heterosexual" trend, act rude and sexist, get inebriated, and act extremely macho, yet even which will be a tip-off. those who shout the loudest to attempt to cajole others of something may be attempting to cajole themselves. even as no longer a similar, there are one of those MtF transsexuals who marry women hoping to erase their femininity. they sometimes connect the defense force, get into activities, act obnoxious, and convey little ones. yet after a lengthy time period, the facade cracks and the TS change into consumer-pleasant with herself and realizes that she will be in a position to not in any respect lose her female gender identity. yet popping out at that degree has a tendency to reason complications. A divorce is ultimately pretty a lot inevitable in this kind of situation. Or they'd pressure themselves to stay as men until eventually the little ones turn 18 (extremely if a choose guidelines that or no contact). that is a lot extra efficient to comprise words about who you're earlier you drag human beings into it.

2016-11-29 23:24:30 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Being a bisexual I am not truly excepted in either camp. Both gays and straights think I need to make up my mind and they don't realize it is not a choice this is the way I am. I think Gays sometimes classify themselves as bisexual on their way to becoming comfortable with their homosexuality and that is what hurts us bisexuals the most. We on the other hand completely understand both camps. Heterosexuals can never understand homosexuals because they do not realize that God made them straight and he made us homosexual. It is just something that is beyond their comprehension.

2006-06-29 04:14:30 · answer #10 · answered by ♂ Randy W. ♂ 6 · 0 0

I've never been able to understand that myself. It was relatively recently in history that homosexuals started being looked down on. I suspect the hatred was stirred up by some one with a political agenda. Anyway, hating the fags has become the popular thing to do now. I don't understand it either.

2006-06-29 03:38:32 · answer #11 · answered by Josh R 2 · 0 0

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