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Well, supposedly lesbian romances are full of so-called "dyke drama", because they have strong emotional connections, often move in quickly, and so on. And gay men are supposed to have less of a connection and just be about sex- no drama.

Of course, these are stereotypes. Nobody has more drama or is more or less dramatic than anybody else- it's an individual characteristic.

2006-12-15 11:26:07 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

FIrst the usual "Everyone is different" disclaimer. Keep this in mind. YMMV.

In my VERY personal opinion and backed by NO scientific data at all beyond whatever value you can place on personal observance... gay men cause and deal with more drama than gay women.

Its a testosterone thing, really. Testosterone makes men (gay or str8) naturally more agressive than women. A gay man is much more likely to speak out when he feels the urge and, all things considered, I think gay people (seeeing as I'm one of us) have more to speak out about than most.

While a woman (gay or str8) is more likely to quietly confide in friends, avoid a confrontation and, generally, plan to maneuver you to the edge of the pits of hell then give you a slight nudge. Its far less dramatic! :)

2006-12-15 12:51:20 · answer #2 · answered by gooniekim 2 · 0 0

With out a doubt, the lesbian. My stereotype of a lesbian is more like a man than my stereotype of a gay man. I think that men are much less dramatic than women.

2006-12-15 11:25:04 · answer #3 · answered by bnt 2 · 0 1

I am 62 and do not regard myself as dramatic; nor was my partner of 42 years. I would imagine that there are as many "types" in our community as there are in the straight.
Oh! perhaps some would regard my reaction to the aftermath of my partner's death as dramatic. I was away when she died of cancer. It has been explained to me that some people are strong enough to hide symptoms so that others can achieve a certain goal ( a long service leave trip in my case). On my return I found that her family had claimed her body, buried her remains in a private cemetery and placed a stone bearing "UNKNOWN TO GOD" When I visited her grave a female relative taunted me and, filled with anger and shame, I wanted to kill her. Something stopped me but I had a total breakdown some time later. My dear brother helped me and with professional assistance I am now recovered.I do not know if this is "dramatic" in the sense of your question or just human nature.
Sincerely, Rose P.

2006-12-15 12:14:14 · answer #4 · answered by rose p 7 · 0 0

i imagine in the journey that they are in a committed courting, be it lesbian, gay or hetero, each and each and every couple ought to have their personal percentage of dramas. My spouse and that i have been mutually for 26 years and we not often strive against (yet when we do that is a doozy!) we've had human beings contact upon how laid-decrease back we are. i truly imagine it relies upon on the couple. advantages, my pricey.

2016-11-30 20:07:55 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

I don't know any lesbians personally but I know gay guys & I think they're great.I don't know what you mean by drama

2006-12-15 11:28:54 · answer #6 · answered by gitsliveon24 5 · 0 0

A lesbian
My father-in-law is gay and a total Byotch

2006-12-15 17:03:44 · answer #7 · answered by tom s 1 · 0 0

All gay men and women are different. It's not fair to say.

2006-12-15 11:25:21 · answer #8 · answered by ☆Tąrą☆ 3 · 0 0

I think they are both high drama.

2006-12-15 12:04:12 · answer #9 · answered by Clarkie 6 · 0 0

it depends on the individual.

2006-12-15 11:27:50 · answer #10 · answered by shyboy 3 · 0 0

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