I think my boyfriend may not be straight..

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I would read Yukio Mishima's Confessions of a Mask. It's the lightly fictionalized memoir of a gay man working in academia that dates women to hide his orientation from his family. I saw several similarities to your post and this book, to the point that I'm somewhat wondering if this is an elaborate troll...


Wow. I’m actually not trolling. I’m desperate and have felt like I’m losing my mind at this point. I’ve been trying to think “there’s more to a relationship than sex” and I can’t think it anymore, so I’ve been wondering what’s up.

This is quite enlightening.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why it even matters whether he’s straight. You’re not happy and satisfied in this relationship. If you’re not married, don’t have kids, aren’t financially dependent on him, why settle for a relationship with no passion, no intimacy, and no sex? You’re not chained to him. Wouldn’t you rather be with someone who brings passion and intimacy to the table — someone who seems so into you that you’re not suspicious that he’s only with you for ulterior motives?


This. If he were bi, you could still have a good relationship. The issue here is that you're not having sex, he's secretive, you feel he's closer to his male friends than you...yeah, just doesn't sound great, I'm sorry.
Anonymous
You know how you know your boyfriend is gay, if he likes Judy Garland and Liza Minelli.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:You're a troll.
He's a very repressed homosexual.



How am I a troll? I wish I wasn’t seriously desperate to know if anyone else has experience similar. I’m 100% serious so sorry many don’t seem to see that. It’s really hurting me mentally. I feel angry I’ve been deceived and naive and he knows because I don’t read that stuff. I recently asked if Joyce was gay and he laughed. Apparently Joyce wasn’t but his writing is.

Again, wish I was joking. Thanks to those who have offered serious insight. I’ve wondered if he’s faithful in the back of my mind for years. Anytime I asked he got upset and said no. Recently I started thinking maybe it’s not with a woman. AI made me believe could be a man but I wanted to ask real people… the helpful responses truly are helpful. Thank you. It’s tough as I need to leave for my own mental health and to find a relationship I deserve but I also don’t want this man to spiral.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Has anyone else had experience with very repressed gay or bi men hiding it in plain sight—especially through intellectual or academic interests?

I've been with my boyfriend for several years. We had sex during the first year, but even then, it always felt like he preferred to schedule it rather than be spontaneous. He’d say things like “we’ll do it later,” but then “later” didn’t always come. Over time, it just got rarer, and now for the past two years, there’s been no sex at all. There’s always a reason—he’s tired, stressed, I lost too much weight, or I was annoyed with him (which I admit I have been, because he’s very secretive with his phone and just seems totally uninterested in intimacy so him using that as an excuse never fixed it).

I’ve asked him directly if there’s someone else, and he gets defensive, saying no, of course not. And usually I do believe he cares about me—he supports me while I’m in school, he tells me he loves me—but lately I’ve started to wonder if he might be gay or bi and just not out, maybe not even fully to himself.

One reason I’m starting to wonder is this close male friend of his he spends a lot of time with—someone I’ve never met, despite them knowing each other for years. They talk a lot about philosophy (they both teach it), and he helped this friend write a paper on anal pleasure—which honestly flew over my head regarding what it's actually about, but it definitely made me pause. I’ve also started noticing other things: he reads a lot of ancient Greek texts and once joked to me that “the Greeks were all gay with each other,” and he’s obsessed with James Joyce—especially Ulysses and Finnegans Wake. AI tells me there may be a lot of tales of regressing who you are with gender and sexuality in those books... I used to just think he was a quirky academic, but now I’m wondering if those interests have more personal resonance for him. He remembered Bloom's Day this month but forgot my birthday until my friend sent me flowers...

He also wears a lot of pinks and purples, has rainbow stickers on his water bottles (rainbow colors not just a rainbow), he loves P-Town when we go to the Cape, and while I always thought of that as just part of being a liberal, nerdy academic guy… now I’m not so sure. He annotates books in ways that seem very intimate—like underlining his friend’s name in a Greek tragedy.

Honestly, I wouldn’t have even questioned any of this if I hadn’t started asking AI about certain behaviors or interests, and whether they could be queer-coded. It’s not that I have any issue if someone is gay or bi—but if I’m being used as some kind of “safe cover” for someone who is and not ready to be out with it, and I'm just a cover for his Catholic family or to avoid dealing with his own repression, that’s something I can’t ignore. I care about him, but my own mental and emotional health has been really affected by the lack of intimacy and the growing sense that he might not even be attracted to me, possibly because he's hiding who he truly is from me but allowing these males friends to see it.

I don’t feel like I can just say, “I think you’re not straight” as a reason to break up—it feels cruel, especially if he’s deeply repressed. He's stubborn. He wouldn't tell me and would get upset so I will not ask. But at the same time, I’m not okay with the distance and secrecy anymore. He won’t even let me know his phone passcode (never has), saying it’s because of HIPAA (he’s a therapist), but I’m not asking for access to a database of his patient files—I just want the same level of openness I offer him.

Has anyone else been in a relationship with someone who might have been deeply closeted or used intellectual or academic interests to mask their queerness? I’m trying to make sense of this and would appreciate any thoughts or similar experiences.



He. Is. Gay.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why it even matters whether he’s straight. You’re not happy and satisfied in this relationship. If you’re not married, don’t have kids, aren’t financially dependent on him, why settle for a relationship with no passion, no intimacy, and no sex? You’re not chained to him. Wouldn’t you rather be with someone who brings passion and intimacy to the table — someone who seems so into you that you’re not suspicious that he’s only with you for ulterior motives?


Gaslit anytime I suggest we may not be a good match. I guess if you’ve never been super gaslit over and over with someone speaking over you and being stubborn to get the answer they want you to have, and they make you think you’re crazy for thinking what you say, you wouldn’t understand.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why it even matters whether he’s straight. You’re not happy and satisfied in this relationship. If you’re not married, don’t have kids, aren’t financially dependent on him, why settle for a relationship with no passion, no intimacy, and no sex? You’re not chained to him. Wouldn’t you rather be with someone who brings passion and intimacy to the table — someone who seems so into you that you’re not suspicious that he’s only with you for ulterior motives?


Gaslit anytime I suggest we may not be a good match. I guess if you’ve never been super gaslit over and over with someone speaking over you and being stubborn to get the answer they want you to have, and they make you think you’re crazy for thinking what you say, you wouldn’t understand.


Nah, stop this victimese right now. If you've "suggested" you're not a good match more than once, you're part of the problem. If you don't think it's a good match, you can leave. He doesn't have to agree with you, and he may not. Doesn't matter. You get to nope out of any relationship at any time for any reason, and you're responsible for the decisions you make. Trying to force someone to agree with your choices/reasons before you do what you want/need to do is a really co-dependent way to live, and you are complicit in your own unhappiness if that's what you're playing at.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why it even matters whether he’s straight. You’re not happy and satisfied in this relationship. If you’re not married, don’t have kids, aren’t financially dependent on him, why settle for a relationship with no passion, no intimacy, and no sex? You’re not chained to him. Wouldn’t you rather be with someone who brings passion and intimacy to the table — someone who seems so into you that you’re not suspicious that he’s only with you for ulterior motives?


Gaslit anytime I suggest we may not be a good match. I guess if you’ve never been super gaslit over and over with someone speaking over you and being stubborn to get the answer they want you to have, and they make you think you’re crazy for thinking what you say, you wouldn’t understand.


Nah, stop this victimese right now. If you've "suggested" you're not a good match more than once, you're part of the problem. If you don't think it's a good match, you can leave. He doesn't have to agree with you, and he may not. Doesn't matter. You get to nope out of any relationship at any time for any reason, and you're responsible for the decisions you make. Trying to force someone to agree with your choices/reasons before you do what you want/need to do is a really co-dependent way to live, and you are complicit in your own unhappiness if that's what you're playing at.


I let myself be manipulated and gaslit for years and it was all my own fault. Not a victim. Just an unfortunate idiot. Thanks.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Troll


NP.

Why would a troll add that much detail?
Anonymous
He's as gay as gay gets. Gay guys will tell you, "a hole is a hole." They can have sex with a woman and still be gay as can be, not even bisexual.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I'll just leave this for you to consider: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=krYDgDpgs88.

If your boyfriend is supporting you financially through school, just get your degree and a job, and then break up so he can live his bliss and you can go get laid.


Yep, typical DUM advice: Just use him for financial resources and then dump.

Until women start getting paid equally to men, you will see this advice.
Where do they not?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why it even matters whether he’s straight. You’re not happy and satisfied in this relationship. If you’re not married, don’t have kids, aren’t financially dependent on him, why settle for a relationship with no passion, no intimacy, and no sex? You’re not chained to him. Wouldn’t you rather be with someone who brings passion and intimacy to the table — someone who seems so into you that you’re not suspicious that he’s only with you for ulterior motives?


Gaslit anytime I suggest we may not be a good match. I guess if you’ve never been super gaslit over and over with someone speaking over you and being stubborn to get the answer they want you to have, and they make you think you’re crazy for thinking what you say, you wouldn’t understand.


Nah, stop this victimese right now. If you've "suggested" you're not a good match more than once, you're part of the problem. If you don't think it's a good match, you can leave. He doesn't have to agree with you, and he may not. Doesn't matter. You get to nope out of any relationship at any time for any reason, and you're responsible for the decisions you make. Trying to force someone to agree with your choices/reasons before you do what you want/need to do is a really co-dependent way to live, and you are complicit in your own unhappiness if that's what you're playing at.


I let myself be manipulated and gaslit for years and it was all my own fault. Not a victim. Just an unfortunate idiot. Thanks.


NP. You are still not getting your part in this. You ignored all of your senses and keep blaming it on your BF.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why it even matters whether he’s straight. You’re not happy and satisfied in this relationship. If you’re not married, don’t have kids, aren’t financially dependent on him, why settle for a relationship with no passion, no intimacy, and no sex? You’re not chained to him. Wouldn’t you rather be with someone who brings passion and intimacy to the table — someone who seems so into you that you’re not suspicious that he’s only with you for ulterior motives?


Gaslit anytime I suggest we may not be a good match. I guess if you’ve never been super gaslit over and over with someone speaking over you and being stubborn to get the answer they want you to have, and they make you think you’re crazy for thinking what you say, you wouldn’t understand.


Nah, stop this victimese right now. If you've "suggested" you're not a good match more than once, you're part of the problem. If you don't think it's a good match, you can leave. He doesn't have to agree with you, and he may not. Doesn't matter. You get to nope out of any relationship at any time for any reason, and you're responsible for the decisions you make. Trying to force someone to agree with your choices/reasons before you do what you want/need to do is a really co-dependent way to live, and you are complicit in your own unhappiness if that's what you're playing at.


I let myself be manipulated and gaslit for years and it was all my own fault. Not a victim. Just an unfortunate idiot. Thanks.


If that's the way you're choosing to see it... Maybe go to therapy and work out why you stayed in a relationship where you weren't happy for years?
Anonymous
Move on.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:You know how you know your boyfriend is gay, if he likes Judy Garland and Liza Minelli.

And Bette Midler.
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