Anonymous wrote:
What do you think accounts for what people identify through so-called “gaydar”? Learned social cues? Gender expression correlated with but not synonymous with sexual orientation? If you are gay (particularly male), did people guess before you were open about it? Did that change over time?
I have a teenage nephew who I have a strong feeling may be gay but I have been struggling with why I think that. (I care only from the perspective that I would want him to know that I’m supportive whoever he is.)
I don't really understand the second part. If you let your nephew or child that you are supportive of LGBT people and love him no matter what, and he ends up being straight, how is that a problem?
It was important to me that my kid knew that I supported him whatever his orientation. It was something we talked about a fair amount. It turns out that my kid is straight and cis. He's also a strong ally to his LGBT friends and classmates. So, my efforts paid off.