Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Kudos to you. A lot of gay and bi people are known for constantly hooking up and having several relationships.
And a lot of straight people are known for constantly expressing foolish opinions about people who are gay or bi.
I'm not straight![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Kudos to you. A lot of gay and bi people are known for constantly hooking up and having several relationships.
And a lot of straight people are known for constantly expressing foolish opinions about people who are gay or bi.
I'm not straight![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Kudos to you. A lot of gay and bi people are known for constantly hooking up and having several relationships.
And a lot of straight people are known for constantly expressing foolish opinions about people who are gay or bi.
Anonymous wrote:
Kudos to you. A lot of gay and bi people are known for constantly hooking up and having several relationships.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Especially in teen girls and even more so in teen girls with mental health problems it seems to be very common to experiment with orientations. If they are struggling with identity, it makes sense they are struggling in all realms.
Same as how 50-60% of homeless kids identify as non-straight. Part of the culture. Teens in foster care/group homes also have much higher rates of non straight orientations.
When development hits big barriers (abuse, trauma, neglect, mental illness) one would expect that really all parts of development process would be impacted, including sexual orientation. People who identify as non straight report far more early life trauma.
Did you ever think that these kids are being kicked out of their homes for being gay/bi?
That may be true for a very small proportion but for the most part it isn't. These aren't kids from great homes that are anti-gay. It is rarely situations where parents and straight sibs are at home having a great life and just this one child gets kicked out or leaves because s/he is gay. These are mostly kids from quite dysfunctional homes where there are tons of issues, and their parents and sibs are also having issues. And often these teens don't self-identity as non-straight until they are on the street.
Link to reference on all of this info? It seems like a lot of assumptions if you are not getting this from an actual study of homeless children and frankly it seems really unconvincing.
I write this as a physician who specializes in adolescent medicine and one sub-area of expertise is on LGBT adolescents. The first poster is using statistics incorrectly. Homeless LGBT youth end up on the street because of familial rejection of their sexual minority status. There is no data which suggests that family dysfunction causes homosexuality or gender discordance. I would recommend that s/he examine the following data from thinkprogress.org.:
http://thinkprogress.org/lgbt/2012/07/12/515641/study-40-percent-of-homeless-youth-are-lgbt-family-rejection-is-leading-cause/#
Another reference from the Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine:
https://www.adolescenthealth.org/SAHM_Main/media/Advocacy/Positions/Apr-13-LGBT-Position-Final.pdf
Anonymous wrote:My oldest son came out as being gay. It was difficult for DH and I to accept, so we more or less disowned him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You haven't talked to many people who are gay/lesbian, have you?
You don't have to be gay to know the answer to this. Even if you are straight, when was your first "crush"? Most people have their first crush when they are 10-13. It may not be a direct correlation but most people have a pretty good idea of who they are attracted to at an early age. Whether or not they admit it to themselves is another thread.
I had my first crush when I was 3, on Scott, the little boy in my carpool to nursery school. Then, I had my second crush in 1st grade when I was 5, on Matthew. In second grade, at age 6, I had a crush on Craig, because he was cute and very smart. Lest you worry this equals sluttiness, I didn't do more than kiss until I was in college, and have had sex with a whopping total of two men, the second of whom I married.
Kudos to you. A lot of gay and bi people are known for constantly hooking up and having several relationships.
Anonymous wrote:How does a 13 year old know what they are? It's one thing to find one or the other sex "attractive", it's another to be having sex with them...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those who say they knew when their kid was 4 or 6 or whatever -- how? Is it just that they acted different from their siblings and had different interests? I'd like to think it isn't the stereotypical -- he's a boy but he won't play with trucks or sports and he'd rather play with an ez-bake oven, but is that what it was?
Hmmm ... I don't know what it was specifically when he was a little boy. He was very active, very into sports, happy to play cars. He has two sisters and was equally happy to play with their stuff, playing house, etc., but he'd always dump them if a little neighbor boy came by to go ride bikes or play ball. He had very specific opinions about his clothes and hair, but also had no problem going outside and getting as dirty as all the other boys.
But I do remember telling him when he was 7, there's a word for when boys like boys and girls like girls, in the way that makes your heart happy and you think you want to marry them, and that word is gay. I remember how his whole body relaxed and then happiness washed over his face, to know this feeling that's different from everyone else, has a name. That kind of confirmed it for me, and DH then made it a point to point out gay men who were happy and successful in life, so he'd see people like himself in grownup form. One time he was home sick in middle school and watching rerun after rerun of Will & Grace. He turned to me and said "I don't want to be like Jack when I grow up. I want to be like Will."
You don't know if you are gay that early. You know after puberty. Saying that he should be with men is going to confuse him. Wait until afterer puberty when the hormones kick in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You haven't talked to many people who are gay/lesbian, have you?
You don't have to be gay to know the answer to this. Even if you are straight, when was your first "crush"? Most people have their first crush when they are 10-13. It may not be a direct correlation but most people have a pretty good idea of who they are attracted to at an early age. Whether or not they admit it to themselves is another thread.
I had my first crush when I was 3, on Scott, the little boy in my carpool to nursery school. Then, I had my second crush in 1st grade when I was 5, on Matthew. In second grade, at age 6, I had a crush on Craig, because he was cute and very smart. Lest you worry this equals sluttiness, I didn't do more than kiss until I was in college, and have had sex with a whopping total of two men, the second of whom I married.