It’s Healthy For Men To Question Our Sexuality

August 28, 2014

Brian28

♦◊♦

When I was 22 and in the US Air Force, I spent 4 months wondering if I was gay.

I was stationed in Oklahoma City, deeply unhappy, certain I was supposed to be doing something on the planet far more inspired and evolutionary than learning about avionics systems on 50-year old KC-135 aircraft. Although I had no concept of this at the time, my world was dominated by a very rigid, even immature, masculine ethos largely cut off from healthy forms of feminine expression.

In other words, the military I experienced was teeming with men who couldn’t access much range of emotion, who couldn’t be vulnerable with each other, who were expected to think inside very narrow bandwidths of philosophy, and who commonly sought relief from all this through alcohol.

Carl

military picnic

(all pictures here are from my military era)

Even otherwise feminine women in this environment tended towards similar behavior (it was a survival adaptation thing, I get it). I desperately craved diversity, though I had no idea what that would look like.

To cope with my despair, I picked up an acoustic guitar one day and began creating soft, haunting melodies that would calm my inner angst like a loving mother. But the songs I wrote were the dark, heavy and foreboding ballads of a tortured soul. I was a functioning depressed person, unable to feel much but still able to get out of bed and show up for life. I couldn’t really laugh, and I could never cry. I felt completely misplaced inside my own life.

An engineering and math major at University, I had never considered myself an artist. I was that guy in college who had inspirational quotes pasted all over his wall, aching to throw himself into a passionate life of adventure and magic. But here I now was, imprisoned, passionless, slowly dying in a drab green and brown military uniform world. Yet as I began to express my pain out through the guitar, I started to notice something inside me grasping for beauty.

I wasn’t exposed to many feminine women. I’m not sure whether that was a contributing factor, but regardless, I began seeing beauty in places I thought I wasn’t supposed to. In men.

It was illegal to be gay in the military at that time.

I didn’t really know what was going on. I just knew that as I started playing the guitar and giving voice to the feminine ache inside my own heart, my experience of beauty started to defy social norms. I wasn’t experiencing sexual attraction to men, at least not that I could discern. But intellectually, I knew something unfamiliar was stirring within.

brytimjeff

Brian2

I started to conduct thought-experiments in the presence of men. A tall blond male friend of mine came to my OKC suburbs home one day to practice playing the drumset I was keeping for him. While he was there, I wondered silently for an hour what it would be like if we started kissing. On the mouth. Sexually speaking. Like gay people must do.

Nothing happened. And I don’t know how I would have responded had he tried.

Regardless, after repeating that experiment many times during those few months, I realized I was just too powerfully drawn to the female form. Smooth undulating skin and long hair that smelled of fresh meadows after a rain storm is what naturally toggled my inner switches. Bristly beards and rippling muscles? Not at all.

But I went there. I allowed myself to question my sexuality, to really dive in and confront the truth of my nature, at least at that time. And I did so in an environment where the stakes were high if that truth turned out to be incompatible with my community’s ideals.

military 3 stooges

Brian6

I can’t say that this clarity relieved any of my despair. My sexuality and my pain inside the harsh military labyrinth were largely independent of one another. Well, I was hungering for exposure to more radiant forms of feminine expression. That was actually much of the diversity I craved. I was immersed in an oppressive masculine culture, and it sickened me.

Krishnamurti said “it is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society.”

Had I been gay … so what? I now know that homophobia is merely the byproduct of an imbalanced society that does not value the gifts of feminine wisdom as equal to those of masculine wisdom.

At that time, I wouldn’t have fit into a sick society. Fortunately, times they are a’changing! When the military began to allow openly gay soldiers in 2011, I thought of Martin Luther King’s famous proclamation:

“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.”

I felt immediate relief when gays were allowed to serve because the world was a little more just than it had been a moment before.

The result of genuinely questioning my sexuality years ago has been a calm clarity that allows me to build a life where I get to routinely experience exquisite human beings and colorful characters of all varieties of sexual persuasions.

I have been adored and loved by gay men; I have warmly hugged gay men for long deliciously therapeutic minutes; I have worked and lived with gay men; I have been the benefactor of a profound beauty and wisdom throughout my life, transmitted to me through incredible men who happened to be attracted sexually to men. Gay men are still among my most cherished friends.

My life is better for having questioned my sexuality so long ago.

I get to live amidst the rainbow. It’s a wild and wondrous place to be.

Brian3

BryanCoco

Reeves

 

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  • I love this in it’s entirety. That you were willing to “put yourself out there and suffer the consequences” as it were, took great courage. You are the better for it and surely the “functioning depressed man” is no more?

  • Yes, I agree. I have questioned my sexuality in the past, particularly when I was involved in Christianity but that’s another matter :o) I know for sure I am not gay, but it’s good to question things.

  • Just read your post on The Good Men project and now just read some of your other blog posts here. I’ve got to say that I *absolutely* love your writing and what you’re doing!

  • Thank you for this article, I started to wonder if I was attracted to women, that’s only because of the way men treat me. I feel like it so difficult for a man to be friends with me. I love men, and want that masculine presence in my life but I’m just tired of the aggressiveness and men being intimidated by how independent and ambitious I am. I get tired of talking to women all the time. I feel like that only time I get to hear a man voice is either by music or if one of my male friends are available to talk that live in a different state but even that s difficult because these men they have a spouse or S.O. and they still want me, and I’m like what the hell.. You serious and they will try, if I said yes they will oblige. I wonder sometimes if I will ever have what I want, like what I had with my first love. We never made love but I’m pretty sure if we did, since we loved each other deeply it would have felt better.

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