Deleted Member Posted October 30, 2010 Posted October 30, 2010 In my experience, most gays - perhaps the nicest ones, are invisible or just in town passing off as straight. The beautiful ones are out & taken, and probably very happy, the seedy or desperate ones are in clubs & bars hoping to be picked up for cheap sex, and the nice, ordinary ones I'd probably get on with are never actually seen, and are therefore out of range. Anyone else feel like this, or is Cardiff, or me just 'special'? (cough!).
Ro**** Posted October 30, 2010 Posted October 30, 2010 I think that's a pretty clear estimation actually.
elSac08 Posted October 30, 2010 Posted October 30, 2010 Totally agree - the other kind is so much easier to find (and harder to lose)
Derek_Clay Posted October 30, 2010 Posted October 30, 2010 them and also the submissive types as well to be honest me i happen to be a former closet type turned out of the closet submissive gay man myself but then i happen to have a thing for authority figures when it comes to a reasonalbly harmless mutually consenting and enjoyable master-slave/pet lovers relationship as doms subs relationships go
Es**** Posted October 31, 2010 Posted October 31, 2010 totally agree!!! I wanna meet someone like that :/
Wi**** Posted October 31, 2010 Posted October 31, 2010 eh iv known some that are nice... and they werent in the closet
Johnny_David Posted October 31, 2010 Posted October 31, 2010 I'm not totally in the closet,and my friends say that I'm nice,and I am. Why be an angry gay when there are so many gay-haters?
elSac08 Posted October 31, 2010 Posted October 31, 2010 I guess that my take on this is that each of us should be doing that with which we feel comfortable; we don't have the right to tell another guy what he should be doing. I feel that coming out is a triple gift: first to ourselves - it's the freedom to be who we are as individuals and not hide anything or be ashamed of who and what we are. Secondly, it's a gift to other gay men, proclaiming that we are part of . . . And thirdly, it's a gift to society in general - letting the "world" know that we are out and proud of who and what we are. I came out of the closet at the age of 52, after 25 years of marriage to a woman. I have 2 wonderful adult sons - wouldn't trade that for anything. Was staying in the closet all of those years a mistake? At first, I felt it was; yet I can't say that today. Had I not been married, and stayed in that "situation," the world would not have these 2 awesome men. So something great resulted; I don't regret the past and truly appreciate today for what it is.
Daniel_Greanya Posted October 31, 2010 Posted October 31, 2010 Dont give up hope, the right guy is out there.
Johnny_David Posted October 31, 2010 Posted October 31, 2010 I've been saying that for years. It's a myth.
Ro**** Posted October 31, 2010 Posted October 31, 2010 I agree with johnny. lol Even if the right guy is out there, the odds of meeting him aren't very high. Just look at the way heterosexuals and even bisexuals like myself go through the same issue. And you'd think as a bisexual, it'd be easier not being limited on gender.
Johnny_David Posted November 1, 2010 Posted November 1, 2010 It's true Robert. People say things like,"your soul mate is out there". They maybe right,but in a world with the populkation of over 6 billion what are the chances of meeting this so-called soul mate?
Ro**** Posted November 2, 2010 Posted November 2, 2010 Precisely. That's the reason I don't tell people things like that. And the reason I've decided to just give up on dating either gender. What IS love anyway, other than a neurochemical reaction? Apparently that makes me a mean person though.
Johnny_David Posted November 2, 2010 Posted November 2, 2010 You're being realistic,and I don't think you're mean,I do however disagree with the neurochemical reaction thing. I mean I wouldn't mind being in love I just don't think that the possibility stands for me.
Ro**** Posted November 3, 2010 Posted November 3, 2010 I could be wrong about the way I view it, but I'm a scientist by nature. I do agree that love is becoming less and less of a possibility in this world, though. That fact just seems to be hitting us harder than it does the rest of the world because we're already a misrepresented and/or unacknowledged minority. It doesn't help that so many are ***d to keep to themselves for *** of consequences either.
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