avatarElizabeth Emerald

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Abstract

lies.</p><p id="aacd">The other out-dresses a drag queen decked out for club night, despite that he garbs himself in — royal blue-and-gold—kingly attire (cape included).</p><p id="1b5e">Umbrella man is puzzled by the jeers hurled at his butterfly bouquet. To him, it’s just a colorful canopy to cheer a dreary day.</p><p id="2145">G. Q. Spiffy, on the other hand, is amused — and unsurprised — at the reactions he garners. He shrieks after the gawkers with glee: <i>And I’m an interior decorator to boot!</i></p><p id="41c7">Both Butterfly Guy and Designer Dude are married — happily or otherwise — with children.</p><p id="def6">The couples often double up—for the purpose of trivial, not erotic, pursuits.</p><p id="4265">The men’s eyes catch each other’s on occasion — during their brief stop on the way to leering discreetly at the other’s wife’s Tees-and-Assets.</p><p id="c766">Last year, whilst out walking, I met a fellow named John, with whom I’ve since occasionally fallen into step.</p><p id="108c">There is nothing blatant about John that would trigger the “gaydar” of the so-called cognoscenti.</p><p id="8c4d">I inferred that John is gay only on account of his frequent references to the persist

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ent bias against homosexuals.</p><p id="aede">A psychotherapist, John is rightfully outraged by the continuing discrimination against gays, even 30-plus years post-revocation of their designation as “suffering” from a psychiatric disorder.</p><p id="fa31">John is 68; he has no children. On our walks, John mentions what “we” did over the weekend, what “we” plan to prepare for Thanksgiving, where “we” will be spending Xmas.</p><p id="3b33">I refrain from asking John to name his partner-in-we; I’ve long assumed him to be Larry, his daily walking companion.</p><p id="d5ac">Larry, about John’s age, has a high pitch to his voice, an “unmistakable” sign to the crystal gazers, those pseudo psychics who claim to scry the sexuality of strangers.</p><p id="a60f">Yesterday, as I walked my usual route, I came upon John and Larry on the stoop of what I knew to be John’s house.</p><p id="e2da">They greeted me warmly, as always.</p><p id="156b">“Today’s our anniversary,” announced Larry, smiling at John. “45 years.”</p><p id="3d6d">John, beaming, echoed Larry’s words: “45 years…</p><p id="271f">“… Quite a coincidence, Larry! That you and Laura got married in ‘72 — same as me and Jane.”</p></article></body>

You Never Can Tell

Straight talk on gay stereotyping

Photo by Rochelle Brown on Unsplash

My mother-in-law claims she can tell that a man is gay even if he doesn’t know it himself.

How presumptuous. How preposterous!

How can a stranger’s perception of stereotypical flamboyant or effeminate mannerisms trump the target’s own truth?

Not that it’s anyone’s damn business. If a man’s got a wife and kids, chances are he’s not hiding in his closet — just in his man cave, so as to get some respite from the racket.

I know two straight men who are repeatedly tagged with the lavender letter: the Big G, with attendant curlicues and flourishes for good measure.

One of these men jousts the raindrops wielding a purple umbrella sprinkled with sparkly pink butterflies.

The other out-dresses a drag queen decked out for club night, despite that he garbs himself in — royal blue-and-gold—kingly attire (cape included).

Umbrella man is puzzled by the jeers hurled at his butterfly bouquet. To him, it’s just a colorful canopy to cheer a dreary day.

G. Q. Spiffy, on the other hand, is amused — and unsurprised — at the reactions he garners. He shrieks after the gawkers with glee: And I’m an interior decorator to boot!

Both Butterfly Guy and Designer Dude are married — happily or otherwise — with children.

The couples often double up—for the purpose of trivial, not erotic, pursuits.

The men’s eyes catch each other’s on occasion — during their brief stop on the way to leering discreetly at the other’s wife’s Tees-and-Assets.

Last year, whilst out walking, I met a fellow named John, with whom I’ve since occasionally fallen into step.

There is nothing blatant about John that would trigger the “gaydar” of the so-called cognoscenti.

I inferred that John is gay only on account of his frequent references to the persistent bias against homosexuals.

A psychotherapist, John is rightfully outraged by the continuing discrimination against gays, even 30-plus years post-revocation of their designation as “suffering” from a psychiatric disorder.

John is 68; he has no children. On our walks, John mentions what “we” did over the weekend, what “we” plan to prepare for Thanksgiving, where “we” will be spending Xmas.

I refrain from asking John to name his partner-in-we; I’ve long assumed him to be Larry, his daily walking companion.

Larry, about John’s age, has a high pitch to his voice, an “unmistakable” sign to the crystal gazers, those pseudo psychics who claim to scry the sexuality of strangers.

Yesterday, as I walked my usual route, I came upon John and Larry on the stoop of what I knew to be John’s house.

They greeted me warmly, as always.

“Today’s our anniversary,” announced Larry, smiling at John. “45 years.”

John, beaming, echoed Larry’s words: “45 years…

“… Quite a coincidence, Larry! That you and Laura got married in ‘72 — same as me and Jane.”

Fiction
Gay
Stereotypes
LGBTQ
Gay Rights
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