this post was submitted on 28 Jun 2023
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[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I wear a pride band on my Apple Watch nearly every day, and I am cis/het. it, like the “you’re safe with me” button on the back of my wheelchair, are signifiers that I’m a safe person if someone needs it. Also, the watchband is f’ing gorgeous and hopefully helps normalize pride wear in my small, not progressive area. It pisses of my bigoted FIL also.

I know that some people might get mad a a cis/het man wearing pride stuff, and I get it, but hopefully I’m doing a net positive action. It, as well as sometimes painting my fingernails, and having a lavender phone case, help me fight back against my internal misogyny. My internal reaction of “that’s a girly thing and I’m a man, so I can’t do it” has already reduced a significant amount.

Im also not entirely sure my sexuality is as set in stone as I used to think. But I’m old and happily married, so it’s not like I’m going to explore that part of me, but if I was young and single with this newer view on life, I could definitely see my sexuality being more fluid than it was when I was searching for a life partner.

Hopefully that all makes sense and isn’t offensive. I’ve got 30+ years of bigotry fighting against 7ish years of being a decent human being. Sometimes I don’t get the idea across without sounding bad.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

As a queer person--I can't speak for every queer person, obviously--but personally, I'm all for cis het people repping the rainbow, especially when they're doing it to signify they're a safe space. Thanks for being cool ✌️

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

I think you explained this pretty well, and you hit on a significant point about internalised misogyny.

I'm a bi woman who, as a general rule of thumb, has the dating preference of "anyone but cis-het men" because I've found that ace, bi or trans men have often been forced to work though a lot more of that internalised misogyny than most men (as well as having more community support to do so)*.

It sounds like a big, ideological stance, but it's just a way of reducing the likelihood of dating someone who would refuse to drink a "girly" cocktail, even if they think it's delicious. It's only a rule of thumb though because as you highlight, it's possible for anyone to do the work to unearth and work through their internalised biases. I wish there were more straight dudes who wouldn't be scared of people thinking they're gay. Gay people get asked out by people of the opposite gender all the time, it shouldn't be a big deal. The societal pressure is real though.

I'm glad you shared your experience, it was nice to read. It's good to see examples of positive masculinity, because there's a lot of examples of toxic masculinity in the discourse and that can lead to the incorrect impression that masculinity or men in general are bad. In my experience, men who are aware of these issues are generally happier and healthier than their peers.

* This isn't to say that LGBTQ men are immune to toxic masculinity, no group of people is a monolith ofc