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Chesterton's Fence's avatar

It seems to me as a boring old straight guy that a lot of Queerness is the desire to permanently Other oneself, for various reasons. But like the last chapter of Clockwork Orange, everyone has to grow up and get boring at some point in their lives. Routine. I wonder how much of the supposed revulsion of the Normies is the thought, "get a job for f's sake."

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geoduck's avatar

Once upon a time, I had sex with a trans man. A generally heteronormative experience, no funny business. But years later, it occurred to me to assess it in terms of gayness.

I feel a greater sense of loyalty to people who share their body with me, than I do to society at large. Gender as a concept doesn't interest me personally, and I was perfectly happy to play along with this person's presentation of self to get what I wanted. Calling it straight sex was clearly insulting. So why not call it gay?

But I was sure that if I told my gay friends that I'd had a gay experience, they would dismiss it outright. And rightfully so, I decided. I simply could not expect anyone to take that claim seriously.

So I made sense of the episode by calling it queer. And being A-OK with what had happened--it reflecting a general proclivity on my part--maybe that made me queer.

All that to say that I don't think queerness is necessarily subversive, oppositional or contrarian. I think it's a good word to describe aspects of individual sexuality which don't make sense in any commonly-held conceptual framework.

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