Last week, on my drive home from seeing my brand new baby
niece in Indiana, I heard a discussion on a morning radio show that had me
actually yelling out loud to the poor, deluded lady who called in. See, she’d
fallen into one of the pitfalls of being friends with a gay man—she’d developed a crush on him and wanted
to ask him out on a date.
As I’m speeding along on Interstate 69 (and no, I’m not
making that up!), I was telling her not to do it! Trust me “Kristy” it’s a
train wreck waiting to happen. Alas, the call I was listening to that morning
was the follow up call. I was right. Not only did she get turned down, but her
friend and co-worker filed a sexual harassment complaint against her. You can listen to her story here:
“Kristy’s” dilemma did get me thinking, though, and for
that I thank her. See, about a decade ago, I was in Kristy’s shoes. I had a relationship with a gay man (we’ll
call him “Steve” since I haven’t actually asked his permission to share our
story!).
Steve and I met through work and quickly became
inseparable. Everyone at work thought we were a couple—at one point Steve even
had a picture of the two of us on his desk. We went on dates and bought each
other presents. We’d even gone away for the weekend together, although we never
had sex. After about five months together, Steve told me he was moving away.
Our relationship had confused him, and although he loved me, he didn’t want to
have sex with me. Funnily enough, I felt the same about him. My heart was still
broken because his leaving left a hole in my life.
As I had a seven hour drive ahead of me, it gave me too
much time to reminisce on the pitfalls of friendships past and present. I'd learned a lot from my experience with Steve though, most of all the importance of putting my gay friends firmly and immediately into a "friends-only" box to keep myself from having confusing feelings again. My mind was whirling though, and no one
who knows me will be surprised by the fact that I wanted to talk it out. The
first person on the speed dial was my amazing friend Tim.
Tim and I met about five years ago. He’s a good friend of
my brother’s and when we met, we became insta-friends in a way that doesn't happen to me very often. Tim is openly gay, so it wasn't too hard for me to put
him in that friend box. Then things got a bit complicated. I’d gone to an event and met Tim’s family.
His grandma took an instant liking to me, and she has been trying to convince
Tim and I for years that we are perfect for each other! Tim and I both know
better, but the lines did get a bit blurry for a while. So when I talked to Tim
about poor Kristy’s unfortunate choice, he understood completely.
My question for him was primarily whether or not the
reverse happened…were gay men sometimes confused by their feelings toward
straight women? Tim assured me that it does happen—not often, but it does. By
this point my brain was spinning with so many thinky thoughts that I probably
should have stopped driving. I didn't, of course.
What I did begin to think about was an expression I've heard many times in regards to straight women finding a good partner. How many
times have you heard someone say “they’re either married or gay”? I've heard it
quite a bit. And I've found that it’s often true. Finding a good partner is
hard for most of us. If only it were as easy as we make it out to be in our
romance novels, huh?
The thing is, as a straight woman, I find it difficult to
be “just friends” with a straight man. In my experience, it always turns into
something else for at least one of the friends. And heaven forbid you try to be
friends with a married man. The lines are way too easy to cross. I’m a flirt,
who also happens to be a bit on the touchy-feely side. I have to always be
aware when I’m around straight men—single or married—to not smile too much, to
not touch too casually, or any of those little things that I generally do to my
friends without thinking. I've had way too many female friends get upset with
me over being overly friendly with their boyfriends or husbands, even if the
thought of being with them in any way other than “oh that’s so and so’s
husband” had never crossed my mind. Sad, huh?
My thinky thoughts then turned to why it’s okay for me to
be touchy-feely with my gay friends when I don’t do that with my straight
friends. Am I being disrespectful to their relationships? Have I crossed lines
there? EEK! I was only half-way through my seven hour drive and I needed to
make sure I wasn't ticking off someone’s other half!
Thank goodness for speed-dial and hands-free cell phones
because I was able to pick the brain of one of my married gay friends on this
very subject. After a bit of an eye-roll at the question, he assured me that it didn't bother him at all when I touch his husband—but he had been upset before
by other women who get a bit too up close and personal with his man.
Whoa. Brain spinning in loopy loops. What’s the
difference between what I do and what other women do? Well, it seems like it
comes back to that box I mentioned earlier. The guys I consider close friends
know that I’m not thinking about what’s in their boyfriend’s pants and I’m
certainly not imagining what’s going on in their bedroom. They are in the
“friend box”. It’s really all about intent. I don’t want to know what goes on
in my girlfriend’s bedrooms with their significant others and I don’t want to
know what goes on in my gay friends bedrooms with their partners either! I
don’t use their lives as fodder for my own fantasies and certainly not for the
sex I write in my novels.
However, my friend assured me that not all women keep to
those guidelines. Especially not women who read or write in the gay romance
genre. Oh my. While this news probably shouldn't have surprised me as much as
it did, I found myself both shocked and a bit mortified that someone would be
picturing my buddies in bed. (Yes, I’m blushing just thinking about it and I
know the guys who I talked to about this subject know that and are already
laughing at me!)
After much more thinking, I finally arrived home, and
being me, immediately messaged another friend who I knew had had an
uncomfortable experience with a female writer getting a bit too close for
comfort. The thing is, as female writers in the gay romance field, we’re going
to want to ask questions sometimes. Let’s face it, there are bits we don’t have
so making sure we portray things accurately is pretty important in the scheme
of things. I know I always try to have
at least one guy beta read for me, because they will find something the gals
miss.
So this friend and I spent time chatting about the
difference. It became clear to me pretty quickly that while I was looking for
more technical info, this other writer was actually looking to add specifics
into her novels from my friend’s private life. I’m not sure if I would call
what she did objectification or fetishizing, but either way, it left me feeling
perturbed on my friend’s behalf. The
line had clearly been crossed and, as a result, that writer no longer has my
friend to talk to. Her actions cost her a friend.
And the objectification doesn't come only from the women.
As my gal pals and I have experienced, there is a certain amount of
objectification that happens with gay men and straight women, particularly
where breasts are concerned. Oh yeah, I went there. But I know straight guys wouldn't grab my chest the way gay guys seem to feel free to! And the comments.
Seriously, guys. Take a minute to think before you ogle or grope, please.
As the title of this post suggests, I think there are
many benefits to being friends with gay men. They just aren't the typical
“friends with benefits” that the term has come to mean in society. I love
having a man’s ear to talk off when I’m having man troubles of my own. I love
having men in my life who are “safe” to hug—I don’t have to worry about them
thinking I want in their pants if I touch them! As a writer, it's amazing to have someone who I can turn to for questions when I have technical questions. There are a lot of other
benefits, but really, it’s just about having friends—male or female—where sex isn't part of the equation.
What I've learned from talking to my friends about this
is that we need to be *very* careful not to make our friends feel like research
projects or science experiments. There are lines that shouldn't be
crossed. Although our intentions may
seem noble, they come across as intrusive and downright rude.
With all that thinking, I really haven’t come to any
solid conclusions other than the one I’d already come up with: make sure I have
my friends in the appropriate box. I have to wonder though, have any of you had
similar experiences? After hearing Kristy’s dilemma, remembering my own, and
talking this over with several friends, it seems like the experience is more
common than I’d first imagined.
I’d love to hear your thoughts on the subject. The topic
has certainly stirred up a bit of a hornet’s nest among my friends. So what do
you think? Where are the lines and when do they get crossed? Have any of you
lost friendships because of this?
i have lots of thoughts on this subject, give me a day or two, and I'll respond. Loves, Wt.
ReplyDeleteThanks Wt! I actually thought of you when I was writing parts of this. I knew you'd have some thinky thoughts as well!
DeleteI have some thoughts as well from a different view. I'll write it up and post later today or tomorrow. Thanks for this article Poppy, it certainly brings foward some interesting concerns.
ReplyDeleteCan't wait to hear your thoughts CR. Please make sure to link me so I can share as well. I am really interested in this as a subject and glad it seems to have touched a chord!
DeleteWow. when you stir, you use a bloody big spoon.
ReplyDeleteI can honestly say tho, and you know this, Tak and I never had this problem.
I couldn't tell you if thats cos of the kind of people we both were, neither letting many close, so cherishing the friends that we do.
On the other hand, I treated him just as I do you, no subject is taboo, if questions couldn't be answered we cogoogled.
Also, you can hug my hubby as much as you like, I won't mind, and he loves you anyway
*snuggles* I'm glad I get to hug Mr. P. I adore him and you as well.
DeleteI agree with you about Tak. He and I had a similar relationship although we weren't nearly as close as you were. I think another interesting angle in this is that there are some friends it *doesn't* happen with at all! I have a many friends where nothing like this has ever been an issue.
Again...intention! I think that's the key, but I wish I were able to be more eloquent about it.
I suppose my comment to your article touches a few things you mentioned. Hugging or being touchy/feely makes significant others uncomfortable. For me, it’s ME that is uncomfortable. I have no gay friends. Oh, a few on FB, but none in RL. Very often, I worry that I will make inappropriate comments (or actions), or be too enthusiastic over the affection between them and their significant other, simply because I never witness it here in my real world.
ReplyDeleteBesides not actually meeting any, I think it’s also a feeling as if I want gay friends because they are…gay. I think you mentioned “safe”. Safe to hug. Too true! Straight men make me nervous because they can (and will) expect something from me. No gay man is going expect anything from me “except” my friendship. How wonderful! How refreshing! Where are you guys????
Anyway, I completely understand where you are coming from. I don’t think about bedroom antics with any friends. That’s their business, not mine. And on some level—ewwwww. Lol Honestly, it doesn’t cross my mind with someone I know.
As you mentioned, me being an m/m erotic writer, and not having the parts to be purely accurate, I have questions. But I do have a few FB gay friends willing to answer them for me, some with boyfriends/husbands, and some without. It makes no difference to me since it’s not their relationship I’m asking about. My questions are generalizations most often. Heck, I don’t even ask my FB gay friends if they top, bottom or switch and there’s only one I tease unmercifully for his “mental images” when he makes comments. Tee hee…ahem…back to reality….
I read an article written by a gay man about women friends. I would love to share it with you sometime.
Thanks again CR! I responded to this on Facebook as well, but I really appreciate your candor. I'm a jealous sort like you are. I've learned though that you have to learn what boundaries are okay to cross and which ones aren't. I'm also the same as you with some of my gay friends. There are those I'll ask more personal questions of, and others who I'd never dream of it. It comes down to knowing your friends well enough!
Delete--And I say ewwwww on some level too! So glad it's not just me!
And some of us will just answer anything, even if you don't ask us the question :P
DeleteI think with the touchy-ness and the questions, it's all about the intent and not the action. Does that make sense?
ReplyDeleteBut I loved this. You are so spot on.
Thanks Jason! I think intent is a hard thing to quantify in this instance. I mean, how can you really tell what a person's intentions are? However, I do think that we all pick up on certain vibes that we have to listen to. I'm glad you loved this! I hoped it would spark a conversation as it had among my friends (you included!).
DeleteI couldn't agree with you more, Poppy. The lines definitely get blurred in both directions. I have to admit that even though I'm a gay man, I'm not shy to tell my straight gal pals what nice boobies they have. I've never honked a pair because that would just be too crude, but I find nice breasts aesthetically pleasing even though they don't turn me on sexually. I shall have to watch my comments. I sure don't want to make any of my gals uncomfortable around me. But I've lived through blurred lines. I was involved with a woman and married her. We were together for about 12 years. When we met, she was a great woman. She still is, but I think I confused my emotions. There was no doubt I loved her, but I knew she could never replace my longing for men and their male parts. At least I knew that subconsciously but as you mentioned with your friend, society and conventional behavior got in the way. I let myself be swayed by what I should be doing instead of what I wanted to do. Now, I have a better understanding of relationships and interactions as I've matured. I'm no longer that innocent twenty-something. Relationships can be complicated but the good thing about the straight woman/gay man relationships that I've enjoyed is that they have been anything but. We and my gal pals can be ourselves without the fear of sex clouding the relationship. For me, that's golden.
ReplyDelete