JansenDowel
Active Member
Are there any other gay INTP's in this forum? When did you first discover you were not like everyone else?
what's the quintessential gay type? i would say ESTPs
No, I'm from the UK. And I might sound stupid but, i don't get that joke lol.
You know I'm surprised there aren't more INTP's out here.... Yeah.. I just came to make that joke. Sad really.
You're not just a commodity, you're an INTPf institution.*
*or need to be institutionalized. Still trying to decide.
I've come out about these discoveries to pretty much everyone, but my family, minus my brothers. My little brother thinks it's funny, because of how conservative and involved in the church was. He came out a few ago (my mother cried). My older brother thinks it's gross, but he doesn't care. I don't see myself having a serious relationship with a man any time soon. So I don't see any reason to bother my parents with it. They would rather not know anyways.
Well I would have food if institutionalized...
I don't believe how many bisexual and pansexual men get called gay just because they like men, or act slightly more flamboyant than straight guys, but it happens all the time.
I think women have a harder time being gay when every guy finds them sexy or something, but women tend to value individuality more than men do. Men just ridicule other men for the stupidest shit.
All in all, it's a tough and happy life being gay! Choose wisely!
And I have a hard time believing that sexual preference isn't just a choice.
And I have a hard time believing that sexual preference isn't just a choice.
Yea, I'm aware of what YMCA is, I just mis-read the joke lol.
And to me sexuality is more of a spectrum than it is boxes. So I'd try and avoid labelling yourself if you're still not %100 sure of how you feel. But good luck with it though.
Its not a choice.
This is a completely different topic but I am curious.
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Probably not naturally but just theoretically can it be a choice? I've heard that some people can change what they are attracted to (although it didn't mention changing sex just size etc..) by "insert scientific method here that I didn't pay attention to." quite quickly.
It's been a while since I never checked this forum again after some suspended or something I guess, don't quite remember. And today I check this forum and found this thread.
I am gay. I realized it since I was 15, start dating when I was 17. By then I figured it out and discovered that I am gay since I was around 6 or 7.
Somehow I think that I know I am INTP because I am gay.
And since most of this forum member are male, it got me questioning are there any female like me here?
You're brave! How did your parents handle it? Mine didn't handle it well.
Lucky for those who live in the Western country. It's seems easier with their acceptance.
Yeah, I'm trying to get a "big picture" of the views being espoused here, and I'm having trouble reconciling the poster's claimed homosexuality with a list of points that seem pretty critical of homosexuals. But maybe I am misunderstanding the writer's intention. My view is similar to Sinny's in that, sure, reproduction obviously works a particular way but a lot of these points seemed focus on deriving some kind of morality (i.e., how we are "supposed" to experience and pursue our physical sexuality) rather than just accepting that there is no real morality except what is imposed by humans and people can make their own choices.
(heck, even getting your ears pierced is going against biology because we aren't born with pierced ears "naturally" but who really cares if someone pierces their ears?)
Could joogabah explain better how all of this fits into his particular experience of sexuality?
I look at sexuality as universal, for mammals. I prefer to split a human cycle in the following categories for mammals that are comparable. Age is relative to lifespan.
*Pre fertility - age ~age ->12
*Fertile ~age 12-45
*Post fertility ~45 ->
Then there is actual fertility. When a egg can be fertilized with semen. For the female this is:
Pre fertility - 1 to 3 days before egg release
Fertile - a few hours each month
Post fertility - 1 to 2 days after egg release
A male is usually fertile if they can achieve semen release.
It gets complicated if a female will not stand in the fertile phase. And if a male will not ride. Not sure what goes on when this occurs. So called homosexuality though is most certainly universal. This will usually occur in the *Pre fertility and Pre fertility phase. In the Pre fertility phase there is usually transsexuality also. Like a cow will ride, on most anything. And fuck like she have a penis. However, when she is fertile she will stand, and no longer ride. Egg is released in the ovulation and will travel to the uterus, as take some hours. On it's way, it may pick up sperm or it may not. Sperm should ideally have been laying a few hours for conditioning in the uterus before it meet the egg. Sperm also have short lifespan.
Long story short. Timing is precarious. Humans in general go about this in a very crude and anything that could even remotely resemble precision and skill. Usually, two well conditioned humans will crudely fuck each day until success....
"homosexuality" and "transsexuality" is necessary in terms of precise impregnation, "heterosexuality". Indulging in all 3 are necessary for expert performance and precision. Otherwise, one is sort of, stumbling around in the dark.
Lol, I don't see why here's any need to complicate something so simple.
The point is to resolve contradictions within simpler explanations. This is how knowledge advances dialectically.
What we deem to be the best of that knowledge, and perhaps more importantly its apparently limitless potential, is what we worship as "God".
Lol, I don't see why here's any need to complicate something so simple.
I accept the Marxist premise that ideological superstructures are by in large determined by economic necessity. So I'm looking for the economic necessity behind certain ideological arrangements of sexuality in our time.
Okay, sure, sex can be manipulated and used as a source of power among the established class. Who can have sex with who, who can have sex at all, the weaker being used as the sexual objects of the stronger, etc. And sure, old patriarchal society using women as resource and absorbing them into complying with their own subjugation. Same patterns translated into different historical scenarios.I perceive multiple moralities that are class-based. I see dominance and submission as part of the human condition that the species is apparently determined to overcome. I think sexuality is central to this process and that is the reason issues of power are so frequently paired with sexuality, which doesn't seem necessary if sex is just a pleasurable activity. Rape as a turn on never made sense to me until I understood the eroticization of dominance and submission, and how that could be employed to get a dominated class of people sexually turned on by their own oppression. I see females as the first class of humans to be regarded as "other", objectified and used as a means to an end.
That clears up better what you've been saying.I also think that while liberalism is important for the free discussion of ideas, the focus on the individual can preclude analysis from other angles and leads to conclusions like there is no objective basis for morality. And yet - morality is never an individual matter. Isolated, morality has no meaning, because morality is a question of what we should or should not do in our relationships with each other. It is always negotiated and intersubjective. But it can definitely have a rational, objective basis (and the prohibition mentioned in Romans 1:27 seems like it could be an example of this - and I would expect a population with no knowledge of microbiology to assume the correlation between particular behaviors and disease was an act of punishment by "God").
Agreed. It's unfortunate here in the US that we have a sizeable minority that insists otherwise and can't simply embrace it for what it is.I am an atheist who recently moderated my anti religious views after considering the fact that religion is not a scientific hypothesis on the material origins of the universe, even if some of its myths claim to be. It is a commentary on the human condition.
No issues with that.Just because its literary forms are not literally true, it does not follow that it is worthless. As an example, just because Santa isn't real, it doesn't follow that the very basic, low level morality of being good to get what you want (which is the only moral level accessible to very small children) is irrelevant. In an allegorical sense, Santa is very real. You won't get what you want if you aren't nice to people. And Santa is required to impart this wisdom to very green individuals.
No problem, I get it, I've heard/perceived this before (it's not like you're saying something new -- the scapegoat from the OT is very much parallel to Christ in the NT, except of course elevated to divine status). The twist is that the scapegoat as sinbearer/sineater is generally viewed negatively, while Christ is placed on a pedestal for the noble sacrifice of abandoning perfection to carry the weight of the world's inequity.Similarly Christ is a kind of scapegoat sacrificial substitute necessary due to guilt and psychological projection and the tendency for human populations to go after someone to place all blame when things are going badly. That was poorly worded but it is early and I'm still tired.
I am not of the opinion that humans consider reproduction at all in their sexual desire. I believe this to be an over reliance on speculative evolutionary psychology that forgets that DNA is not the only information system that humans employ; that our subjectivity is much more malleable than other animals to the point of making us something qualitatively different.
The present dominant materialist worldview (which I share) forgets about language for some reason. It wants to place all of our behaviors in DNA code, instead of linguistic code.
I'm not sure how you can say a language predates the speaker. Language only exists to benefit the speaker. Maybe the idea of language was a potentiality within the universe, and then we came along to fulfill it. But not much more can be said about it.I think God is language. It is eternal from the human perspective. It predates us and survives us. It is invisible, disembodied "spirit" that has real effects in the population. Certain ideas in language can float about the population (like a demon) and wreak havoc. Having no scientific terminology to express this, early humans made use of the only vocabulary available to them.
Yeah, that's pretty transparent, even in religious circles who accept Freudian concepts.As an atheist, over time, I've realized that "God" is analogous to something like Freud's superego, and "Devil" the id.
You know, this is a lot of words to state an idea that isn't really that complicated nor even really that controversial.With this in mind, I can more easily tolerate the language of the religious. They are talking about the same thing using concepts and modes of expression that originated prior to scientific descriptions of reality. In other words, just because there isn't a literal tortoise and hare, it doesn't follow that a fable is without meaning or value.
I knew I was gay at around 6. It was probably gradual, I do not remember. How did I feel? Afraid! As a child, hearing all of those gay slurs made me realize it would probably be dangerous coming out. So I stayed in the closet until I knew how to asses danger more reliably. What about you?
I agree with Yolo, almost exactly.
Sexuality was farrrrrr from being in my mind at the age of 6.
I liked dinosaurs.