DARE in SALON today
Erin McKean
editor at VERBATIMMAG.COM
Thu Oct 2 16:16:17 UTC 2003
DARE is cited in the response to the lonelyhearts advice column
question in Salon today.
Pasted in below.
Erin McKean
editor at verbatimmag.com
Since you asked ...
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Queer eye for the wrong guy
I'm gay, but the love of my life says he's straight. Can we still be friends?
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By Cary Tennis
Oct. 1, 2003 | Dear Cary,
How do you suggest "curing" yourself of being madly, completely and
obsessively in love with one of your best friends, with whom there's
absolutely no chance that it will move beyond anything but friendship?
I'm a gay man, and almost two years ago, my boyfriend of five years
suddenly dumped me, proclaiming his newfound heterosexuality; he was
in love with one of our mutual, female friends. They have since gone
on to have a wonderful relationship and are now expecting their first
child. This threw me into a tailspin. I was devastated and no longer
speak to either one of them. But in the last two years, I've managed
to somewhat make my peace with the situation and have started to
forgive them both. But herein lies the problem.
Around the same time as the breaking-up trauma, I made a new friend
through another friend I already had. Despite the fact that he was
"straight" and had a girlfriend, he was very flirtatious, touchy,
sensitive and very, very attentive. I began to get "signals," and I
started imagining scenarios of him rescuing me from my pain and
bewilderment. After several months, I could no longer take it and
broke down to him in the middle of a restaurant during dinner,
confessing that I was in love with him and knew that he had feelings
for me as well, and I was very curious as to what was going to
happen. He was shocked. He had no idea he had sent me mixed signals
and was heartbroken that he had unintentionally led me on. In
retrospect, I realize that this is just his personality, and he
treats all of his male friends this way.
We have continued to remain friends since then, and have grown
extremely close, but the problem is that my feelings still remain and
are stronger than ever. I've tried dating other people, but no one
(no matter how great a person they are) can measure up to him. He's
everything I've ever wanted in a lifelong partner, and being around
him brings me such joy and hope, but also makes me extremely
depressed. At this point, he is much more of a hindrance in moving on
from my failed relationship than my ex-boyfriend ever was.
I've tried distancing myself, but he and I are both totally wrapped
up in the same social group. Besides that, I don't want to. I would
still prefer him in my life as a friend than not at all, but his
friendship keeps me from moving on. This has been torturing me for
nearly two years now, and I'm starting to think I'm using it as a
"crutch" or an excuse to not get close to people that could hurt me
again. I'm sure this is probably a fairly textbook situation, and I
would love to hear your thoughts on it.
Straight Chaser
Dear Straight Chaser,
This may be a textbook case, but you cannot rely on textbooks. You
can't even rely on reference books. For instance, if I turned to my
beloved Dictionary of American Regional English, I would find that
"gay" is Quaker and Amish slang for "worldly." In A-H, the first
volume of what William Safire called "the most exciting linguistic
project going on in the United States," there is no mention of "gay"
meaning "homosexual." The slip-cover of that 1985 work notes, "Over a
five-year period, fieldworkers interviewed natives of 1,002
communities, a patchwork of the United States in all its diversity."
You mean to tell me that not one of those individuals in one of those
1,002 diverse communities noted to the interviewers that the word
"gay" means homosexual?
So much for textbook situations. If this is a textbook situation,
then not much has changed since Henry Drummond noted in his 1894
"Ascent of Man," "In almost every [science] department, the
text-books of ten years ago are obsolete today."
While the reference books are open, however, let me give you a couple
of citations, just for amusement: From the American Spectator, 1935:
"Two special expressions, for which there are no good American
equivalents, are in use among the 'plain' people (i.e., those who
wear the plain garb of the Mennonites, Amish, and other religious
sects): "to go gay," meaning to become worldly in the sense of
attending dances, card parties, movies, or participating in other
forbidden pleasures." Or as Fredric Klees noted in "The Pennsylvania
Dutch" in 1951, just two years before Merriam-Webster's 10th
Collegiate dates the first use of "gay" to mean "homosexual":
"Occasionally there is magic in the phraseology, as in the case of
the Amish girl who was expelled from meeting because she married a
Reformed youth and 'went gay.'"
To get even close to any sexual connotations in the word "gay," we
must turn to the 1811 "Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue: Buckish
Slang, University Wit, and Pickpocket Eloquence," which defines
"Gaying Instrument" as "the penis."
So keep your gaying instrument in your trousers as we continue. To
sum up: This may be a textbook situation, but the real learning takes
place in the field. What you have learned so far, apparently, is to
rely on nonverbal cues. That's why you're in a pickle. What you're
relying on in your unspoken negotiations with members of your sex is
a vast secret language that developed over centuries in a society
that has had to signal its great passions in public silence. I fear
that language is rapidly falling apart, but because there remains a
great social stigma, that silent language is still in use.
The communication problem is compounded by the rapid spread of
subculture slang across class boundaries (witness the virtuosity of
white male suburban teens in rich black slang; witness "Queer Eye for
the Straight Guy"). As the slang, posture and gestures of subgroups
are bastardized by the popular media, the signal degrades; terms lose
their meaning and fall prone to misinterpretation. Not only that, but
the rapid breaking down of gender signals in our culture causes
particular problems in your case.
So what do you do? You counter obfuscation with overdefinition. You
counter vagueness with aggressive clarity verging on the absurd. You
use a better, more explicit language, both verbal and gestural, one
that's widely understood by mainstream culture. Basically, you must
appropriate the language of romance to end this non-romance: You're
going to have to break up with your friend.
Of course, since he thinks you're just friends, he may register
surprise when you break up with him. But don't let that stop you. A
man's gotta do what a man's gotta do.
Pick a nice restaurant, where you don't have to shout and you can
have some privacy. Buy him something nice beforehand. When the time
seems right, explain to him that you've tried hard to make the
relationship work. Tell him it's become clear that you and he have
different needs. Tell him it's over. Tell him not to cry, but hand
him a hankie if you spy a glistening pearl of salty tear begin to
bloom at the inner canthus of his reddening eye.
He may not understand now, but in time he will. And though experience
has shown that it's hard for non-lovers to become friends after they
break up, it doesn't hurt to hold out that hope. Reassure him that
he'll find Mr. Right eventually. And tell him that eventually, once
he's over this, you'd like to be friends.
That should leave him speechless so that you can excuse yourself, pay
the check and leave alone, quietly, through the back way.
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Want more advice from Cary? Read the Since You Asked directory.
salon.com
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About the writer
Cary Tennis is the copy chief and a staff writer at Salon, and he
gives interesting advice.
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