I really don’t know what my parents thought of me when I was a little kid. I had some health issues early on. My mother had always said that I had “double pneumonia” when I was an infant, whatever that meant. I was the baby of the family, being the last of three children, with one brother and one sister. I was small for my age and extremely limber. My mother used to get annoyed with the family doctor because he would get sidetracked during my checkups. He enjoyed seeing how far my arms and legs could bend and rotate. He said I was double jointed.
I was extremely shy. My parents had a hard time taking me anywhere new. I hated crowded places. I was basically a home boy. I just enjoyed being at home. But it was more than that. Whenever my parents tried to take somewhere, a restaurant for instance, it turned into an ordeal for everyone concerned.
We had a couple of dogs and a cat. There were toys and books, trikes and bikes. I didn’t have any problem keeping myself occupied. That’s amazing when you think about it today. I had no computer games or dvds. We didn’t get a TV until I was eight or nine. What would today’s kids do?
Anyway, I didn’t realize until later in life, that I was different from most of the kids my age. I wasn’t one of those rough and tumble boys. For example, I used to hate going to my cousins house. My uncle was always trying to get my cousin and me to wrestle. Mainly to show my Dad what a tough kid his son was. I was having none of that. Thankfully, he eventually gave up doing that every time we visited.
I avoided any kind of group activities. My parents were concerned when I started school that it would freak me out. I didn't freak out. I did stay off to the side and watch a lot. But I basically got along fine. I enjoyed school. As I grew older I didn’t take part in sports such as Little League and basketball. I was way too small anyway. I just wasn’t interested and my parents were too busy making ends meet to take the time to encourage me to step out of my comfort zone.
When I was an adult I found out that I had inherited my Dad’s anxiety disorder. Keeping to myself when I was a kid was my way of coping with its unpleasant effects on me. As I grew, I also learned to develop close friendships with those people I was most comfortable with….like the boy next door.
About Me
- Adon
- New England, United States
- Having been unable to break my silence about being gay or bisexual due to living in a conservative New England community, and being an active Mormon as well as being married to a wonderful woman, I will try to do so here. This is the story of parts my life, beginning when I was a young teenage boy. I have learned that being gay or bisexual can, in ways, be a lonely life. I was not actually alone, but many times it felt like I was. As a boy, I thrilled at the discoveries that I had made about my body and my physical and emotional attractions. I despaired when I realized I couldn't tell anyone. There were times when things didn't end well. There were some sad and traumatic experiences. But, there were also many joyful and wonderful life experiences that I wouldn’t have had if I had given in to discouragement along the way. I believe there is joy in living even with the challenges along the way. Be aware that I have been honest and to some degree explicit in my boyish descriptions of my budding sexual awareness. What I have written is what I felt, thought and experienced at the time. These particular posts are marked with a double star **.
3 comments:
I had to laugh at the fatherly approach that was used back in the day... Why always baseball?? lol I was pushed into many sports, and grew to be a professional athlete at one point, but, to be honest, I hated the pushing part, and resisted all the way... The sport that I finally achieved in, was an individual sport, considered to be for 'sissies' by my father, who never participated to any degree in sports, himself!! lol How ironic that his son would outshine him in a sport that he looked down on, at first...
Anyways, I guess that was par for the course in those days... I played every imaginable sport, and, pretty much held my nose, until I wrenched free into my own...
I sometimes wonder why I pushed ahead with that, so far, after the war... I think I might still have been trying to prove something to my family... Oh well... water under the bridge, eh?? lol luv, tman<3
I was quite unathletic. It didn't help that I grew up in a fairly isolated part of town, with only two neighbor boys and my brother to play with. The result was that I never had a chance to play baseball, and when Little League came along, I had none of the rudimentary skills of my contemporaries, and I didn't continue after the first day of tryouts.
And I regret that I never seem to have developed your ability to form close friendships. There are plenty of people with whom I would have liked to be close friends, but I didn't know how to pursue it. Beyond that, there is the problem a lot of us gay guys have: we're never sure whether our feelings toward another guy are "normal" or erotic. As a result, we are always guarded in our dealings with those we like.
ok back sorry i found it disrepectful to comment any more with out reading a full post. So now i have read them both it is a very great start and i love the build up of learning more and more...as to that me and you have a lot in common...so i will be eargerly waiting to see what else there is...lol so you have a new follower Love<~Peter~.
p.s. which is really good since i am trying to thin my blog list lol so hard to do when you keep finding great ones
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