Quote from: accord03 on May 21, 2010, 08:30:33 AM
But seriously my friends can't come out. They're homophobics 
Accord, some people who are homophobic are in fact bi or gay themselves. It's possible (though I don't know how likely) that one of your friends is like that.
You appear to have a girlfriend and have apparently been perceived as a lesbian by other people? Is that true? Do you see yourself as straight?
Of course, lots of folks will be only too happy to categorize you to suit themselves. If people see you as a woman or if you are pretransition and attracted to women, some people will see you as a lesbian.
Once you transition, even if you have bottom surgery, some people will still insist that you are a lesbian. A lesbian in denial. A lesbian who hates "her" sexuality or "her" self so much that "she" changed her body to fit into a heteronormative or andronormative/patriarchal box. They may not know you personally; they will just categorize people that way, and you fit in the category.
In other words, some people will always see folks like us as gay, no matter how we identify or whether we change our bodies.
QuoteSo, FTM who are bi or gay is attracted to two guys having sex? And not doing the straight way like pussy and penis?
The spectrum of gay/bi FTM sexual practice is broad and varies from person to person. Some guys keep their front holes and never have sex there; some keep those parts and love sex there. Some like anal sex and some don't. Some guys feel incomplete without male genitals and like to use those parts or have them pleasured.
I imagine that a few guys out there don't have top surgery, ever, and might like their chests the way they are. I haven't run into a guy like that that I know of, but I recognize that it could happen. To each his own.
For myself, I have always imagined (from early childhood) that the
natural way of the universe was that men like to be with men--because who would want to be with a woman! Yes, I was a little gay boy long before I understood sex. I had some female playmates but preferred the boys. When I started imagining sex (before I experienced it with another person), I tried to fantasize about men and women together, and it just didn't do anything for me. It seemed wrong and unnatural. So I kept the fantasy boys and men that I'd always had in my mind, and I allowed them to become sexual together. That was what seemed right to me.
I'm perfectly happy that other people do what is right for them. In fact, I even have a few straight friends.