That question haunts so many of us. Society demands proof as if desire needs to be a portfolio, as if belonging comes with a checklist.
Sometimes I wonder if I am simply pretending. Not in the sense of some grand lie, but in the way a thought can feel like an outfit that never quite sits right on the shoulders. It is easy to say I like men. It is also true that sometimes I like women. Somehow that makes the world more suspicious, not less.” The mind resists easy explanations, and mine particularly craves evidence, exceptions, and verification. Sometimes desire seems crystal clear, a touch, a lingering glance, an inner knowing that this isn’t performative but genuine, woven into my very being. Still, I’m haunted by uncertainty about whether I truly belong within that label’s definition. Am I performing it correctly, living it visibly enough, suffering visibly enough?
It doesn’t help that the world has its own lines ready. “You’re too young to know.” But I notice no one ever tells a child, “You’re too young to know you’re straight.” No one asks a boy chasing a girl on the playground if he’s sure. That certainty is a given baked into lullabies and wedding plans and the names scribbled in pencil on the back of notebooks. And yet if the arrow of desire points somewhere unexpected, suddenly you become suspect. Suddenly you need evidence. A portfolio of proof that what you feel is real.
And I think if I was truly pretending, why would I want to join the ranks of a marginalized community that has been oppressed for centuries? If this was some costume, why would I choose one stitched together with fear, shame, and a history of violence? It makes no sense yet my brain wants to interrogate me like I’m guilty until proven innocent.
Sometimes, I admit, I wish it were simpler. I imagine a version of myself that is straight a version who wouldn’t have to wonder if every hug is being watched by the wrong pair of eyes, who wouldn’t pause before a simple word like love because the tongue can betray you in front of the wrong audience. A version that doesn’t carry a mirror in the mind, forever adjusting, forever hoping no one sees too much.
It is society’s voice that does this: the aunties who would rather pretend; the uncles who speak in jokes; the friends who mean well but never quite get it. They ask questions that stick: “Are you sure? Maybe it’s a phase. Maybe you’re confused.” I know they think they are being kind or cautious but what they really do is plant seeds that grow into thorns, forever poking at the softest parts of you.
Desire, too, does not always obey the neat diagrams. When I try to locate it in the places I’m told it should live the pixelated screens, the stock fantasies it slips out of frame. I don’t even like watching these things much. And yet a part of me wonders if that disinterest makes me an imposter: if the lack of a textbook fantasy makes the real thing somehow counterfeit. I know what I do not want, and I know what I do but my mind still wants to press me for a consistency I cannot offer.
There are days I envy those who wear the label like an easy badge, no second-guessing. I envy the ones who can say “I am this” and never feel their stomach twist when they hear their own certainty echo back. But I suspect they, too, wake up some days and wonder who they are when no one is looking. Maybe we all do. Maybe that’s the honest part.
If I were to write this out plainly my own hesitant, scribbled manifesto it would not be some brave declaration in block letters. It would say only this: that I exist, that my desire is enough, that the edges may always stay blurry but the feeling is real. That I owe no one the spectacle of my suffering, or the correctness of my fantasies. That I do not need to earn this label with pain or performance.
Am I straight enough for you? Am I gay enough for you? Or is the real problem that the world only understands two doors and I happen to live in the hallway between them. Maybe that isn’t the question at all. Maybe the real test is whether I am enough for myself in all my contradiction, doubt, softness, and stubbornness. For now, I am trying to believe that I am. And tomorrow, I will try again.
Previous versions of this are also posted on GaysiFamily: https://gaysifamily.com/lifestyle/am-i-gay-enough-for-you/
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