The Burden of the Closet and of Secrecy Being the Default

It is in retrospect that I have begun to see the painfully obvious ways in which being in the closet, in which defaulting to secrecy, has hurt me. After all, being in the closet is an active effort and required picking up habits that don’t go away just because you come out. Unfortunately, the more painful memories require a trigger warning as they involve child abuse, sexual assault, efforts to cover the aforementioned up, and my reactions to it, which includes recreating trauma.

I don’t remember when I learned to keep myself secret. When I told my mom that a male family member had molested me, I blamed her when she asked why I hadn’t told her sooner. I wasn’t able to talk to her about it until after I had been through a lot of therapy and a lot of that time focused on the dysfunctional relationship we had. Plus, there wasn’t anyone else around involved in raising me. Generally, she had taught me that I should be seen but not heard, that I was around to help her process her feelings, sometimes that included being her punching bag, and that the person who had molested me could do no wrong and was forgiven, usually, for any of his past transgressions. This person is no longer in our lives, because my mom finally was able to stop letting him in, but I digress.

When it happened, I was eleven or twelve years old, well before I had started to have real sexual urges, although I had started puberty and had already noticed that I was also attracted to boys. I don’t even remember being told not to tell anyone; it was as if he knew that I just wasn’t the type of person to talk. I was painfully quiet back then and perhaps that was obvious to the adults in my life and doubly so to the predators looking for an easy mark. Indeed, it was only after therapy lessened the impact that I could begin to talk about being molested. I wrote about it often, but it took me close to ten years to tell anyone other than two therapists about it.

I’ve reviewed my journals from back then. Although I noted what happened, near as I can gather or remember, I only didn’t tell anyone because I was worried that they would take that as the thing that “turned” me gay. That the pride and assuredness of my own sexuality blinded me to the hurtful impact of continuing to keep his secret is an irony that I think anyone with more experience could have seen. And really, that is the undercurrent to the ways in which I have hurt myself by being so secretive; if I had had a trusted adult and been able to be honest with them, the self-destructive behaviors that came after may have been curtailed. I don’t blame myself though. In retrospect, I can see the parts when I let shame control the narrative, but in large part it was about survival: as I’ve said prior, I knew that coming out would see me homeless, I thought I was controlling the narrative about me, and it also true is that you need a sense of pride in your sexuality to survive in a heteronormative hegemony. Yet, again, that trusted adult may have been able to point out to me the link between the childhood molestation and all the cruising I was doing as a young person.

I used to go to the gym a lot in high school and college, work out, then cruise in the steam room and locker room showers. As I wrote about it back then, I was excited to be sexually active and also saw it as my obligation, a way of sticking it to society by having lots of gay sex when, at least in California, the right to marry was being voted on and being taken away. It wasn’t just about sexual freedom, but revolution, after all, no amount of shaming could take away how good the good times felt. The issue was the bad times. Stone cold sober, I would lose agency over my body, freezing in place and letting people I was not attracted to touch me and pleasure me. I remember explicitly telling myself to just close my eyes and let it happen, it would all be over soon. I didn’t understand what was going on then, that I was recreating the earlier childhood trauma by letting these older men use me. Apparently, I also didn’t understand that I could just say no and conceptualized what was happening as an obligation, although I’m not sure why I felt obligated to do anything.

In the gyms, this cruising consisted of mutual masturbation and oral. I don’t know why it never went further than that. Perhaps, from up close, some of these men realized how young I was and never invited me anywhere else. In the post-orgasmic clarity, they realized the hairy chest couldn’t hide how young my face looked and the fact that my voice still cracked. I apologize as this may be too much for some people, but I do have some sympathy for these pederasts. Attracted as they were to younger men, they were playing a dangerous game, as they never bothered to confirm my age and would certainly have gotten themselves in trouble if we had ever been caught. See I never lied about my age, one or two did bother to ask and I would always respond honestly, “Seventeen!” And perhaps it was that I rode my bike to the gym and would not have wanted to bike anywhere else but home, or be driven anywhere else as I wanted to stay in control.

Whatever it was, I managed to hold onto my virginity until my freshman year of college. The one close friend I had back had their own unhealthy sexual patterns and encouraged me to get rid of it. I deeply regret that I didn’t have someone else to talk to about that and that the culture in general led me to think I wasn’t a man until I did. I chatted with a grad student on the hook up apps who was fairly attractive. He sent over a couple pics of his body and I was ready to go. Unfortunately, when I opened the door, the person before me in no way resembled his pics. An older me would have angrily confronted him about this and sent him on his way. But instead I walked him back to my room and I tried to ask him about his pictures. To every question he had an answer and to every hesitation he had a negotiation. We did get some of our clothes off and at some point, I rationalized to myself that if I just went along with it, he’d finally leave. I remember he rode me until he came and then I asked him again if he would leave. He finally did. I thankfully insisted on wearing a condom. I remember taking a long hot shower and then logging onto some forums, probably a reddit forum, to brag that I had finally gone all the way. I didn’t even bother writing about it in my journal though, although I do remember feeling as if something was not right.

My freshman year of college, I decided to go back into the closet. In a truly hare-brained move, I thought I would stay in the closet, not make friends, get my degree as fast as possible and then move on with my life. I think, without having written it down, I can admit that I wanted as much financial independence as soon as possible because I knew my parents would not support me. Second, I certainly did not fit neatly into the gay identity and was scared because of that. Although I knew that I was some sort of bisexual, my then favorite author spoke often how he knew many gay men who started off as bisexual and were just kidding themselves. I wasn’t sure about my own sexuality and didn’t want the scrutiny, so I just didn’t bring it up and kept my online and gym cruising to myself. Per my journal, I then went on to feel tremendously guilty when I did make friends who I wanted to come out to, but was scared they’d feel bad about me lying. Still, I wish I had come out, not just to help me reflect on the above behavior, but also to have warned me about the only other gay person in our cohort.

By the end of my freshman year, I had managed by and large to avoid scrutiny because I was really into two of my friends. Really a third if I’m being honest, although he was a guy so I’m not sure how I kept that crush a secret. It isn’t as if I went around telling anyone who asked that I was into my friends, but with one specifically people could tell I liked her. At the end of the year, I had started considering how I would come out and was even wearing subtle rainbows and yet was not being recognized. The one time it happened at a party that an older guy asked in code if I was family, I happily said “Yes! We’re all one big engineering family!” He kept insisting that no, he wanted to know if I was family, familia, which truly confused me because the minority engineering program at this school painted itself as a family and I could not tell the difference. The upperclassmen interceded and told him to leave me alone. As I later learned, he had a habit of getting his classmates drunk and sleeping with them, clearing out the closeted men in his generation and they didn’t want him wasting his time with me, so obvious was my crush on my female friend.

We had a guy my year that was following in his footsteps, regrettably. One of our friends told me later that he had a list of all the guys he wanted to get drunk and sexually assault. I know for young gay men and for a certain type of older gay man, the fantasy persists of getting a straight man drunk and “turning” him. Having been on the receiving antics, I can say that it’s awful and that no means no. As I later found out, this guy had made a list of all the guys our year that he wanted to get drunk and sleep with, his go to MO as he remains a total slime bag. Still, it was another end of the year party and apparently it was my turn for him to try something.

The party was fairly non-eventful. At the time, I recall him being persistent in handing me booze and me telling him many, many times, that I needed to be careful with how much I drank. If needed I can elaborate on it later, but I had broken my leg and was on crutches at the time, so I knew I needed to stay sober enough to walk on crutches. I made it home safely and I wish I had ended the night there. However, I had made it a habit after any party where booze was involved, to stay up late playing video games until I was completely sober, as I get the spins when I try to sleep while inebriated and inevitably end up puking. I don’t remember who messaged who first, but I do recall him pointing out that if I wasn’t going to sleep yet that I should come over and hang out. Even though my gut was telling me not to, I figured I’d go up and see what happened.

We got there and it was fine, until it wasn’t. We made out, I did get hard, and we fooled around a bit but then I said no. I told him I didn’t feel comfortable proceeding with more but wouldn’t mind staying to sleep together. He said ok and let me doze off. I awoke some time later to him stroking me awake and I got mad, told him no, and went back to sleep. This kept going for a while, because while I was wanting to leave, I was scared at the thought of having to hobble my way down from his dorm room and back to mine, so late at night and so desiring to just be asleep.

That was the last party of the school year and I pushed it out of mind that summer. When I returned that year, I noticed that some of the freshmen seemed to already know something about me and that the gay ones were particularly stand offish. I didn’t know what it was at the time, I figured that having recently come out (again) I was still a bit awkward and, having joined the officer positions in the minority engineering group, I did not want to come off improperly toward them. What I didn’t learn until later was that the guy above had participated in a summer program and had told all the incoming minority engineers that he and I had issues because I was homophobic.

I didn’t learn this until well after college and in retrospect, I applaud the sociopathy of this man. He figured since I showed such discomfort being openly out that I wouldn’t effectively counter the narrative that I had a lot of internalized homophobia. And in a way, he was right. But the reason I went on to dislike him was because he had forced himself onto me. After all, I had given him several clear and precise nos. What could have been drunken mistakes then turned into sober cover ups. Also, to be clear, by the time he had locked his eyes upon me, I had started to come out to our friends anyways and either way, had already come out to my parents, something he hadn’t done. There was no way to cast him as a man trying to help someone struggling to come out. And truly, if he had not tried to turn people against me, I might have continued to have said that he and I just didn’t get along. See, it wasn’t for another year that I bothered to tell anyone about what had transpired against us and it was only because he insisted on trying to make me a bad guy.

I am happy that I finally stopped trying to keep things secretive or private and, in the end, came forward with my story. It didn’t undo all of the issues I had with the younger gay men in our group, after all, I am still a huge dork and at the time was still very socially awkward. But it no longer made them afraid of me and thankfully, it minimized the amount of times I had to be around this rather unpleasant individual. I only wish I had seen sooner what it was costing me to keep secret the ways in which other people had hurt me. Our peers did turn against him and helped me keep him out of my life, which was the other side of secret keeping. Not only was I holding onto this pain by myself, but managing the scenario fell on me alone, when I could have been getting help the entire time.

Because I have already written so much and because I still want to go hit the gym, I will stop here. I want to follow up to make clear what else hiding all of this caused as well as elaborate on the relief I felt in telling my story and some of the help I received.

Thoughts on Being Professionally Closeted

I am out to my friends and family, but professionally closeted, somewhat anyway. If you’re able to see what’s in front of you, without the assumption of heterosexuality, you’ll notice me. In part, this professional closet is just a professional veneer, topics that I don’t bring up because they’re not appropriate for the workplace. But I think that professional attitude is itself a tell. After all, from entry level to management, their heterosexuality explicitly comes up. I don’t mean the wives either. One evening a section head graced me with the knowledge that in his youth he attended a couple swingers’ parties and orgies, but, he claimed he did not participate. Unfortunately, he also let me know that his son’s grades were slipping, which wasn’t as bad as what his friend was dealing with, whose son had just come out. How he got to these topics from asking him if he had any career advice is beyond me. 

Unfortunately, I naturally present more masculine and this lets my coworkers initially read me as straight, which lets them be more honest about their negative opinions on queer people. That manager’s statement was relatively benign. After all, grades don’t seem to define the structure of your life quite the same way that your sexuality does and he could have been reflecting on how that young man would have to deal with the prejudices of a straight environment. But I’ve had other coworkers refer to difficult contractors as “cocksuckers” and “maricones.” Again, my straight coworkers have no problem dropping any suggestion of a professional attitude to say offensive bullshit without caring who might be listening. It is frustrating, but I can pretend that they don’t know and brush it off a little more casually. 

That’s not to say that the psychological damage of being professionally closeted is not building up over time though. After all, it’s not just the effort I make to drop pronouns and refer to every ex boyfriend as an ex, but learning directly from my coworkers that they would think less of me if I came out to them. It almost feels dirty, as though I’m a spy behind enemy lines gathering intel. With that intel, I do begin to look down on them, categorizing them as people who are somewhat bigoted and thus people I need to continue to be dishonest with. Frankly, always having to tiptoe around these people lest I trigger their delicate heterosexuality gets tiring and expends energy I could spend elsewhere. In my defense, I have come out to some of them to test the waters of being more out professionally. 

A couple of coworkers decided to grab dinner and drinks together after a work meeting. I had to leave early and as I was leaving mentioned that I was leaving for a date. A coworker told another and so forth until it got back to the specific construction site I was regularly on. The project inspector told me had heard about it and asked if I had a girlfriend now and I responded, “Well, no, I have a boyfriend.” I had gotten to know him well enough by now to be sure that whatever happened, he would not risk his job by being too explicit with whatever he felt about that. As expected, he quickly dropped the topic. But a different engineer and I got drinks way later and he let me know that the inspector was very uncomfortable from that day forward whenever I was around, even though we had been working together for a year by then and would work together for another year more. 

Reactions such as those, the casual homophobia as well, those are the reasons why for now I don’t feel too guilty to continue lying by omission, for staying in the closet for now. After all, these people presume heterosexuality and to clarify that now reveals a bit too much for me. There’s an author and columnist I’ve been reading since I was young, Dan Savage, who has this idea that there’s the people you’re saying you’re fucking, the people you want to fuck, and the people you’re fucking. In my case, single and theoretically willing to mingle, I’m stopping at the level of people I want to fuck as a need to know basis and my coworkers don’t need to know. The hilarious byproduct is that my coworkers think I’m a bit of a sexual prude, but after all, I’m never letting them know I’ve been to bathhouses and nude beaches. I do intend to drop the act though. For example, I’ll definitely need to mention a stable partner or husband, but even before then, the cost of being professionally closeted is too annoying, especially as I intend to climb the ranks. Plus, I’m going through all of this out of concern for coworkers who do not themselves maintain any sort of filter for respectability or for the comfort of others. 

There’s two more things to share right now, although I am aware this is getting long. First, there was a time in college where not being fully out significantly hurt me, as I detailed here, although I need to elaborate more. Second, I wanted to focus on the coworkers that make it a necessity to remain partially professionally closeted. However, there’s thankfully some other LGBT coworkers here and there as well as more and more young people coming into the workplace, some still holding on to biases but largely friendlier to the queer community. 

Coming out and Familial Shame

“Lo que mas me gusta de ti es que no se te nota.”

A while back, as my younger sisters were leaving behind their early teenage years, they asked me why I had never come out to them. “That’s easy,” I responded, “it’s cuz Ma kicked me out when I came out to her.” I caught them off guard with that response, because while it was that simple, there is also more to the story. From their perspectives (eight, nine and fourteen at the time), their older brother left the day after graduating high school to Mexico and just didn’t come back to live with them. I also wouldn’t put it past my mom to have told them that I was just tired of living with so many girls, as she alluded to many years later. Although I did want some space from them, the reality was that I felt that I was contributing by that point to the toxic environment, so when I was seventeen years old, I left home and didn’t return.

This isn’t a tragic story about running away and living in the streets though. After all, my mom had made it very clear my entire life that she would not hesitate to turn her back on me if I acknowledged who I was. By that point in our lives, my mom knew. Whether it was the gay porn on the family computer’s history, the way I pined in angst over specific male friends, or whether she had snuck into my room, found my journal or a library copy of some same sex young adult novel, I haven’t asked. Nor is our relationship close enough now that I feel comfortable finding out from her. Still, she had made it clear she knew and had an issue with it. So, before coming out to her, I made a plan for how I would spend the summer before college, as I had decided to come out to her toward the end of my senior year of high school. I asked an aunt in Mexico City if I could stay with her and my bio dad if I could stay with him in between college orientation and my move in date for the freshman dorms.

Of my actual coming out, I still look back on it as one of the worst days of my childhood and really one of the defining ends to that time. It has left an unmistakable mark on my relationship with my mom, the mostly single parent who raised me, and on all my relationships. After all, that day was proof that some love is conditional. Her response that day she saw as just something she had to do. Not only did she disapprove, but she insisted that I left her no choice, she had to protect my sisters by casting me out, lest I somehow spread “it” to them. I still remember the tears and melodrama, her struggling to breathe as if she were the one suddenly without a home. To this day, I struggle to have a relationship with her, because I know that if I had not gone on to be “successful” she would not speak to me. After all, now she can brag about her son the engineer. If she leaves out my sexuality, I can’t fully blame her, because even now, out of convenience I do the same.

But back then it was seemingly the worst thing I could have done to her. My rage at the time was that if she had not wanted to know, she should have continued to turn a blind eye. After all, I was almost done with high school and would be leaving soon. Perhaps the college admissions process had made her feel small, as I had largely done it on my own and she didn’t think to tell me to apply until admissions letters started arriving in the mail. I don’t blame her at all for this and she had made sure I was going to the type of schools that had guidance counselors that knew what they were doing. Perhaps it was that we were arguing so much in those days and she wanted to retaliate. So it is not difficult to see that my mom had been trying to push me to come out so that she could punish me for it as well and was doing what any bully would do, picking on things that make us most ashamed or that we feel are our biggest faults. 

Although I understand how this is rooted in shame, it feels so reductive to say my mom is ashamed of me or that I am ashamed of my sexuality. How I view myself now is tinged with modern thoughts, but back then, my vanity and arrogance helped me press onward in the face of opposition and yes, this is a defense mechanism, but it worked until it didn’t. It is more apt to say our entire culture is ashamed of queerness, on both sides of the border, and we were just two small people adrift in all of that. It would be easy to say this is just because we are Mexican and I have met many Mexican-Americans who would leave it at that. After all, the quote up top is from my aunt, one my mom’s cousins and only a couple years older than me, telling me at a party how she appreciated that I can pass for straight. Yet, it was a different cousin, my mom’s age, who accused my mom of homophobia and asked her to let my then housemate visit, mistakenly believing we were more than just friends. However, it is eminently more convenient to have most of my American coworkers assume that I am a prude with high standards, a bit of a nerd who has a hard time meeting women, than it is to have to deal with their discomfort at knowing that I am a sexually active queer man. Those who have found out and are not supportive, have no shame themselves in letting me know. Worse even are those coworkers whose prejudice blinds them to an obvious fact and who then drop the professional guise to relax into casual homophobia and expect me to agree with them. So, there is no letting America off the hook either or casting aspersions to Mexican culture as if it is a monolith. Or myself, because if I’m honest, professionally I’m still in the closet, selectively coming out to coworkers but also allowing them to assume that I am straight. 

Shame is a topic that I want to explore more. Both in how I was taught that being queer was bad as a child, how it has served me as an adult, and how I need to push it off to thrive as an adult. It just felt that coming out was where I had to start, because it marks such a difference between what is seen but not acknowledged and what once acknowledged lingers over every interaction out there in their hegemony. Because as nice as it is to believe that one day it won’t matter, that day is not today, and except in a few industries, it seems that we are all still encountering people who reward those who can pass more than those who cannot. 

I’ll leave it here for now, to gather thoughts on what the next post should be.  

Note: I tried to schedule this post to publish on March 16, 2021 at 6 PM. I apparently didn’t set this up correctly so I manually posted it and backdated it. 

Starting for a reason

Last night, I brought up the idea of hanging out with my close friends after we had all been vaccinated. The most reactive person of the bunch seemed disturbed and slightly offended that I would even ask. However, in a bonus for him, he somewhat managed to explain his feeling about the situation without being directly offensive. By the end of the conversation, it wasn’t clear if he was judging me for having gotten Covid-19 or for continuing to have casual sex since breaking up with my ex.

It frustrated me throughout my run this morning, but upon reflecting on it, this is part of the many reasons why I decided to start a blog. I have thus far led a very homonormative life, not so much out of a desire to fit in but a desire to achieve financial stability. At seventeen, choosing an engineering major seemed the surest way to that goal. I even had a number in mind for what salary I would reach. I let that be the goal that decided so much of my late teens and early to mid-twenties; there were so many options along the way that I just closed myself off to in order to continue along my path toward financial success. And I do want to make it clear, this was not a decision borne out of material desires, but a real necessity.

At the time that I was making these decisions, I had already lived let’s say fifteen or so years with the fear that my parents would be deported and that, being the oldest, I would be left to find a way to take care of my siblings without any sort of money or education of my own. This fear drove me to the shortest and most reliable path to stability. Although my love was writing, I had also read enough of my then favorite authors that, absent some rich patrons and friends, I worried it would take a long time before I could come to rely upon any writing to produce a stable income. So, I, along with many other rather normative peers, picked engineering. I do want to point out that I did have strong math and science scores in grade school, did not want to deal with blood, thus no medical school, and saw law as a path more reliable than writing perhaps but very lengthy.  

I am happy to report that eleven years later I have gotten to a point where I could help take care of my siblings. I have a cute two-bedroom condo in a rather nice city. Although a smaller space than the house they rent now, it would not be the smallest place my parents, three younger siblings and I have lived in. But it is also true that my parents would no longer be deported, as, anchor baby that I am, they already have their citizenship. They’re still horrible with money and I’m told still argue about it, but, with my salary and everyone else pitching in, we’d get by.  Together, the fear that so guided my earlier life has receded, although in this country I’m not sure it’ll ever completely disappear.

To get back to my point, I’m at a point in life where I need to find something else that pushes me forward. My love of writing never left in this time, my countless journals and the short stories therein can attest to that fact. That’s one reason. Second, I also want to create a space to more fully explore my sexuality and identity, without having to make room for the baggage that people close to me bring. Similarly, I want a space where I can recount my experiences growing up, without the discomfort that my family members feel when I recall painful childhood experiences. Finally, before the pandemic, my favorite thing was to sit around a table discussing topics at length, movies, music, politics and family drama. The pandemic has taken away the ability to do so safely with a large group of people but I’m making my own space to do that. Whether anyone reads it or not is less of a concern at this point.

I still haven’t figured out the basics of blogging, SEO, tags, categories, things like that. So, if you somehow stumbled upon this specific post, please drop a line. For posts on specific topics, I am going to make sure I have that correctly set up, but well, this is all a work in progress.