KayeWatson

Forum Replies Created

Viewing 8 posts - 1 through 8 (of 8 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • in reply to: OK if I go to a gay bar? #20401

    KayeWatson
    Member

    I bring straight friends to gay bars and go to straight bars with them. It is absolutely OK for straights to go to gay bars as long as they aren’t rude or hateful to the gay people the bar was meant for. Keep in mind that you may be hit on by someone of your gender. After all, it is a gay bar; most people there might assume you are gay. If you respectfully tell someone that you are straight they will almost always back off and go flirt with someone they may actually be able to pick up.

    User Detail :  

    Name : KayeWatson, Gender : Female, Sexual Orientation : Lesbian, Race : American, Religion : no religion, Age : 26, City : Hammond, State : LA, Country : United States, Occupation : homemaker, Education level : 2 Years of College, Social class : Middle class, 
    in reply to: Why do some Queens hate lesbians? #20402

    KayeWatson
    Member

    It’s not exactly the same side or the same issue. Drag Queens might be gay guys who enjoy performing, straight men who like women’s clothes, or a transgendered person who is a straight woman on the inside even if her genitalia doesn’t match up. Sadly, I think that a lack of understanding causes some Queens or lesbians to dislike or suspect each other. The Queer/LGBT community does not hold a monopoly on tolerance and some members of it are as bad as the homophobic/heterosexist people they complain about.

    User Detail :  

    Name : KayeWatson, Gender : Female, Sexual Orientation : Lesbian, Race : American, Religion : no religion, Age : 26, City : Hammond, State : LA, Country : United States, Occupation : homemaker, Education level : 2 Years of College, Social class : Middle class, 
    in reply to: Reply To: Gay Life #20403

    KayeWatson
    Member

    My mother! I have lesbian aunts and gay cousins on all sides of my family tree. Because my mom grew up with other homosexual people she can be more understanding than a parent who knows nothing about homosexuality. However, that sometimes makes things harder for me when all is well on the surface, but deeper feelings begin to leak out. For instance, she can’t seem to understand why it is hurtful to me to hear her discuss political issues and state that she doesn’t believe I deserve the same rights and treatment as my straight siblings.

    User Detail :  

    Name : KayeWatson, Gender : Female, Sexual Orientation : Lesbian, Race : American, Religion : no religion, Age : 26, City : Hammond, State : LA, Country : United States, Occupation : homemaker, Education level : 2 Years of College, Social class : Middle class, 
    in reply to: Canada’s gay acceptance #20404

    KayeWatson
    Member

    I think Canada is more accepting. So much so that my girlfriend and I are seriously considering moving to Canada.

    User Detail :  

    Name : KayeWatson, Gender : Female, Sexual Orientation : Lesbian, Race : American, Religion : no religion, Age : 26, City : Hammond, State : LA, Country : United States, Occupation : homemaker, Education level : 2 Years of College, Social class : Middle class, 
    in reply to: Adoption among gays #20405

    KayeWatson
    Member

    I think it is very sad that there are children who go without families because it is illegal for gay couples to foster or adopt in their state. The simple fact of the matter is that most sex crimes are committed by straight men and homosexuality is not a learned trait. I happen to believe that my girlfriend and I would be wonderful, loving, supportive mothers.

    User Detail :  

    Name : KayeWatson, Gender : Female, Sexual Orientation : Lesbian, Race : American, Religion : no religion, Age : 26, City : Hammond, State : LA, Country : United States, Occupation : homemaker, Education level : 2 Years of College, Social class : Middle class, 
    in reply to: what’s wrong with “ma’am”? #20406

    KayeWatson
    Member

    I think it’s mostly a geographical thing. I was raised in Texas and now reside in Louisiana. I call women ma’am, and not just my elders. I see it as a term of respect, not a way of calling a woman old. When I visit my brother in Iowa the clerks at stores give me dirty looks when I forget and call them ma’am. It’s different down south. I’d call little girls ma’am and they light up in big smiles over being treated like a lady. I call women my own age or older ma’am and they don’t react at all. They just expect it.

    User Detail :  

    Name : KayeWatson, Gender : Female, Sexual Orientation : Lesbian, Race : American, Religion : no religion, Age : 26, City : Hammond, State : LA, Country : United States, Occupation : homemaker, Education level : 2 Years of College, Social class : Middle class, 
    in reply to: Whites who tan – why? #20407

    KayeWatson
    Member

    My girlfriend and I are very pale and we don’t tan. I never really understood this either. I guess a tan from natural exposure makes sense, but I don’t understand why a person of any skin color would want to bake their skin. The evidence of links between UV exposure and skin cancer just makes it more puzzling to me.

    User Detail :  

    Name : KayeWatson, Gender : Female, Sexual Orientation : Lesbian, Race : American, Religion : no religion, Age : 26, City : Hammond, State : LA, Country : United States, Occupation : homemaker, Education level : 2 Years of College, Social class : Middle class, 
    in reply to: Blacks smoking weed #20408

    KayeWatson
    Member

    I don’t think they do smoke more. I think they just get caught more and punished more severely.

    User Detail :  

    Name : KayeWatson, Gender : Female, Sexual Orientation : Lesbian, Race : American, Religion : no religion, Age : 26, City : Hammond, State : LA, Country : United States, Occupation : homemaker, Education level : 2 Years of College, Social class : Middle class, 
Viewing 8 posts - 1 through 8 (of 8 total)