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lesbian that fell in love with a man

Discussion in 'Family, Friends, and Relationships' started by Alehkz, Apr 18, 2014.

  1. Alehkz

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    I had an experience with a guy I fell in love with. I am a lesbian. I am physically attracted to women and females as a straight man is attracted to females. Here is my story:

    I was 18, met this really handsome 20 year old guy. He and I fell for each other at first sight. I saw him first then he met my eyes and we couldn't look away. We were both at an auditorium and then the lights dimmed. I could barely pay attention to the play my friends and I went to see. After the first half of the play, he saw me out in the lobby while i was waiting for my friends to powder up in the bathroom, meanwhile I wanted to buy a drink. He was standing behind me in line and I hadn't noticed. It wasn't until he spoke that I learned that he was partially deaf (hard of hearing, as he always referred to it). But he and I held a conversation about the play and we hit it off. He had quite the sense of humour and I couldn't stop looking into his eyes. His smile and his attention to my lips was just making me feel all kinds of sstirred up inside. He bought me a drink, we spoke until we went back in and I didn't see him until the end of the show again. He asked if we could keep in touch, that he had tickets to come see the upcoming show, front row, because he knew some actor I didn't know. I gave him my number, didn't hesitate for some reason. My friends gave me a peculiar look when I joined them for dinner that evening and asked about that guy. My best friend who is also a lesbian, noticed that it sounded like a date. I told her that was nonsense, that I had just gotten out of a bad relationship and I was just looking to fill my time with getting to make new friends and connections in the chamber orchestra. She didn't seem convinced, I think she saw I was into this guy.

    I went to several other plays with this guy, he could be described as the most sensitive, thoughtful, sweet, and mannered and moral man I could never imagine a guy to be. I asked if he was gay and he said no, but that there was nothing wrong withbeing gay. I told him then that i am a lesbian but that I had this huge attraction to him I couldn't explain or understand, that i had been thinking of him often and even missed him and just wanted to be around him. He said he kind of figured I was a lesbian because I'm into sports and cars and I acted sometimes like one of the guys, but I definitely looked and acted like a lady and was a girl he felt comfortable around and no games, what you see is what you get. He also confessed to having been attracted and very pulled towards me the first day he saw me. He was afraid of coming on too strong and too direct, but given the situation, he might not see me ever again, so he took the chance. I told him iI was relieved he did. I just couldn't explain why given that I am a lesbian.

    I told my best friend, but she didn't welcome it much. She said my ex was driving me crazy and up the wall and I might be looking for some sort of emotional escape to spite her at all costs. She thought this was the perfect plot to get back at her. And I said, no, I seriously think I might be falling for this dude and I don't know what to do. I told her how I felt around him but she seemed uncomfortable and I didn't take that conversation further. I stayed away from my lesbian friends for a while. I felt ashamed and alone. I told my gay guy friend about it and he was the only little bit of positivivity and support I got. He just warned me to be careful, use protection, and went into details about the male...you know, gay men and their uncensored ways about genitalia. Anyway...

    Let's skip to the part where... I kissed a man and I liked it. He didn't wear cherry ChapStick but he did smell really nice, had a nice haircut, and dressed to truly impress. We were at a parking lot and he was teaching me sign language. He kept looking at my lips and I whispered in his ear, "kiss me." And we kissed like there was no tomorrow. It was the most magnetic and passionate kiss in my life, even to this day.

    Three months later and a month after my birthday, he asked me to be his girlfriend. He asked me out to a formal dinner and it seemed more like a marriage prop than a girlfriend, but he liked the romance and wine and dine atmosphere. I took him home to meet my parents. They seemed as confused as my friends because not too long ago I went against the tides with coming out to them and now I was with him. My dad didn't speak to me much anyway but my mom said that she hoped maybe it would work out somehow. My sister teased me about being a closeted bisexual and then it dawned on me : I felt like a traitor to the lesbian identity I had fought so hard for others to accept.

    I continued on with him. He and I eventually spoke about marriage and kids and of course, sex. I hadn't even thought about sex. Or marriage. Or kids. Or...a one year anniversary. Time flew by so quickly and so smoothly that it had just been him and I. My friends didn't unfriend me, but they certainly didn't feel comfortable around him either. It was ackward. His best friend didn't like me either. They got into a fight one time because he was a bit alchoholised and said "she's a lesbo, right? She should know it won't work out!" And after that statement, two childhood friends were punching and choking the crap out of each other. They didn't speak after that.

    One night when he and I were making out, I thought I was ready to take it to the next level and be intimate with him physically. But once his shirt and his pants were off and I was partially naked, I felt like I was going to have a panic attack. And, indeed, one followed. I was out the door and gone. He was concerned but hurt. He helped me calm down and we just cuddled as always. He kept apologizing and I just told him to sush and keep holding me.
    After that we tried being intimate but just like the first time, it failed. I just couldn't. I felt like it was fake or a lie or like an immense guilt and that I couldn't do it. I felt scared. We talked about it and I told him I was scared of being a single mother, I was scared of childbirth, and that sex before marriage was wrong and I couldn't. He agreed and felt guilty because as much as he wanted to be intimate he also wanted to get married first and then be intimate and become a father eventually. I felt sick to my stomach with the images in my head. I couldn't see the woman bearing his children, walking down the ile, renewing her bows, going on a golden cruise or dying old with him- being me.
    I subconsciously started to distance myself from him. It came to a point where I lied to him about me going on a trip out of state with my orchestra group for a week. I told him I needed to focus and practice a lot and that I couldn't be sidetracked with talking much on the phone as often in a day as we usually did. He was so sweet and supportive I felt like the biggest (unt for doing this to him. I could tell he had been crying a bit but I didn't want to ask him. That whole week I spend in my room crying and confused and sick to my stomach and left with making a decision. If I kept this relationship going any longer, it would be more suffocating and more unbearable. I talked to my mother and cried with her and told her why I was isolated. She comforted me and told me that deep in my heart I knew the answers to my questions and the right course of action. She told me that if I had one thing down was that I needed to stay true to myself either way. But she told me love breaches many things and if this was something I felt I couldn't overcome, then it simply wasn't meant to be. I kept going over any possible red flags that might be preventing me from committing to him, but I could find none. He was the perfect man any girl could want to marry. And, here I was, actually debating and not wanting to acknowledge that I didn't want to.
    The week had passed like a minute and I looked miserable. He didn't seem to notice much. It was around thanksgiving and he wanted me to go meet his family out in Florida. His sister had just had a baby girl and he had been obsessed with the baby girl. He took millions of photos and acted just like a proud uncle. He bowed he would be a positive role model for her. The baby daddy left the mom, vanishing completely. Two days before Thanksgiving, he and I went for a walk in the park and I kissed him for a really long time since I had been "gone" for the orchestra trip. He popped out a black velvet box, got down on one knee, and popped the big question. The sky was clear, the sun was bright, the autumn wind was fresh, the birds sang, leaves falling like confetti to the floor.... I said, no. And I ran as fast as I could yelling, "I'm so sorry. I can't...do it." He ran faster than I could with tears in my eyes and he drove off and left me there. He was crying his heart out. I wanted to die.
    It took us a week to really speak. We were both hurting and we didn't know what to do. He asked if I still loved him and if I wanted to keep being his girlfriend. Truth be told, I didn't know. I knew I loved him but I felt so disconnected. He lost the sparkle in his eye, the softness in his hand, the tenderness of his face. He was a mess.
    A month later he said goodbye. He had lost so much weight that he wasn't the guy at the theater that I locked eyes with. His blue eyes stared at me a pale gray. Lost, dwindled, sunk. His five o'clock shadow grew into a beard. I begged him to stay with me and to give us another chance that i needed time and he said, no. That it was for the best. That time was not the issue. It was simply a matter of fate and destiny and that we were not meant to be forever. That we didn't have to figure it out now but that regardless, it was something that made him a better person; that he had experienced the true love that many people can only dream about, and that he only hoped his plane wouldn't crash because he dreamed of having a baby girl someday. I asked him to kiss me and to stay but he said no. He grabbed me and cried then took off. I didn't hear about him for a month. He cut me out.
    I heard from some friends that he had fallen into a deep depression and had started smoking weed and drinking a lot, gotten into trouble with the police because of the friend that he punched (they got into a fight drunk at a party) and that he was sleeping with random people.
    I was...devastated is not in the ballpark of where I felt. I had so much guilt and remorse for what iI had done. I sought him out and I didn't recognize him. He was someone else. He was...not for me.

    Six years later, I was taking out some garbage to the dumpster behind the school where I tutored some kids for orchestra camp in the summer and a car with a bride and a groom drove up. The grrom came my way and asked if he could drop his cans tied behind the car because they were going to take the highway. He didn't recognize me but I recognized him. I just nodded and he went back to the car...drove off.
    I cried for three days straight but I saw on Facebook he had what he wanted with her instead after all... A wife, a baby girl, and a marriage. Good for him. She wasn't even cute, but, she could give him what I couldn't.

    I can't explain why I fell in love with him nor am I saying that you will go thru with what happened to me, but some things are a gamble. Love is no guarantee. You have to take the risk of getting hurt and see it as a make you or break you but for the better. Sometimes you bounce back better than you've ever been. Other times love makes you find your inner strength and test your limits until you cannot give any more. It teaches you to let go. Love isn't meant to keep two people together, but to find the best in life as we go along with it. It teaches us to accept ourselves and find out what our limits are and how far we can go. Hurting is not the worst thing we could be. Being with someone and not being available in all ways isn't selfless love. As the Bible puts it, true love never fails. Our love didn't fail. It was true and the best thing we could do was have the courage to let go
     
  2. twizt

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    As I was reading this, I couldn't help but be struck by the similarities of experiences that people have when they have always identified as heterosexual and all of the sudden they were having feelings for someone of the same sex. I don't think in either case those feelings are wrong or inauthentic. Your relationship with him was real. Not too long ago I came across this poem that we have relationships for a reason, a season, or a lifetime.

    People come into your life for a reason, a season or a lifetime.

    When you figure out which one it is,you will know what to do for each person.
    When someone is in your life for a REASON, it is usually to meet a need you have expressed.They have come to assist you through a difficulty;to provide you with guidance and support;to aid you physically, emotionally or spiritually. They may seem like a godsend, and they are. They are there for the reason you need them to be.Then, without any wrongdoing on your part or at an inconvenient time, this person will say or do something to bring the relationship to an end. Sometimes they die. Sometimes they walk away. Sometimes they act up and force you to take a stand. What we must realize is that our need has been met, our desire fulfilled; their work is done. The prayer you sent up has been answered and now it is time to move on.
    Some people come into your life for a SEASON, because your turn has come to share, grow or learn. They bring you an experience of peace or make you laugh. They may teach you something you have never done.They usually give you an unbelievable amount of joy. Believe it. It is real. But only for a season.
    LIFETIME relationships teach you lifetime lessons; things you must build upon in order to have a solid emotional foundation. Your job is to accept the lesson, love the person, and put what you have learned to use in all other relationships and areas of your life. It is said that love is blind but friendship is clairvoyant.
    — Unknown
     
  3. Alehkz

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    Wow I really believe in what that poem says. That is how my experience has impacted me. Especially that last sentence because I have some psychic abilities and I am extremely in tune with what people feel. I am an empathy and a sort of clairvoyant. I do believe that people come into your life to help you grow and the rig words the right person, and the right moment shall cross and create the arena we know as opportunity.
     
  4. Mystory

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    This is probably one of the most powerful and touching stories that I have ever come across during my time spent lurking on this forum, and subsequently becoming a member. You know, a few years back, there was a story exactly like this... a story, which, I couldn't help but feel mirrored this story in every single way... with the exception that it was a guy who fell in love with a lesbian. I cannot remember the specifics but I remember the girl in the story told the man to hold and kiss her- he would usually give in however. Even though it's unlikely that the two stories have a direct link- or both in fact tell the same story but unfolding from opposing ends (as I believe the man was older if i recall), this was truly a very powerful, well written and captivating story. If i find the other story, i'll link you to it. Maybe in someway it might help you, reading about it from the other end...

    edit: I've been trying to look for it, but being that I can't even remember what year it was written, by whom, and what the title was, I'm really unsure if I will find it :frowning2:

    But otherwise... I think labels are the biggest problem here; somehow identifying ourselves under a single banner, a single orientation seems to be the biggest hindrance to the flourishing of true love. I'm really glad however that you were able to experience it for the time that you two were together... and I can only hope that you will love again. If you found love once, it means that you can find it again... if you were loved once, it means you can be loved again... if you were happy yesterday, it means that you can be happy again some day, another day and in the days yet to come...
     
    #4 Mystory, Apr 19, 2014
    Last edited: Apr 19, 2014
  5. polaroid

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    Thank you for sharing this.
     
  6. Alehkz

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    I think I read this story you're talking about. I replied but I got a message in my inbox from the Adkins saying that thread was pretty much history but that he could help me get it posted Lol. That's mainly why decided to come out and share it. I could relate with him in many ways.
     
  7. Wolf123

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    Thank you for sharing this :slight_smile:
     
  8. Kikia11

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    This made me cry, thank you for sharing it *big big hug*
     
  9. lovely lesbian

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  10. North link

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    Thank you so much for sharing this, I feel like my eyes have been open abut more. I think that you where so very brave and true to your self though out your experience.
     
  11. Alehkz

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    It took a lot of courage. But it has paid off. :slight_smile: he is happy and i have a story to tell and a couple lessons well learned.
     
  12. sldanlm

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    That was a great story, thanks for sharing it. It sounds like a classic example of bi-romantic. Unfortunately a lot of people confuse bi-romantic with bisexual, but the two can be completely different.
     
  13. Alehkz

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    Yeah, I can see how people could think I was bisexual. He thought I was bisexual and I knew I wasn't. I can't have sex with men. The mere thought let alone intending to is just....no. No desire, no craving, nothing. Bi-romantic? Absolutely. But sexually active I think would have made me a bisexual; being in love with him- just bi-romantic.
     
  14. AthenaEvince

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    The last paragraph of your original post just hits me so hard. That was...beautiful. As painful as it sounded (and I'm sure was), it just was beautiful. You're so right, and everyone needs to learn that important, albeit difficult, lesson. Including me...


    "Love isn't meant to keep two people together, but to find the best in life as we go along with it. It teaches us to accept ourselves and find out what our limits are and how far we can go. Hurting is not the worst thing we could be. Being with someone and not being available in all ways isn't selfless love. As the Bible puts it, true love never fails. Our love didn't fail. It was true and the best thing we could do was have the courage to let go"

    Thank you for deciding to post.
     
  15. Alehkz

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    I had a feeling that I needed to post that very important lesson. It was a painfully well learned lesson but worth it.
     
  16. ResidentTheatreKid

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    *hugs you*

    This made me cry... Such a touching story, but you're both happy now, yes? xXx
     
  17. spockbach

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    This is a fascinating account of real love and physical passion. It's funny how complicated things can become for people of all sexual orientations. What is attraction? What is sex? What is emotional connectivity? Sometimes the lines are just not clear.