Tag Archives: gay marriage

Thom, Urban Planning Graduate Student, New York City

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong


photo by Kevin Truong

Thom, in his own words: “As a kid from Ohio, the stork couldn’t have dropped me in a more accepting family; my parents are very liberal and forward thinking. Yet as a kid I held an incredible amount of guilt and self-hatred. When I was younger I liked to plan everything and when the thought of being gay came to mind, I couldn’t imagine how it could fit into the straight and narrow path for success I had mapped out. I didn’t know any gay people or have any gay role models growing up. When there’s no one there to show you what’s possible, it’s incredibly difficult to feel good about who you are or imagine what you’re capable of.

I came out when I was 20 to my Dad while we were on a long car ride. I was talking about Judith Butler and
social constructions of identity, and then next thing I know I am telling my father that I’m gay! I remember he pulled over to the side of the road and I cried for a really long time. He told me that he loved me, and that nothing would change that. I had never breathed that deeply or cried with so much relief. In an instant I felt so much more myself, and so much more felt possible.

The feelings I had about my sexuality as a kid and the empowerment that came from coming out, inform my decision to be outspoken about my sexuality as an adult. If I’d had a role model or someone close to me that could of reassured me that things were going to work out, I would have been so much happier in my adolescent years.

I’m still pretty new to New York, but what I’ve experienced has been cool. Having worked at a gay bar in San Francisco and been involved in the scene at a number of levels, New York definitely brings something else to the table. I really like the diversity especially amongst young queer identifying folk in Brooklyn. With work and school, I’m not quite as much of a party boy as I once was. You might see me at Metropolitan or One Last Shag from time to time. Say hi.

My ideal man is the brawny paper towel man with a PhD.”

photo by Kevin Truong

Haines, Creative Director, New York City (visiting from Los Angeles)

photo by Kevin Truong

Click here to see the rest of Haines’ New York City photo shoot.

Haines, in his own words: “Being gay influences all aspects of my life. Desire, curiosity, attraction, interaction, love, humor, passion and for me, creativity. It fuels my recognition that my friends are my family. And affords me a loving patience with my actual family as they comprehend what my being gay means to them.

I think, gays are more sensitive and artistic people because we spent so much of our young life pondering why we are different. “Normal” wasn’t our reality and thus required a deeper understanding.

Whenever conservative’s say “it’s a choice” I always respond (to their surprise) that they are right. It IS a choice. …whether or not to be honest with yourself. That is the main challenge for a gay person. If-and-when we will be honest with ourselves about our ultimate truth. But once we are, the rest is easy. The good people come forward and the lesser people make themselves irrelevant.

(The gay scene) is fine in LA. There are all sorts. I can do without the one’s who are all dolled up on the outside and empty on the inside, but that goes for all people.

I tend to lean towards the east side of town which means the little clubs and cafés in Silverlake and Los Feliz, but there’s something to said for the simple pleasure of meeting friends up in West Hollywood or down at the gay beach affectionately known as “Ginger Rogers” (AKA Will Rogers State Beach).

I always knew i was gay since junior high school, but aside from occasional “recreation” with a couple friends, I didn’t really come out until just after college.

At that time I was living in Newport Beach, CA and devoted to sailing. A handsome guy named Marc came down from LA with some friends of mine to go out on my boat and we all partied into the night.

The wind completely died and we just drifted in the moonlight. I asked if anyone wanted to go swimming but only got one taker. Marc and I jumped off the boat in our boxer shorts and raced each other to a buoy about 50 yards away. We held onto it, laughing and trying to catch our breath without catching each other looking. For a moment, there was total silence and we looked right into each other’s eyes and both just knew.

Right then the friends way over on the boat yelled that the wind had caught the sail and the boat was moving! We had to swim with all our might to catch up to it.

It’s really hard to get hold of a slick, wet hull of a moving boat but I happened to get one finger in the grommet hole of a bumper hanging off the starboard side. The boat pulled me along in its wake as Marc swam up to me. Instead of grabbing my hand, he wrapped both his arms around me and held on as the wake water poured over us like river rocks. We kissed beneath the semi-private curve of the hull and let the boat carry us for as long as my finger in the grommet hole could hold out.

Years later, all my (straight) friends who’d been up on the boat deck that night told us they saw the whole thing, had watched us kiss and didn’t rush us getting back aboard.”