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I'm a Unbent Girl, but Aspire I Were a Gay Guy...
Leahcar’s question continued,
This must sound so strange but I’m finally being honest with myself and require to get it out (Short for ‘out of the closet’. When someone’s LGBTQ+ identity is known to other people.) there for someone else to know about before I burst. I won’t tell anyone I know about these feelings, but they just frustrate me all the time. It makes me so saddened because I understand I can’t transform the fact that I was born in the body I was, but I don’t suspect I’d ever gaze into getting a sex (Different things people choose to do to actively express or enact sexuality and sexual feelings; often this involves genitals, but not always. ) change, especially since going from female to male is so complicated and wouldn’t nearly finding in what I wish I could be. Do you know if having this problem is as rare as I expect it is? Most people who want to change sexes I assume are not feeling like they want to be a homosexual (Someone who is only or mostly emotionally and sexually attracted to people of their same sex or of the same or a similar gender.) version of the antonym gender (Characteristics tha
My Penis Sent a Recent Hookup Running for the Hills. Now I’m Considering Something Drastic.
Dear How to Do It,
I am a same-sex attracted man and recently hooked up with another guy I’d been out with a couple of times. However, when he saw that I wasn’t circumcised, he said he was grossed out and left. While this isn’t the first age I’ve encountered this, it doesn’t arise all that often. Even so, would getting circumcised be worth it so I never have to deal with this again?
—Time for a Bris
Dear Time for a Bris,
You absolutely should not change your body as a result of interactions rooted in ignorance and intolerance. That would be letting people who shame part of your body—one that is associated with increased pleasure for many who are lucky to be intact—have a utter over it. Absolutely not. They aren’t worth the nerve endings. They aren’t worth the trip to the physician. They aren’t worth the time it took to note your extremely short letter to this column, though I appreciate the fodder.
The thing about the way so many gay men interact—with virtual strangers in brief, close encounters that never guarantee a follow-up—is that flesh, which is to say a defining part of our humanness, beco
What Gay and Bi Men Really Want
Are physical and sexual attraction the most appealing qualities in a partner? Or are unseen qualities like good manners and reliability the most attractive?
Following on from his research into what linear women want and what straight men want, D&M Research’s managing director Derek Jones has taken the next logical step with his latest study into what gay and bi(sexual) men want.
In order to dig deeper and outline out a true list of turn-ons and turn-offs for gay and bi men, Derek once again used of the Im-Ex Polygraph method. He originally devised this method of analysis to distinguish what people say they want from brands, products or services from what they really want by comparing stated versus derived measures of importance.
Qualities the same-sex attracted and bi men said they desired in a partner (‘stated’) were compared to the qualities deliver in example celebrities they nominated as attractive (‘implied’). The same comparison was made between stated and implied negative qualities, to determine what attributes are really the biggest turn-offs.
What gay and bi men say they want
Just fancy straight women and direct men, “we enjoy be
Sexual health for gay and bisexual men
Having unprotected penetrative sex is the most likely way to pass on a sexually transmitted infection (STI).
Using a condom helps protect against HIV and lowers the risk of getting many other STIs.
If you’re a man having sex with men (MSM), without condoms and with someone new, you should own an STI and HIV assess every 3 months, otherwise, it should be at least once a year. This can be done at a sexual health clinic (SHC) or genitourinary medicine (GUM) clinic. This is essential, as some STIs do not cause any symptoms.
Hepatitis A
Hepatitis A is a liver infection that's spread by a virus in poo.
Hepatitis A is uncommon in the UK but you can obtain it through sex, including oral-anal sex ("rimming") and giving oral sex after anal sex. MSM with multiple partners are particularly at risk. You can also get it through contaminated diet and drink.
Symptoms of hepatitis A can appear up to 8 weeks after sex and include tiredness and feeling sick (nausea).
Hepatitis A is not usually life-threatening and most people make a packed recovery within a couple of months.
MSM can avoid getting hepatitis A by:
- washing hands after se