Gay men lonely
The Silent Suffering of Lonely Gay Men
Loneliness has become an epidemic within the gay male community. Gay men who arent in an intimate relationship often describe feeling a deep and profound sense of loneliness. This emotional pain can be a problem as it can direct to serious mental health issues.
Knowing how and why loneliness happens in gay men is essential to understanding what you can do about it.
Why are gay men lonely?
Loneliness happens when you feel cut off or isolated from people and communities. This isolation is prevalent in male gay communities because it can be hard to break into the friend communities of gay men.
Research has shown that gay men have fewer friends than both straight people and gay women. If you have fewer friends and fewer people to surround yourself with, you’re inherently more isolated and susceptible to loneliness.
The social shift from in-person meetings to online and social media platforms has also exacerbated feelings of loneliness. Text messaging, as a dominant form of communication, also lacks a sense of connection. You can’t se
March 02,
The Epidemic of
Gay LonelinessBy Michael Hobbes
I
I used to fetch so excited when the meth was all gone.
This is my friend Jeremy.
When you have it, he says, you have to keep using it. When its gone, its like, Oh adj, I can go back to my life now. I would stay up all weekend and go to these sex parties and then feel like shit until Wednesday. About two years ago I switched to cocaine because I could work the next day.
Jeremy is telling me this from a hospital bed, six stories above Seattle. He wont tell me the precise circumstances of the overdose, only that a stranger called an ambulance and he woke up here.
Jeremy is not the companion I was expecting to own this conversation with. Until a few weeks ago, I had no idea he used anything heavier than martinis. He is trim, intelligent, gluten-free, the thoughtful of guy who wears a work shirt no matter what day of the week it is. The first time we met, three years ago, he asked me if I knew a good place to undertake CrossFit. Today, when I seek him how the hospitals been so far,
Gay Loneliness Is Real—but “Bitchy, Toxic” Culture Isn’t the Full Story
If you are gay or grasp many gays, chances are you saw “Together Alone,” Michael Hobbes’ longform essay on what he calls an “epidemic of gay loneliness,” show up in your feeds late last week. After seeing the article shared approvingly by many friends, I skimmed and dutifully posted it myself. It’s unsettling, full of resonant descriptions of isolation, drug addiction, and self-hatred among gay men; and it’s ambitious in its attempt to name, outline the contours of, and prescribe solutions for what it argues is a cultural and social crisis among gay men hovering between youth and middle age. But later, as I read the article more closely, I began to feel uneasy.
Something in Hobbes’ portrait—more specifically, in the words of the group of gay men he chose to interview—reminded me of a kind of conversation that I encountered when I’ve worked in offices with large gay populations. The conversation happened frequently enough that I began to be able to predict how it might unfold. An older gay male colleague, typi
Gay Loneliness and What To Perform About It
Gay men are more lonely than straight men.
It pains me to write that. Gay men need positive inspiration and role models, not more negative statements.
However, I am highlighting this fact because I know it is easier to make alter when we acknowledge painful truths.
Let’s start by reviewing some of the research on gay people. Academic journals can be incredibly boring so let me grant you the brief highlights:
Research shows:
Why are we statistically worse off on these measures of mental health? Is it something we ate?
You probably can guess the answer. It’s called “growing up gay.”
Even in today’s more enlightened times we experience more rejection as kids. And that’s especially true for gay men who embrace a more feminine gender presentation gay men who embrace a more feminine gender presentation than other boys.
Many of us grow up expecting rejection and we remain on high watchful for it in social situations. Even if you personally hold never received blatant rejection, the negative culture has an impact on you. No one has to c