
Does that make any sense?
The point I’m getting to is that I feel like I’m treated differently because of the way I apparently present myself. It makes me think that if I acted in way that was less, say, stereotypically gay, then I wouldn’t be met with such humored reactions. The more I think about it the more it bothers me because I question how seriously I can really be taken. What if I was giving a sales pitch for my company or relaying some scientific findings; would I be taken as seriously as a heterosexual-looking man? I kind of doubt it.
There seems to be a notion of gay mannerisms = funny, which is certainly a less insidious form of homophobia than others, but I think it’s still a form nonetheless. The good social worker in me always wants to call out my classmates and say something like, “I can’t help but notice that you all look really amused by me right now? Are you reacting to something I’m saying?”
I experience this as a microaggression partly because I don’t think that people react consciously to me in this way. We’re certainly taught that it’s funny to see a man act like a woman because, well, what could be more zany and backwards than that? Not that I think I act like a woman, but I know it just takes a flick of my wrist to get a laugh out of people. I don’t know. I’m all over the place on this one.
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