Good explanation, Steve ... thanks. You wrote: "I think everyone is inherently bi-sexual. It just depends on where on the continuum you choose to be. Some are totally straight, others totally gay. Some are bisexual. Then there are those who are varied degrees of the above."
I have always thought this. I remember saying this to someone about 20 years ago and I got the strangest looks! Being a science major at the time, it only made sense to me based on the human body's chemical make-up. My guess is that certain people cannot "get over it" because they do not understand (or accept) fully the workings of nature. Heather -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Steve Polifka Sent: Thursday, November 21, 2002 10:20 AM To: Heather Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: Will-not gay enough? NJC I wish the world would just get over it. I hate the double standard of guys like, going crazy when 2 girls start kissing, but the minute a gay man appears...and I am NOT going to get into how many married/ straight men lead double lives or have (gay)lovers on the side. I think everyone is inherently bi-sexual. It just depends on where on the continuum you choose to be. Some are totally straight, others totally gay. Some are bisexual. Then there are those who are varied degrees of the above. The hardest part is being in a relationship with someone and not feeling comfortable enough to express yourself. My boyfriend has complained that he has a hard time keeping his hands off of me in public- like holding hands or just touching my shoulder- something that 'straights' don't give a second thought too. And I think that whole thing carries over into Will and Grace. We saw the start of him dating someone, but no real intimacy- and I don't need to see 30 second lip-lock to get the message to me. (Grace gets all the romance, and Will is neglected!) So until the rest of the world is somewhat comfortable with it, I doubt TV will be... Steve Just my $.02 Steve