Before I Knew How to Leave

This post discusses sexual encounters, emotional coercion, bereavement, religious guilt, and experiences of obligation around sex. It may be difficult for some readers.

Reflecting on yesterday’s encounter, I became aware that it was almost an exact replay of my first ever sexual encounter – although the outcome was very different this time.

I came out in my final year of university. It was 1994 and I was 20. There’s no standard coming-out story, but this is mine.

It began with a pressure inside me – growing and growing, demanding and demanding – until I had to do something about what I had always known. Was I gay? Of course I was.

I put an advert in the local paper:

Gay biker looking for fun and friendship, maybe more.

(You were charged by the word, a bit like a telegram.)

I had three replies: one from a chap called Geoff, one from a fellow called Mark, and a third I can’t remember. I was rather taken with Mark, who was a policeman. We spoke on the phone a few times, but I think I must have unnerved him. I was clearly desperate and more than a little bonkers.

I spoke with Geoff a couple of times and eventually agreed to meet him in a café in Southmead, Bristol. I don’t remember what we talked about. What I do know is that I wasn’t attracted to him. I wanted him for one purpose only: sex.

When he asked if I’d like to go back to his place, I jumped at the chance.

I was buzzing. I was with a gay man and we were going to have sex. That was all I could think about – not whether I fancied him, just the overwhelming need to be fucked.

His flat was on the top floor of a once-grand Georgian terrace by the harbour. It would once have been a wealthy trader’s town house, but it had long since been carved up into characterless, run-down flats.

I don’t remember whether we went into the bedroom. What I do remember is that everything felt tired and neglected. There was damp in the bathroom and unwashed crockery in the kitchen sink. Even the supposedly clean mugs were tea-stained.

When I cast my mind back now, I have a hazy sense of being on the floor, naked.

He was excited – a virgin. I was young, inexperienced, and painfully available.

The thing is, he couldn’t get hard. I came. He didn’t.

I experienced the famous post-nut clarity and thought: what the fuck am I doing?

But I had already offered myself. In my confused mixture of shame, embarrassment, and longing, that offer felt binding. I still wonder whether, if I’d managed to make him come, I would have felt any differently.

It didn’t help that he kept talking about being a spiritualist and about how we were “destined to be together”.

He leaned hard on that language over the following months. I felt trapped. How do you escape without trashing someone’’ beliefs or hurting their feelings? My own religious upbringing had already scrambled my head – particularly around being gay – and Geoff knew it. He used both my fear of my sexuality and my residual religious guilt to turn obligation into something moral.

I felt manipulated. And I felt stupid.

In the end, I told him it was over. There was no attempt to stay friends. I saw him only twice more, from a distance, and never spoke to him again.

That was the worst situation I ever got myself into where I offered sex and then felt an obligation to stay longer than was healthy. Smaller versions of the same pattern cropped up throughout my single life.

I don’t want this new phase of my life to be blighted in the same way – by feeling committed to situations I no longer want.

My early sexual experiences taught me that offering sex created obligation. That belief wasn’t challenged; it was reinforced by Geoff and several subsequent partners.

Yesterday shook it loose. This time, I did leave.


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