Thank you!Prime Mel Gibson is unfuckwithable in the handsomeness department.
![]()
![]()
reminder to put "no homo" when posting comments
![]()
I agree with you though, I was just joking. Most straight dudes have no affect on me and some even repulsive me in a way. I mean...Heh do you know the story behind my avatar? There's a lot wrong with some of them, but not in the bitchy crybaby way that has become popularized over the last decade in sociopolitics. I take a lot of joy in being hypercompetitive with and crushing them, let's go. It's also about ethics and self-respect.
I'm usually turned off just by simply knowing that a guy doesn't swing this way and find it inappropriate to lust over them (with rare exception). There's more than enough in the sea who actually do to even bother giving them a thought. So all of self-flattery and "icky" insecurities you'll hear and read are amusing, especially when they're largely so sloppy and unhygienic.
It's like, "I want to be your bro, not your damn boyfriend".
Appropriate.

is 100% accurateSo all of self-flattery and "icky" insecurities you'll hear and read are amusing, especially when they're largely so sloppy and unhygienic.
Utterly Impeccable Timing. <45> He was the fuckin man. Good pick, I feel bad for bringing @uppercutbus into all this now though.
He was bisexual though, man! It has nothing to do with bigotry but for a lot of people I think there's some kind of psychological block for you guys where it's simply impossible to look at us as anything other than homos due to the, uh, *gulp* "one drop rule"? and I understand that.
Dunno how @SRN feels but I don't really care if people consider me gay and I'm not embarrassed about it (anymore), but there IS a middle ground and it's found by being turned on by and sleeping with women too. We can relate to you on that level in a way full blown gheys can't. We can blend in and be virtually indistinguishable to and from you.
The survey finds that bisexuals differ from gay men and lesbians on a range of attitudes and experiences related to their sexual orientation.
For example, while 77% of gay men and 71% of lesbians say most or all of the important people in their lives know of their sexual orientation, just 28% of bisexuals say the same. Bisexual women are more likely to say this than bisexual men (33% vs. 12%).
Likewise, about half of gay men and lesbians say their sexual orientation is extremely or very important to their overall identity, compared with just two-in-ten bisexual men and women.
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
https://www.independent.co.uk/life-...th-risk-lgbt-heterosexual-issue-a7933806.html
Bisexual people experience more discrimination that other members in LGBTQ communities don’t, a new [June 2017] study has revealed.
Whilst previous studies have shown that bisexual people are more at risk of experiencing anxiety, depression and suicidal thoughts, this new study published in Prevention Science, found that these risks are exacerbated because bisexual people feel as if they don’t belong in any one community.
“Bisexual people face double discrimination in multiple settings — they are often invisible, rejected, invalidated, [and] stigmatized in the heterosexual community as well as the traditional LGBT communities,” explained lead study author Ethan Mereish. “Given that isolation and discrimination, bi people might be experiencing increase factors that might make them more lonely or isolated,” the professor told NBC News.
In terms of addressing the problem, Mereish and his team believe that more should be done to distinguish bisexual people from other LGBTQ members, giving them a singular identity that can subsequently allow their mental health to be understood exclusively.
https://www.thedailybeast.com/are-bisexuals-shut-out-of-the-lgbt-club
Two studies published in the December 2015 issue of the Journal of Bisexuality confirm what bi people have been saying for some time: The discrimination they face within the LGBT community is as real as the discrimination they face outside of it. Left with few places to find unqualified support, it may not be surprising that bisexual people have some of the worst mental health outcomes of any sexual orientation.
“Pervasive stereotypes and negative attitudes about bisexuality are present not only among the ‘dominant’ heterosexual population but among lesbian and gay populations as well, resulting in a ‘double stigma’ for bisexuals,” the authors wrote, in an attempt to account for the alarmingly high rates of depression and anxiety among bisexuals.
![]()
straight passing privilegeUh.
This tends to be one of their bigger problems with it. Not that all gay dudes are even remotely self evident but it's a bigger part of their identity, they're more open about it in public life and among social circles, they obviously don't date / aren't intimate with women and being assumed straight is damn near universal for us.
Thickly veined homosexual thread
He was a pretty sailor boy though.
![]()
Interestingly, the top three vote getters (after Pitt) are all under 5'10 "manlets". Height really doesn't count for very much in some circles.
I use to have a crush on her when I was younger. Yeesh! How bad she has aged.Cathleen Turner
![]()
Your last sentence is highly disrespectful, as a Newman fan and a handsome sherdoger I'm super offended. (but I laughed anyway)Paul Newman, Johnny Depp, Brando and Cruise are the contenders, imo. All of them have a good mix of rugged handsomeness without going too pretty. Depp is the "prettiest" with the least handsomeness, but hes as far pretty as a guy can get before he starts getting called a gay just for existing. Theres like a sliding meter of rugged handsomeness and being pretty where the more of one, the less of the other. Brando is all the handsome, with Newman being second, then Cruise and lastly Depp with all the pretty. Newman and Cruise get points for still being prime material despite advancing age. Brando fell off HARD, and Depps lifestyle is catching up with him. Newmann likely looks more fuckable than half of sherdog despite being a ten year old corpse.
he barely even has a wrinkle on his forehead.surprised no one has mentioned this handsome guy itt.![]()
He was bisexual though, man! It has nothing to do with bigotry but for a lot of people I think there's some kind of psychological block for you guys where it's simply impossible to look at us as anything other than homos due to the, uh, *gulp* "one drop rule"? and I understand that.
Dunno how @SRN feels but I don't really care if people consider me gay and I'm not embarrassed about it (anymore), but there IS a middle ground and it's found by being turned on by and sleeping with women too. We can relate to you on that level in a way full blown gheys can't. We can blend in and be virtually indistinguishable to and from you.
The survey finds that bisexuals differ from gay men and lesbians on a range of attitudes and experiences related to their sexual orientation.
For example, while 77% of gay men and 71% of lesbians say most or all of the important people in their lives know of their sexual orientation, just 28% of bisexuals say the same. Bisexual women are more likely to say this than bisexual men (33% vs. 12%).
Likewise, about half of gay men and lesbians say their sexual orientation is extremely or very important to their overall identity, compared with just two-in-ten bisexual men and women.
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
https://www.independent.co.uk/life-...th-risk-lgbt-heterosexual-issue-a7933806.html
Bisexual people experience more discrimination that other members in LGBTQ communities don’t, a new [June 2017] study has revealed.
Whilst previous studies have shown that bisexual people are more at risk of experiencing anxiety, depression and suicidal thoughts, this new study published in Prevention Science, found that these risks are exacerbated because bisexual people feel as if they don’t belong in any one community.
“Bisexual people face double discrimination in multiple settings — they are often invisible, rejected, invalidated, [and] stigmatized in the heterosexual community as well as the traditional LGBT communities,” explained lead study author Ethan Mereish. “Given that isolation and discrimination, bi people might be experiencing increase factors that might make them more lonely or isolated,” the professor told NBC News.
In terms of addressing the problem, Mereish and his team believe that more should be done to distinguish bisexual people from other LGBTQ members, giving them a singular identity that can subsequently allow their mental health to be understood exclusively.
https://www.thedailybeast.com/are-bisexuals-shut-out-of-the-lgbt-club
Two studies published in the December 2015 issue of the Journal of Bisexuality confirm what bi people have been saying for some time: The discrimination they face within the LGBT community is as real as the discrimination they face outside of it. Left with few places to find unqualified support, it may not be surprising that bisexual people have some of the worst mental health outcomes of any sexual orientation.
“Pervasive stereotypes and negative attitudes about bisexuality are present not only among the ‘dominant’ heterosexual population but among lesbian and gay populations as well, resulting in a ‘double stigma’ for bisexuals,” the authors wrote, in an attempt to account for the alarmingly high rates of depression and anxiety among bisexuals.
![]()