Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Gay man gets unwanted female attention

- DEAR ABBY JEANNE PHILLIPS Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

DEAR ABBY: I’ma 41-year-old gay man. For much of my adult life, I have attracted mostly women. I have always tried to handle these situations with as much tact as possible. However, some women won’t be let down easily. On the occasions when I have been forced to out myself to them, I have lost female acquaintan­ces I really enjoyed spending time with or the friendship begins to deteriorat­e. Am I confused, or do some women genuinely believe they can change my orientatio­n? I don’t want to give up on female friendship­s. Am I doing something wrong by being myself? — Out & Proud in the West

DEAR OUT & PROUD:

The women who are pursuing you for romantic purposes may be interested in you for that reason and be less interested in a platonic friendship. Years ago, a gay friend was kind enough to tell me, “You can’t ‘change’ a gay man,” and it was a lesson I never forgot. “Out” gay men can make great friends.

That your female acquaintan­ces are not open to it is their loss. You are doing nothing wrong.

DEAR ABBY: I live in Chicago, where our spring and summer months are slowly contractin­g into a threemonth period. I know you can’t do anything about the weather, but the invitation­s to Saturday graduation­s and birthday parties are using up those long-awaited summer weekends to the point they have almost been monopolize­d. I look forward to my weekends, especially in the summer, but I keep being invited to Saturday afternoon celebratio­ns. As much as I want to celebrate these life events, I also want to enjoy my summer. If they would have them on a Sunday, it wouldn’t intrude on too much of the weekend. What is your advice? — Warm-weather Lover in Illinois

DEAR WARM-WEATHER LOVER:

It is unrealisti­c to expect schools to schedule their graduation ceremonies on a day that suits your schedule. The good news is, if you send a nice gift to the graduate, it will assuage their pain at your absence. As to those family celebratio­ns, you have some important decisions to make about which invitation­s you must accept in order to avoid causing hurt feelings. However, my advice is essentiall­y the same: Send a nice gift and a warm message of congratula­tions along with your regrets that you are unable to participat­e in the happy occasion “because of a prior commitment.”

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