I had my first boyfriend in primary school. Year six actually. My first boyfriend was called Matthew and I kissed him in the back of the school bus.
Since then, I had experimented with girls. Who hadn’t? It was the done thing at high school parties, drunken nights at university, a kiss here, holding hands there. An exploration with bodies, what it meant to push “boundaries” and connect sexually.
But this was different.
At 23, I was in love. I gazed at the girl across from me and knew I would do anything for that person. That I could, if we both wanted to, build a future, a life with that person. This was more than experimentation. This was real.
I realised (almost surprisingly) that I was prepared to have the conversation with my parents, that I was comfortable to come out and tell the world I was, not just “seeing a girl”, but in love with one. I realised I was prepared to walk down the street holding her hand and nuzzling her neck and look past the smiles or the stares or the snickers of passers-by.
This felt terrifying. But I also felt more myself than ever before. I understood myself better.
This realisation gave me power but it did not take away the nerves.
When I thought about telling friends and family, my hands would sweat and a sick feeling would settle in my stomach. Supporting something ideologically was very different to living it. Having intellectual conversations about sexuality and gay marriage at the dinner table is very different to sitting your parents down and telling your father that you’re in love with a woman.
And “no, you don’t know her; and no, my past boyfriends were not ‘fakes’; and really, I’m sure you’ll love her when you meet her… If you’ll agree to meet her. Will you meet her… maybe one day?”