That said, I'd like to respectfully suggest that there may be some slight differences here in the area of sexual or romantic feelings for those of us in the alphabet soup community (LBGT, BLGTQ, GLB, LQTBG, MWHSWM, Whatever It's So Complicated and Silly
I'm not sure anyone who hasn't experienced the closet can understand the degree of rigorous attention to detail involved in maintaining the too-often necessary illusion of heterosexuality. At a young age, with hormones raging, one has to be meticulously cautious about every glance, every word, every gesture, almost every movement of the body which would otherwise be entirely reflexive, unconscious, unexamined. Your survival may depend on it.
Let your eyes linger one fraction of a second too long on the "wrong" object and one runs the risk of painful consequences including physical violence. And again this is generally speaking even more true for men than it is for women as the latter are often allowed more opportunities for physical appraisal, touch or affection in western culture. Fortunately things are changing these days and none too soon!
But the psychological and physiological effects of the closet can be profound and lingering. For one whose only recently come out, the physical proximity of a person to whom one's attracted or the real or imagined proximity of sexual or romantic fulfillment can induce a panic reaction or even sometimes illness. It's like the "jitters" a heterosexual person might feel around the object of their attraction, only made immeasurably more complicated by the (sometimes) years of social and self conditioning that tell you everything you're doing, feeling and expressing is very wrong and/or extremely dangerous.
Anyway. All that to say that's why I agree with trusting your instinct but in certain situations that instinct may be a false one born of conditioning. It may take years for a young gay, lesbian or bi person to be able to sort out the difference. And that's an unfortunate and often overlooked consequence of coming of age in a homophobic society.


