True Stories: Gay Memories – Going To A Gay Bar For The First Time #LGBTQI #LGBT

As a gay man, you may be surprised to hear that one of the biggest hurdles I faced was going into a gay bar for the first time.

At 17-years-old, I was in awe of my straight mates. They’d been wandering into bars and nightclubs for the last year with the only threat of getting asked for age identification.

At 17 years old, my straight mates were not only getting drunk most Friday and Saturday nights but were boasting about sleeping around with members of the opposite sex without any worry. Whether they’d slept with many of those they mentioned was open to debate.

At 17 years old, it was against the law for me to sleep with a person of the same sex. If I boasted about it, I could get myself into trouble. The law stated that, for my safety, sex remained on hold until I reached 21.

Of course, I overlooked that particular part of the law. Like any red-blooded male at 17, my hormones made my brain think of little else but wanting to (putting it mildly) get laid.

By the time I reached my 19th birthday, I already had what I had considered a boyfriend. He was over the age of 21 and thought I was too.

On one particular, wet Saturday evening, I found myself sitting in my boyfriend’s car. Holding hands with him, we listened to the patter of the rain on the roof as we watched the raindrops splatter on the windscreen. For weeks, we’d both built up the courage to go to a gay bar for the first time.

The bar was out of town and miles from where we lived. However, neither of us wanted to get out of the car and walk up the steps to the bar. Instead, we both sat there trying our best to peer through the spattering of rain, trying to make out the figures going into the bar.

“It’s nice and warm in here,” I said.

“Yeah, too wet to go outside,” responded my boyfriend.

For the next half an hour, we made an excuse after an excuse as to why we should stay in the car. Even though curiosity ran through our minds about what was on the other side of the doors to the gay bar, our bodies remained fixed to our seats while we continued peering at figures entering and exiting the bar.

“What if we bump into somebody in there who recognises us?” asked my boyfriend. “If there’s somebody in there from work, I could end up getting beaten up or sacked.”

Not only did those words cut me in half, but I began to worry that if the police raided the bar, my boyfriend and I would be in serious trouble because of my age.

Although at 19 years old, it wasn’t against the law for me to go into a bar, I questioned if it was against the law for me to hold hands with another man in a public place.

Terrified of the consequences of entering a world where people would have welcomed and accepted us for who we were, we drove off and went home. Hiding who we were and how we lived our lives seemed a much safer option.

It would be months later when I talked about that night again.

“If somebody you worked with had been in that bar, wouldn’t they have been as terrified as we were at being spotted?” I asked.

“I never thought of that,” came the reply. “But it’s still a risk, isn’t it?”

Six years later, as I made my way on a coach to a new life, I left behind a boyfriend who had been secretly sleeping with another man he worked with.

Have you ever been terrified to do something or go somewhere for the first time? Please share the details in the comments section or, even better, contact me about submitting your story as a guest post.

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76 responses to “True Stories: Gay Memories – Going To A Gay Bar For The First Time #LGBTQI #LGBT”

  1. charlesdavis avatar

    Even though I didn’t come out until the early 1990s, going to gay bars terrified me–probably because I grew up in a religiously conservative household. I was so scared that when my boyfriend asked me to go with him to a local gay bar, I just turned on my heal and said no. No explanation. No apology. Thank goodness he continued to pursue me because we were together for the next twenty-two years.

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      What happened in our past can often affect our decisions about why we don’t want to do something. Even though I knew I was gay, going into a gay bar terrified me too. Probably, fear of the unknown. Yet, I had no problem going into a straight bar – perhaps because my mother was Landlady of various bars and pubs for many years.

  2. Jan Moore avatar

    It is so important to share these stories. Your loved experience is an important part of dismantling oppression. My daughter (11) is trans and we fear doctors. I also fear the thought of getting into an accident and her going to the emergency room without me.

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      I’m sorry you have those fears, Jan. I hope I can reassure you that in the western world, we now live in a time when being LGBTQI is much more acceptable. I understand your fears because I often find myself in a position of having to correct somebody who thinks I have a wife and having to think twice before I correct them. We have to take stock of a situation before deciding what to do.

  3. Liesbet @ Roaming About avatar

    It angers me that you had to go through that, Hugh! Talk about discrimination. Luckily, the times have changed. Some. I remember your story about driving off on that coach. So, I guess he really did cheat on you…

    The only times I’ve been terrified to enter a place is when it had to do with tests – at school, for my driver’s licenses, for my US citizenship, to get interviewed…

    (PS: There’s a small typo in your top title and caption under the image regarding the word “gay”. :))

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      There was so much discrimination back when this was all happening to me, Liesbet. Not just towards gay people but also towards women and many minority groups. All a sign of the times, so it’s great that things have changed so much since then. I know it still goes on, so there is still a lot of work to be done, but we’ve come a long way.

      Interviews are undoubtedly scary encounters. Your comment reminds me of the times I’ve visited the U.S.A and how scared I was when approaching the border forces. When you get an arrogant border control person, my fears are made much worst, although I’m pleased to say I’ve never been refused entry…yet.

      Thank you for letting me know about the typo. I’ve now corrected it.

  4. wrookieschu avatar

    I had a similar experience. My best friend and I stood outside the only gay bar in Belfast when we were 18, excited but terrified to enter. We must have there for what seemed an eternity. When we mustered the courage to go in, we were surprised to see it was pretty empty. Never mind, we were just super excited to be sitting in a gay bar. It seemed like a big hurdle to overcome then.

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      It’s good to hear that you actually made it into the inside of that bar. It took me at least another year after this true story before I made it through the doors of a gay bar. It was as big a hurdle for me as what ‘coming out’ to my family was. However, I’m still happy to have experienced both situations, as I learned a lot from them.

      1. wrookieschu avatar

        Yes coming out was extremely scary, although it’s definitely getting better with each new generation thankfully. I am just so thankful we live in countries that appreciate being gay 🙏🏼

        1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

          Same here. Although there are still many countries where being gay is still a crime. Some have the death penalty for being gay. I hope that one day soon, being gay will be accepted everywhere.

          1. wrookieschu avatar

            Absolutely me too!

  5. dgkaye avatar

    Thanks for sharing your experience Hugh. I can only imagine the concern – first for going to the bar first time, then, being discovered, underaged, and fears of getting fired or beaten up. That is just horrible to have to live with those fears. Glad all worked out as you aged. :) x

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      What angered me most of all is that all my heterosexual friends were allowed to do what I wasn’t by law without any concern, Debby. It seemed so unfair at the time, but we’ve come a long way since then.

      1. dgkaye avatar

        We have Hugh. Although there is just too much injustice still.

  6. JT Twissel avatar

    This post is an excellent reminder that it hasn’t been that long since people had to worry about being themselves. I once had to meet with the guardians of a young cancer victim in a primarily black and impoverished neighborhood in Oakland. I had to learn to walk quickly and keep my head down. And to accept that the norms aren’t the same for everyone.

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      Yes, similar situations still exist in today’s world. Not only is it such a shame it still happens, but it goes to show that we still have much work to do to fix our broken society.

  7. Graeme Cumming avatar

    Indirectly, this puts me in mind of an old friend of mine. When I say old, I mean he was 97 when he died a few years ago. He started out as a client, but we became friends, still meeting up when he no longer required my services. He was very old school. Always wore a suit and tie – even if he was spending the day sitting at home! It was quite a few years before I discovered he was gay, and that was by chance. He never mentioned it, or even alluded to it. What struck me was that, having been born in 1918, he was almost 50 by the time the law changed in 1967 – which meant for half his life it was illegal to be a big part of who he was. And, let’s face it, the law change didn’t mean being gay was suddenly acceptable. So, for most of his life, he felt it necessary to hide that aspect of himself – and probably still did to some extent right up the time he died. In many respects, it’s hard for me to comprehend that, but it still angers me.

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      I can only imagine the stories your friend would have been able to tell, Graeme. His life will have been very different to the lives of gay people in the 21st century. I wonder, though, if he got a sense of thrill and adventure when going to places where he could have met other gay men? I remember those feeling when visiting gay bars for the first time, often accompanied with emotions of fear and panic. Such places did exist, and I recall evidence of some of them when I took my first step into gay bars in the early 1980s.

      I can understand your anger, but I wonder what he would have said to you had he seen your anger because of the way he wasn’t allowed to live his life and be who he really was.

      Thank you for sharing the details with us. I’d love to have been able to interview your friend and find out more of what his life was like living as a gay man when it was against the law to be gay.

      1. Graeme Cumming avatar

        He was a fascinating man, Hugh, in so many ways. I was able to learn a lot from him, none of which had anything to do with his sexuality! A reminder of why we should make time for the elderly. They can enlighten us about stuff that happened before we existed.
        All that aside, I hope all is well with you.

        1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

          I agree, Graeme. I have a 95-year-old aunt who I visit regularly and who I quiz about the past. I’ve learned a lot from her and also obtained some great old photographs. She’s the last of her generation, so I’m happy to have gained so much knowledge about the family history.

  8. Norah avatar

    It must be so difficult to be yourself when society’s laws seem to deny you the right.

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      I’m fortunate to have become an adult after 1967 when the law in the UK was changed so that it was no longer a crime for two men to have a relationship, Norah. I can’t imagine what it must have been like for gay men before then, although I have read articles about underground nightclubs where gay men could meet. But the risks they put themselves in were far greater than the ones I faced.

      1. Norah avatar

        There are many discriminatory practices in our society that still need to change, Hugh. I’m pleased this is no longer one of them.

  9. TanGental avatar

    It’s a tough read Hugh. We both went to London at much the same time and I had my many rational and irrational fears and panics but nothing on a scale when the law was also against you or you could be sacked or beaten for going to a bar. At least some progress has been made but not enough when you hear the stories so many women tell of going about daily lives and getting harassed as a standard.

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      Progress has indeed been made, Geoff. But, as you mentioned, it’s deplorable that society seems to be going backwards in other areas. The recent cases of women being harassed and murdered while going about their daily lives are dreadful. There is still a lot of work to be done. However, I look back on much of my life in London during the 1980s and 90s with happy memories.

  10. petespringerauthor avatar
    petespringerauthor

    Who doesn’t have fears or was terrified to try something? The difference was you were probably going somewhere that wasn’t as well accepted by society at the time. Unfortunately, overcoming bigotry, prejudice, and discrimination is a problem our society is still challenged by.

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      Very true, Pete. Although things have changed a lot since. Acceptance of gay and bisexual people has come on in leaps and bounds over the last 40 years, although there is still a lot of work to do. I’m fortunate to now live somewhere where being gay isn’t a crime. Many gay and bisexual people in some parts of the world face the death penalty for being who they are. I hope that by the time I leave this world, being gay or bisexual isn’t a crime anywhere on our planet.

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