By Adryen Proctor Since being black is an idenritv that T had already learned to enable, the identity of being gay came second and proved to be a huge challenge. I felt like being gay had to fit into the already defined identity of being black. On numerous occasions I have been asked whether 1 am a ‘gav black man’ or a ‘black gay man’, rhe question that I believe they’re truly asking is: W hich of these characteristics do I hold in higher regard? 'The majority of the black community does a great job of shutting out ideas that seem tarfetched, such as someone in their community being JXjBI'. I’ve come to joerceive the role of a black man as strong, able, viral and possibly dangerous. A black man would never exhibit homosexual tendencies. ,\ major problem that 1 have with the black community today is the tact that they teel entitled to take certain scriptures from the Bible and turn them into messages of hate and damnation tor homosexuals. IXIB'!' African-Americans are ostracized and swept under the rug because we are deemed as ‘not truly black’ or ‘going through a phase’- all because our community has a problem with our presence. W hen 1 came to C.arolina, I had been out ot the closet for about two years. 1 come from a rural area in northeastern North Carolina called Roanoke Rapids. W hen it became public knowledge that 1 was gay, the demograj')hic of a mostly black high school provided me with a sample of how the black community would react. Overall, 1 was shown that the females in mv community took to my identity much better than males, (doming out severed presumed friendships as well as brought on the homophobic jokes, slurs and gestures. It proved to me how cruel people could be when they disagree with mv sexuality. W hen 1 reflect on my time here at L’NC', I realize that I have not had too many joroblems ot homoj‘)hobia out of the black communit\’ besides the occasional person staring at me and the overused phrase of ‘no homo’. I'hat phrase completely battles me because it one were secure in their own sexuality, there would be no point of that little insertion at the end of “questionably gay” sentences. In nay eyes, that phrase is a reflection of how insecure people are about their own sexuality. Many black men view honaosexuality as a negative and abtiormal concept (along with the majority ot the black community), so they feel the need to add ‘no homo’ in order tt) separate themselves frt)m this ostracized group. I remember one conversation where “no homo” was used and I asked the guy (who was black) why he telt the need to say that. 1 told him that we all knew he was straight. 1 le said that he didn’t want people to look at him differently because he didn’t say “no homo” and to this da\’, 1 still don’t understand. The black community is not the only group at fault. I'he gay community in dealing with black people has been an equally difficult experience. Cl rowing up in a society where the media rules your perception ot the world and the only LCIBT figures you see on television are white, it negatively impacts the already present emotions of isolatif)n and abandonment we have to endure from our racial community. 'I’here is such a separation of the white gay experience and the black gay experience that many black people don’t identify with the usual IXIB bK) labels and consider themselves SCiL’s or Same (lender Lo\ing people. This label was created by and for i\frican-.\mericans who prefer to distance themselves from terms that they see as associated with “white-dominated” lesbian, gay, and bisexual communities, 'bhis divide between an already ostracized people is unnecessary and only puts up more walls instead of bringing people together in the unison that we need to make a chanve in the world. Although UNCI is an extremely diverse school, different sects within its student body have their own code of behavior. To answer the original question, “My answer is always that 1 am both because each identity holds equal importance”. I do not believe that I have to shut down a part of who 1 am in order to become a stereotypical ‘gay man’ or a stereotypical ‘black man’. I am black, 1 am gay, and I am a man. '‘i'ou can find me at a probate for a black fraternity as well as at a (ILB I SA Mixer. Identifying as both black and gay has opened so many doors for me to a culture that 1 would be oblivious to if I had kept who 1 am hidden away. Mix and match the wf)rds all you want but I do not plan on changing who I am anytime soon in order to fit societal molds or standards that it may have for me. 1 create my own path and do my own thing: Do you?