Noone in my family is gay, none of my friends were. I have never been (sexually) abused or raped by or experienced anything else to be repulsed by men. Any of these are the usual arguments for one being or becoming gay. But I am anyway.
I have no problem with the view of homosexuality as an anomality, but discarding it as a choice to be or act upon it too simple. I am attracted to the same sex as much as most are attracted to the opposite sex. I don't consider it a choice to act upon it, I much more consider it a choice not to act upon it.
There is a study by a highly regarded Dutch professor (a neurologist,I forgot his name) who links homosexuality and transexuality to a difference in chromosomes and a distinct difference in brain functionality. When it comes to explaining what I am, this - to me - is by far the most acceptable and logical explanation. At the same time this would imply that people indeed are born gay.
I have no problem with the view of homosexuality as an anomality, but discarding it as a choice to be or act upon it too simple. I am attracted to the same sex as much as most are attracted to the opposite sex. I don't consider it a choice to act upon it, I much more consider it a choice not to act upon it.
There is a study by a highly regarded Dutch professor (a neurologist,I forgot his name) who links homosexuality and transexuality to a difference in chromosomes and a distinct difference in brain functionality. When it comes to explaining what I am, this - to me - is by far the most acceptable and logical explanation. At the same time this would imply that people indeed are born gay.

"No studies done which make someone gay"