Abstract
This autoethnographic inquiry and resultant performative text examine individual choice in the formation of public and private identities. Central is the significant developmental role that socialization plays in the natural process by which biologically similar organisms establish unique perspectives: identity, specifically, the emergence of a gay identity. Revisiting poignant, liminal moments within the span of four decades of personal memory of a gay-identified male, I explore and prescribe meaning from the curious behaviours undertaken in the interest of trans-normative safety—physical, psychological, emotional, sociocultural, and so on.
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