November 22nd, 2009
 

365 Gay: Opinion

Starving for ‘Splash’

, columnist, 365gay.com

For Labor Day weekend I’ll be making my annual trek to Austin, Texas for “Splash Day,” a big gay party on a lake. I always look forward to Splash, though not as much as I look forward to what comes right after it:

Permission to eat ice-cream again.

You see, like most gay men who attend, I prepare for Splash by increasing my gym time and decreasing my carb intake to Olympic-prep levels.

At restaurants, when waiters try to deliver a bread basket, I scream as if I’ve seen a roach. I order salads and then assiduously pick out the croutons. Ask me if I’d like to see a dessert menu, and I’ll look at you as if you’d suggested bringing plutonium to the table.

I know this is silly for all kinds of reasons. Even when I was single and “on the prowl,” I was never particularly attracted to gym bunnies. Neither did I notice a positive correlation between being in top shape and having great sex. On the contrary: carb deprivation makes me cranky, and cranky isn’t sexy.

The fact is, the hottest experiences I’ve ever had have been with ordinary guys while I was in ordinary shape (not counting my husband: an extraordinary guy in every sense of the term). And I’m no longer on the prowl. So why do I care about an extra quarter-inch on my waistline?

Let’s be honest: it’s not about health. One can be perfectly healthy without having washboard abs. Besides, I haven’t had washboard abs since I was six years old—which is about the last time I looked good in a speedo—and I’m not going to achieve them now without liposuction or starving myself to the point where I look gaunt. It’s just not in the cards genetically.

So is it all about appearance? Maybe, but three weeks of being a food nazi won’t measurably improve how I look. Besides, at 5’8” and 150 pounds, with a 31-inch waist, I look pretty good for my age.

Speaking of age: I’m thankful that at nearly 40 I’m blessed with a youthful countenance. Readers sometimes inquire about the author photo that accompanies my column. It’s recent, I swear. What’s my secret? Intravenous Botox.

No, seriously: there’s no secret. Like my stubborn love-handles, my boyish looks are mostly thanks to genetics. Beyond that, I don’t smoke, I eat well, I get decent rest, and I don’t dwell on things that depress me (with the possible exception of my love handles).

I also exercise moderately. By “moderately,” I mean I lift weights a few times a week and occasionally take a brisk walk (but not so brisk that I can’t stop when a neighbor offers me a cocktail). You won’t see me running unless I’m being chased.

I’m grateful for living in a city (Detroit) where gay men don’t feel pressure to be model-pretty. I once turned down a job in Los Angeles partly because I didn’t like the body-image pressure there. In Detroit gay men are actually allowed to eat cookies on occasion. (Mmmmmm…cookies.) Except in the three weeks prior to vacation, apparently.

See you all at Splash. I’ll be the cranky one eagerly awaiting his next ice cream.

John Corvino is an author, speaker, and philosophy professor at Wayne State University in Detroit.

For over fifteen years he has traveled the country speaking on homosexuality and ethics. His writing has been featured in regional and national periodicals, at the online Independent Gay Forum, and in numerous scholarly anthologies. His column “The Gay Moralist” appears Fridays on 365gay.com.

For more about John Corvino, or to see clips from his “What’s Morally Wrong with Homosexuality?” DVD, visit www.johncorvino.com.


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  • Doug loves you Said: August 28th, 2008 at 8:19 pm
    • Yeah just look good all you want, but try being disabled and see if you like it. It could happen toy anywhere anytime. Be kind. Peace

  • Mario Said: August 28th, 2008 at 7:49 pm
    • Apparently professors aren’t allowed to be light-hearted, ever. Because like, people will wonder what they can learn from a professor who enjoys jokes or anything silly.
      Also, because there are disabled people in the world, anyone who’s not disabled isn’t allowed to ever worry about their appearance, because then they’re being horribly insensitive, superficial, and maybe even bigoted!
      Get a grip people.

  • Jeremy Hoekstra Said: August 27th, 2008 at 2:58 pm
    • Don’t listen to the freepers, John. I think most people can agree with parts of this article. (Me in particular, since I hung out with you at Splash one year … you looked good regardless.)

  • Doug loves you Said: August 24th, 2008 at 2:35 pm
    • Hey Julian, I bet you looked cute in your tight little pink tutu. Did you get a lot of tush? Sure hoped you used protection. Lighten up yourself. This man is a professor? What could you learn in one of his classes? How to prance around trolling for booty? Sorry if you’re pffended but I doubt if you’ll give it much thought.

  • Julian Said: August 23rd, 2008 at 12:12 pm
    • I think people should lighten up a bit! This was a very amusing piece by someone who is not at all self-obsessed, but merely trying to look his best once a year for a special event, at the same time realizing the limitations on his chances for success. I used to do the same thing for Pride. Nice piece — very gentle humour, indeed.

  • Trace Said: August 23rd, 2008 at 11:20 am
    • This absolutely conceited and self absorbed author is a philosophy professor?

      This individual may be approaching 40 but it’s obvious that he is still very infantile in his outlook and mannerisim.

      With no worries or concerns in his life, I’m sure hopping he can solve that whole love handle situation. It must be horrible.

  • queer onelegged dude Said: August 23rd, 2008 at 6:58 am
    • Thank you Carlos, Iappreciate your compassion. I wasn’t out to seek pity. I only wanted to let others know how blessed they are to be strong and able. I so miss being able to camp, hike in the woods with my man, swim and just get out and have fun with friends. Mainly I stay home and play around on my pc or read, watch some tv[animal planet] or take care of my patio plants when its not too humid. It’s not the life I would wish on anyone but its mine and I thank God I at least have that. Thanks again friend. Love, Doug…..

  • Carlos M. Said: August 23rd, 2008 at 5:00 am
    • It’s people like the columnist that disabled gays are treated like crap by other gay men. We go through the same struggles as you do, yet we’re lesser people? It’s sad when when even the HRC store in DC doesn’t treat all LGBT with equality.

  • queer onelegged dude Said: August 23rd, 2008 at 4:40 am
    • I lost my left leg due to repeated infections from diabetes 2 years ago. I am always fearful of losing my other leg for the same reasons. Now you make light of being just a tad too large. How superficial you must be. Imagine having people stare and whisper or yell at you when you try to go to the store in a wheelchair. I am not bad looking but would I be welcome at your “splash”? How do you think people like me feel in todays world who are not perfect in body. You should thank your maker for what you have,and dont tell me you do, cause we both know its a lie. You’re article was not in the least funny.

  • Alex Said: August 23rd, 2008 at 3:21 am
    • I wish I could go to “Splash” it sounds like a lot of fun!

      And you were right: being a gay man in Los Angeles and it’s demanded that you look the part. Unfortunately, most guys don’t have those perfect porn star bodies so they end up with eating disorders, shooting steroids or meth, and compulsively going to the gym 24/7 which leads to very happy lives that are being consumed by their own vanity.

  • Jeff Barea Said: August 23rd, 2008 at 1:15 am
    • Ha, Ha, Ha, John…

      In x number of years (keep my secret and I’ll keep yours) you have never aged once!

      Welcome back to Texas brah!

  • Doug Robertson Said: August 22nd, 2008 at 10:32 pm
    • Yeah, I’m one of the readers who openly questioned how recent the photo. You caught me at the time, so I apologize for that. You’re a lucky guy. And even though I’m gay, I never got the whole gym thing or whatever. I’m just skinny, I don’t want to beef up, takes too much effort. I’m lazy, too, so that’s another reason. Have fun, though, and behave.

 
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