Thanks so much for your replies.
I think that part of the confusion, for me, lies in the double nature of sexual orientation, i.e., its subjective aspect (where personal feelings are concerned) and its more "objective" social aspect (where others will label us according to our sexual behaviours).
Delving back into Bornstein's Gender Outlaw while searching for a quotable nugget for another thread, I came upon her discussion of the difference between gays and transsexuals. She maintains that sexual orientation is a matter of whom we choose to relate to, whereas gender identity is a matter of how we choose to relate to ourselves. Although, on the face of it, I would tend to agree, when I ask myself if a gay person stranded on a deserted island would still be gay in the same way a gender-variant person would be gender-variant, I have to answer "yes." So, I have to believe there's a large element of identity in both sexual orientation as well as in gender identity and there's a large element of "relational politics" in both sexual orientation as well as in gender identity. It just ain't that clear.
I tend to view the matter at hand as does Lydia; I'm a biological male who's attracted to biological females, ergo, I'm heterosexual. If I only very slightly modify the definition to say that I'm a "social male" attracted to "social females," (or vice versa, or any possible combination to be found in Lydia's logic table, above), well, then, things get a little, uh, hairier, so to speak. Why? Because, as we well know, "social males" can be either biological males or biological females, and the same goes for "social females." Then, sexual orientation (even an allegedly "asexual" one) almost becomes a game of finding the bean under the nutshells. Ultimately, when people don't know under which nutshell they'll find the bean, they'll say, "I refuse to be labeled" or even, "I refuse to label others." I guess queers and genderqueers (such as Kate Bornstein) simply refuse to, uh, play with other people's nuts.
Love,
CJ
