Are same-sex relationships at a disadvantage?

Are same-sex relationships at a disadvantage?
Image: Image credit: The Cute Brute

I’LL never forget reading the chapter on homosexuality in Dr David Reuben’s book Everything You Wanted To Know About Sex, first published in 1969.

He wrote: “The homosexual must constantly search for the one man, the one penis, the one experience, that will satisfy him. He is the sexual Diogenes, always looking for the penis that pleases. That is the reason he must change partners endlessly. [In gay marriages] the principals never stop cruising. They may set up housekeeping together, but the parade of penises usually continue [sic] unabated… Mercifully for both of them, the life expectancy of their relationship together is brief.”

 Even though I was only 16 years old and yet to experience a relationship, the sentiment stuck like glue to pubescent corners of my brain.

Now, as I cautiously reach the age of socially acceptable engagements and pregnancies among my straight girlfriends, I can’t help but wonder whether or not Dr Reuben was right. Are my friends at a distinct advantage when it comes to maintaining long-term relationships due to the enticing benefits of financial and legal stability marriage offers?

In a 2004 paper, psychology professor Lawrence Kurdek of Wright State University in Ohio reported that over a 12-year period, 21 per cent of gay and lesbian couples broke up, while only 14 per cent of married straight couples did. This might all sound a little drastic, but hear me out.

Scientific studies consistently prove that the intoxicating chemical response to falling in love can last anywhere from three to 18 months. Culturally coerced into believing this infatuation should last forever, unsuspecting couples will often call it quits at the first sign of natural ebb to their usual loved-up flow.

Now, if you think of a relationship as a Mario Kart racecourse, there are a number of social “boosters” in place to help straight couples overcome the lulls and rough-patches inevitable to any serious romantic union. It’s often around the two-year mark that straight couples will become engaged, the excitement of which reignites a cognitive chemical cocktail of good feelings. A year later comes the wedding — another reaffirming boost. Then the first pregnancy — yet another boost.

While same-sex couples are skidding out on metaphoric banana peels and getting KO’d by spinning turtle shells, our heterosexual counterparts have already reached the familial finish line. You see, as much as happy long-term relationships are about connection, they’re just as much about distraction. Let’s not forget that building a strong relationship (and that’s what you’re doing — building), just like any regular construction site, needs external reinforcement to keep all the slippery, wobbly bits in place. It’s simple occupational health and safety.

So what can same-sex couples do to keep the spark alive in their relationships?

In a perfect world, we’d benefit from the exact same boosters as most other couples do. But while our politicians run around like headless chooks, handling the subject of national marriage equality like a slimy bar of soap in a maximum-security prison, we’re left with little choice but to improvise. We can take a long vacation, buy a property together (not likely for us millennials, though) or adopt a few dogs (good luck finding a rental that allows dogs). Alternatively, we could have a civil union ceremony, find ourselves a lovely surrogate, and start a little rainbow family of our own. But all of this takes a tremendous about of time, paperwork, legal negotiation, and money — and many of us will struggle to last the distance unassisted.

It comes down to this: marriage is a social construct for a reason. It helps us humans move against our inherent instinct to move promiscuously through a long list of lovers, spreading our seed as far and wide as possible. Marriage is there to “boost” us when we need it. To give us a relational trajectory, a blueprint to follow.

And whether we choose to be Mario, Luigi, Yoshi, or Princess Peach — we all deserve a fair go at the challenging racecourse of long lasting love.

HOMOS ON HIATUS are creative duo Samuel Leighton-Dore and Bradley Tennant. Their blog celebrates homo-heroes and inclusive ideas. You can find them at HomosOnHiatus.com or on Instagram: @HomosOnHiatus. You can also follow Samuel on Twitter:@SamLeightonDore

To read Samuel Leighton-Dore’s previous columns for Star Observer, click here.

__________________________________

**This article was first published in the March edition of the Star Observer, which is available now. Click here to find out where you can grab a copy in Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane, Adelaide, Canberra and select regional/coastal areas.

Read the March edition of the Star Observer in digital format:

__________________________________

You May Also Like

One response to “Are same-sex relationships at a disadvantage?”

  1. Wow I never thought I would say this but, what a load of fucking shit! This is the kind of outdated 50 years ago thinking our LGBTIQ community does not need. It clearly seems to me the writer of this article was brainwashed by the Australian Christian Lobby! Sorry a 2004 study is not realistic to today in 2016! Heterosexual marriages for example 50% end in divorce. We can not use gay marriage statistics as yet because it has only been a couple of years since it was made legal! If you believe this rubbish, then I believe this when pigs fly!