The following is an excerpt from Putting on a Show by Rob Mills, a book about manhood, mates, and mental health.
Perhaps because I didn’t have any sisters, I grew up super scared to be around girls. When I was very young, I thought girls were beautiful, otherworldly creatures, and I had no idea what made them tick. I found it much safer to hang around with my mates – kicking footies, playing basketball, being idiots. Girls seemed smarter, more assured, less smelly.
To use the term very loosely, I had my first girlfriend when I was in Grade 5. I was a toy boy, I suppose, because she was in Grade 6. I can’t remember really pursuing her. She seemed to adopt me and, because I didn’t want to upset her, I went along with it. Much to my relief, the relationship didn’t last long. There was no official breakup, as far as I recall. We just drifted apart. From her perspective, I suspect she found me one-dimensional and wasn’t overly impressed with my talent at making fart noises with my armpit.
I had my first pash in Year 7. It happened at a party, in a ‘truth or dare’ situation. Despite the audience, I can remember how warm and pleasant it felt. I could get into this, I thought, even as I worried that I was doing it wrong and kept taking peeks at the girl to see if she was enjoying herself. By this time, there were more girls in my life, and I was becoming a lot more comfortable around them. I was lucky enough to go to a co-ed school, where we all just became mates. We were often all catching up together, hanging out and having sleepovers at each other’s houses – not orgies, to be clear, just as friends – and this was when I started to feel confident around girls. They began to lose their mystery, and I could see our similarities as much as our differences. They became friends, equals, and I loved it.
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