Homosexuality

Homosexual individuals are sexually, romantically, and emotionally attracted to individuals of the same sex. Homosexuality occurs in both men and women. In addition to sexual behavior, it is also associated with feelings and identity. The occurrence of homosexuality in the female population is estimated at 1%, and in the male population, at a minimum of 2%. American psychologist Alfred Kinsey stated in the late 1940s that he found homosexual orientation in about 4% of the examined men. However, such a high incidence has not been reliably documented in the general population since then. Nevertheless, the four percent has become well-established in the public consciousness. With the aforementioned occurrence, homosexually oriented people are the most numerous sexual minority in the population overall.

According to the long-standing consensus of behavioral and social sciences and health professions and professions related to mental health, homosexuality in itself is a normal variant of human sexual orientation.

Homosexuality vs. Homosexual Behavior
It is necessary to distinguish between homosexual behavior and homosexuality as an internal sexual orientation. Not every homosexual behavior is motivated by a different sexual orientation. This is true, for example, for substitute homosexual contacts of prisoners. Likewise, prostitution is often practiced by men and women who themselves are heterosexually oriented. Finally, not every homosexually oriented individual also engages in homosexual behavior.

Bisexuality
Bisexuality is the state when an individual cannot precisely state which of the two genders they are sexually attracted to. However, there are extremely few such truly bisexual individuals among men and women. Homosexually oriented people sometimes have a tendency to refer to themselves as bisexuals to make the existence of their homosexual orientation more socially acceptable where public opinion is not very positive towards homosexual people.

Attitudes Towards Homosexual People
Psychosocial and cultural attitudes towards homosexual people have changed significantly. In recent times, we have known societies in the world where homosexual behavior is criminalized. This applies primarily to sexual intercourse between men ("sodomy," "pederasty" as punishable acts). Other societies take a non-committal stance towards homosexuality, and a number of developed countries have legally recognized same-sex marriages or civil unions, in which partners have almost identical rights to those of opposite-sex couples.

The medicalization of homosexuality also persists when some psychoanalytically and behaviorally oriented psychotherapists consider homosexual orientation as a pathological condition and try to cure it. It is often forgotten that homosexual orientation is completely excluded from the latest version of the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems (ICD-10). The American Psychological Association and other organizations argue that there is no scientific basis or empirical data to consider homosexuality as a disorder or abnormality of sexual orientation. This is the recognition of homosexually oriented men and women as a distinct sexual minority, which is neither criminalized nor medicalized in modern democracies. The homosexual minority should have the same rights and responsibilities as the heterosexual majority.

How is sexual orientation formed?
There is much debate about the ways in which sexual orientation is formed. In recent decades, experts have preferred biological theories. Despite almost a century of psychoanalytic and psychological speculation, there is no real evidence to support the view that the nature of parenting or early childhood play any role in shaping an individual's heterosexual or homosexual orientation. It seems that sexual orientation is essentially biological and predetermined by a complex interplay of genetic factors and early uterine environment. Sexual orientation is therefore not a choice. Speculations about the influence of family or poor psychological development on the formation of sexual orientation are based on misinformation and prejudices.

The presence of a persistent homosexual minority in a predominantly heterosexual world would be difficult to understand without a very significant biological predisposition. We know that homosexual orientation appears in adolescents with endogenous urgency. It has never been shown that it is possible to learn a homosexual orientation. There are no scientific studies documenting successful and safe changes in sexual orientation. Attempts to change sexual orientation are controversial because of the tension between values espoused by some religious organizations on one hand and values of organizations supporting the rights of lesbians, gays, and bisexuals and professional and scientific organizations on the other. No major professional medical organization supports efforts to change sexual orientation, and practically all of them have adopted statements warning professionals and the public.

Research into the biological basis for homosexuality is supported by studies of homosexuality in monozygotic and dizygotic twins. These studies generally show that homosexual orientation is statistically significantly more common in monozygotic twins than in dizygotic twins. Recent genetic studies have been able to define the genome of male homosexuality quite precisely, albeit with numerous question marks.

Homosexual men and women in puberty and a predominantly heterosexual environment are often pushed to "be like everyone else." Therefore, the first sexual experiences of later-defined homosexuals are sometimes heterosexual. About half of homosexual men and two-thirds of homosexual women will have had heterosexual sex at some point. Most of these encounters occur during adolescence and young adulthood.

Coming out
The process of recognizing and accepting one's atypical sexual orientation is often referred to as "coming out." It is a process that can be of varying length and conflict. Not only the subject's mental stability and education are important, but also the attitudes of their closest circle and society as a whole. Open sexual education always takes into account that a certain percentage of people are homosexual and that children should be made aware of this fact. They are also taught that a person may react in different ways to their sexual atypicality and that society must accept homosexual individuals without prejudice. However, it is certain that even the most liberal societies have not completely rid themselves of conflicting attitudes towards homosexuality. The majority rarely overlooks the differences of minorities.

Intrapersonal and social problems cause individuals who are homosexually oriented to have a higher incidence of suicidal attempts than heterosexuals. Because they may be ashamed of their sexual orientation, the true state of affairs remains hidden from doctors even in cases of repeated sexually motivated suicidal attempts.

The resistance of society and the conflictual intrapersonal processing of homosexual orientation have resulted in certain specificities in the practical lives of homosexual people.

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