I was talking to a workmate today about how much I love quiche. And I remembered the saying “Real men don’t eat quiche”. And back when I was in denial, before I could come out to anyone, I remember smiling from ear to ear as I would tell people I love quiche, and I guess that means I’m not a real man.

No one else had a clue what I was getting at, but I thought I was funny

What were yours if you had something similar?

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    I remember joking at ~16 or 17 about being a lesbian trapped inside a man’s body.

    Turns out that was not 100% untrue 😬😅😜

    … 🩵🩷🤍🩷🩵

    ❤️🧡💛🤍🩷❤️💜

    Edit:I’ll note that the first crack in my shell, or realizing it was there at all didn’t happen for another 15 years

  • bootyberrypancakes
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    1 year ago

    I was always so proud of my smallish hands/wrists and would always compare them with girl friends and be like “LOOK OUR HANDS ARE ALMOST THE SAME SIZE! 🥰”

    Or the time my ex was walking around topless while I was programming and asked how I wasn’t turned on and I grabbed my tits and said I have them too what’s the big deal lmao.

  • @BassaForte
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    1 year ago

    At a car show, at the booth to pick up my free T-Shirt, I was asked “what car are you?” and I responded “I identify as a Ford Focus”. I get that might sound a bit offensive because of the “one joke” thing but I thought it was a funny response, and I didn’t mean it in an offensive way. That was before my egg cracked anyhow, and the person at the booth got a kick out of it.

  • @[email protected]
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    111 year ago

    I have never once heard “real men don’t eat quiche” that seems like some really bizarre gatekeeper rules.

    I 🩷 quiche too btw

      • @[email protected]
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        41 year ago

        Interesting! I will have to check it out because I’ve never heard of it. But then again, growing up in a misogynistic, evangelical, smallish town, no one there was reading a book saying their ideas of manliness were stupid. Also I don’t know when I ever first had a quiche.

        So was it always more of a joke for you, or did people around you say stuff like that seriously?

        • AdaOPM
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          21 year ago

          The people around me said it in a “joking but not joking” way. I grew up in a small town in country Australia, but unlike yours, it wasn’t particularly religious. They were conservative, racist, sexist, you name it, and that saying was enough of a thing for me to have heard it many times. I’m guessing, like me, most people didn’t know where the saying came from though

          • @[email protected]
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            31 year ago

            Yeah, had no idea what it was from but the time frame adds up.

            There was an American show called Ed, Edd, and Eddy where there was a slightly queer coded kid named Jimmy who brings a quiche to the cul-de-sac picnic and gets made fun of by the Eastern European coded “Foreign Kid” for cursing the picnic with a cursed food.

            Always wondered why they chose quiche.

  • @[email protected]
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    51 year ago

    My friend took me out for my first drink and I think I had a mojito or something fruity and he was like “you know that’s a girl’s drink, right?” I was nervous, but still drank it… after spilling the first one by accident😅
    Oh and I did the whole “I’m a lesbian” bit as well.