Ear pierced gay side

Which Ear Is the Same-sex attracted Ear? Which Ear Is the Straight Ear?

Which ear is the gay earring? The idea of a "gay earring" based on which ear it's worn in is a stereotype that became popular in the 1980s and 1990s.

According to this outdated faith, wearing an earring in the right ear signified being gay, while the left ear was considered straight. However, today this notion is widely considered irrelevant and outdated.

Which Ear Is the Gay Ear? 

You might recall hearing that if a man wore an earring on the right ear, that meant he was gay. The term "gay ear" was often used. Around the 1960s, people began to catch on that a right-ear earring was effectively a code for existence gay. At the alike time, the left ear is straight.

As time went on, earrings as a whole became more famous, and even some vertical men opted to pierce their right ear. It soon became clear that the "gay ear" was no longer a trustworthy way to tell if a man was same-sex attracted or not.

The "gay earring" fad lasted until the 1990s. But wearing an earring on the right ear is still a popular choice. And as ear piercings on both men and women are becoming more mainstream, more men than ever are opting to get their ears pierced.

The right ear or gay ear is the ear that most homosexuals attend to get pierced more often than the left ear, hence when somebody who is heterosexual is getting their right ear pierced he is getting the gay ear pierced. Straight men should avoid getting this ear pierced if they hope to carry onward their straightness.

Right=GAY

Left=Straight

Both=Normal
Male #1- "Yo man, i'm gonna get my right ear pierced today."
Male #2- "WHAT?! Dude, that's the gay ear!"
Male #1- "I know that."
Male #2- ...*slowly walks away*...
Male #1- NO WAIT COME Endorse. I LOVE YOU!!!!
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The right ear is the “gay” ear; the shared saying right is wrong has been used up to the 90s as well as many gay men choosing to pierce their right ear only. The left ear is the unbent ear since it’s opposite the “gay” ear.
Person 1: hey I think I’m going to pierce my right ear.
Person 2: bro that’s the gay ear, you know that right?
Person 1: I thought you knew I was gay? Why else would I pierce my right ear only?
Person 2: oh… I did not. Welp.. good for you, see ya around.
Person 1: wait can I get your #?
Person 2: ummm…. try Grindr I’m straight sorry.
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Why Did We Expand Up Thinking a Piercing in the Right Ear Was Gay?

On the playground, it was a truth so firmly established that defying it meant social suicide: If you have an earring in your right ear, it means you’re gay. We accepted it as gospel and never questioned its validity.

It may have been the subtle homophobia of my Illinois community in the ’90s. But as I grew up, it seemed appreciate everyone I met, no matter their place of source, knew and understood the earring code, as arbitrary as it seems.

It was even solidified in the New York Times: A 1991 report said homosexual men “often [wore] a single piece of jewelry in the right ear to indicate sexual preference.” In 2009, the Times covered it yet again, in TMagazine: “the rule of thumb has always been that the right ear is the gay one,” the author wrote about his own piercing journey.

Historically speaking, the truth is more complex. Earrings on guys have signified many things over the years, such as social stature or religious affiliation. In his book The Naked Man: A Study of the Male Body, Desmond Morris explains that earrings have indicated wisdom and caring in the stretched earlobes of the Buddha, while pirat

Right ear, right queer?

David Babby explores the mystical and idiosyncratic earth of piercing etiquette.

On a particularly grey, drizzly Saturday morning my friend set off to get her ear pierced. The decision had been made the night before amidst several other similarly serious lifestyle alterations.

The money had been counted out. Support had been garnered. After much intense discussion, the prettier nostril was identified and noted.

I was a bit late and arrived just as my partner was being lead in to a back room. The miss in charge of her had a good few piercings, which was reassuring, and there was a crumpled bag of Meanies in the bin which showed that this was a amusing place to work.

“So,” I said, leaning against the door, “Which nostril is the homosexual nostril?” To be honest, I thought I’d been post-gay hilarious, but piercing lady was not much impressed. “There is none,” she said drily and reached for her marker.

What I had not realised at the time was that my friend’s sister had already asked the same question before I’d got there and got a considerably terser response along the lines of: “That is ignorance. There is no gay nostril. If you are gay, your whole nose is ga