An Invisible Life
A landmark 2015 study on gay men and aging surveyed 312 participants with an average age of sixty-one. Here is an imagined timeline of what that life may have looked like, year by year.
1954 — He is born.
1964 — He turns ten. He is doing well in school — bright, articulate, the kind of kid teachers single out. He is athletic enough to hold his own on any field, but it’s the piano he actually loves, the hour after school when no one is watching him perform anything. This is also, without a name for it yet, the year he first understands he is different — years before puberty, years before language for it exists anywhere in his world. National surveys later confirm this isn’t unusual: gay men report, on average, first sensing this difference around age ten, long before most can articulate what it means.
1968 — He enters high school. Vietnam is everywhere. He has a name for what he is now, but there is no one he can safely tell it to. Being gay is a crime in nearly every state in the country. His closet does not begin as a choice. It begins as the only safe option available to him.
1972 — He graduates, barely missing the draft, enrolls in a community college that opened a few years earlier. He has his first closeted sexual encounter with another man — an act that, in most of the country, could still get him arrested.
1972–1976 — He begins frequenting the three B’s of gay life: bars, bathhouses, bookstores. These rooms are, for now, the only places mattering is available to him — and even these are periodically raided by police.
1978 — He contracts HIV. He does not know this yet. No one does.
1984 — He turns thirty. Still single, still closeted, protecting a job he could legally be fired from in most states simply for being known as gay. He is quietly worried about whether he might have contracted AIDS — there is no way yet to know. Besides, he still feels healthy. The ordinary markers of a life at thirty — a spouse, a shared mortgage, a family that knows who he is — are not delayed by circumstance. They are foreclosed by law.
1985 — He takes the first AIDS test available to him. It comes back positive.
1985 — Shaken, he enrolls in a long-running natural history study of HIV among gay men, one of the first of its kind. He does this quietly, the way he does most things. He has no idea that this same cohort will still be tracking him thirty years later.
1987 — He begins taking AZT, the first FDA-approved AIDS drug. The side effects are huge, but he is alive.
1988 — He is turned away from a friend’s group at a bar he’d gone to for over a decade — not told outright, just not included in the plan. He notices the men who get approached now are ten, fifteen years younger than he is. He says nothing. He starts going out less.
1994 — He turns forty. Sodomy remains a crime in roughly half the country. He is still closeted, still legally exposed for the whole of his adult life, and this is also the year he first feels a second, separate loss — the sense of being looked past rather than looked at, in the few rooms that were ever built to want him.
1995 — Combination antiretroviral therapy arrives. He will live. Survival does not resolve what he’s begun to feel about his own visibility — it just gives him more years to feel it in.
2003 — Lawrence v. Texas strikes down the remaining sodomy laws nationwide. For the first time in his life, at forty-nine years old, being who he is stops being a crime.
2004 — He turns fifty. Dating has become quietly, consistently harder — fewer replies, fewer glances held. He starts to believe the difficulty is a fact about him rather than a pattern in the culture. Legal exposure is gone now, but forty-nine years of it do not undo themselves in a year. None of the scaffolding that deepens most people’s sense of mattering at midlife — a legally recognized marriage, children, in-laws, the ordinary architecture of a public life — was ever built, because for most of his life the law made sure it couldn’t be.
2012 — PrEP is introduced: the closest thing to a vaccine the community has ever had, offering younger gay men something close to a future without fear of AIDS. For a man in his fifties, the reaction is different. It isn’t relief. It’s regret — the arithmetic of what a drug like this, thirty years earlier, might have meant if the government had been more concerned to find a treatment and a cure.
2012/13 — A cohort study he joined in 1985 circles back and asks him questions it never asked before: whether aging feels especially hard because he is gay, whether he feels more invisible now with other gay men than he used to. He answers yes to both, and does not think of it as remarkable. It is simply how the last twenty years have felt.
2014 — He turns sixty. Still alive. Still alone. HIV is now a long-term condition he manages rather than a death sentence he was waiting out. He is, without knowing the term for it, one of the 312 men whose answers become the study’s data.
2015 — Marriage equality arrives nationwide. The institution that might have anchored him at thirty, that might have given him in-laws and shared history and legal next-of-kin standing, becomes available to him at sixty-one. He has been alone so long the idea of marrying is a foreign language.
2024 — He turns seventy. Retired, mostly at home. His viral load has been undetectable for years. Medically, he is thriving. Socially, he has been disappearing since 1988, compounding for thirty-six years, with no spouse, no children, and no legal family ever entering the picture to hold the line against it — not because he failed to build one, but because the law spent most of his life making sure he couldn’t.
Researchers have a name for the mechanism now: internalized gay ageism. Critically, they separate two things often confused. Ageism is the real, external bias he lived — being overlooked at the bar in 1988, treated as less wanted with each passing decade. Internalized gay ageism is what happens when a man takes that external pattern, the one he answered honestly about in 2012, and converts it into a verdict about his own worth. The second layer predicts depression on its own, independent of how much actual exclusion a man faces. It is not imagined. It is absorbed.
The study’s real finding is not that gay men fear aging more than straight men. It is that gay men often age without the structures — marriage, family, institutional recognition — that let most people’s sense of mattering survive the loss of youth intact. This man did not fail to build those structures. For most of his life, it was illegal for him to. Take the option away for five decades, then wonder why invisibility stops being a feeling and becomes a biography.
Sources: Wight, R.G. et al., “Internalized gay ageism, mattering, and depressive symptoms among midlife and older gay-identified men,” Social Science & Medicine, 2015. Pew Research Center, “A Survey of LGBT Americans,” 2013.
— Behan