No sex talk, please, I’m a Christian

Even though my male colleagues know I’m a Christian, they still joke with me about f**king girls. When I tell them I’ve met a girl I like, they might say “does she take it up the ass?” Or, “have you railed her yet?”

Railed?

I’d never heard that before.

I don’t think they are being malicious, I just don’t think they understand what it means to be a Christian.

I daren’t tell them I’ve been celibate for 17 years. It would be around the staffroom in no time, and I’d be good for gossip. I’m sure I already am. If only they knew the deeper stuff.

Some things need to be kept secret.

But back to my work colleagues. As you know, I go out to the nightclubs, and if I see my work colleagues out, and they see me with a girl, they might say: “Have fun with her tonight.”

I really don’t want to explain that I’m there to help the girls, to introduce them to NGOs – because it sounds pretentious.

But back to the office. Even though I’ve said I’m a Christian, they seem to still want to tell me their stories of their previous night’s conquests, in detail.

I went for a coffee with a colleague and he said things like “when you’re getting a blow job…”

It is really difficult being a single male Christian in a secular environment.

Do I just have to come out with it? “Look, I’m celibate. I don’t take girls home. I don’t have sex. And, no, I’m not gay.”

The fact is, I want to keep the friends I’m making at work. But the whole ‘I don’t have sex’ thing is just weird to them, and I feel like I’m the joke of the staffroom.

Being a Christian in a secular environment is so difficult.

Especially being single.

I did meet a girl I like recently. Maybe she’s the one.

When I told a colleague and said no, I hadn’t had sex with her, he said “I’d have f**ked her by now.”

So, you see?

It is impossibly difficult being a single male Christian in a secular environment.

Have you got any advice for how to deal with it?

This page is the AMP version of threadsuk.com. The full version of the site can be found here.
For more information on AMP and why you're seeing this page, please visit ampproject.org.