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Gray Muzzle

I still find Lydia absolutely adorable! I think she's one of the least appreciated characters in the story, but there's a lot more going on there than meets the eye. When Colleen drunkenly groped her, I think she experienced something she had never felt before. Lydia was so smitten with Colleen, I just don't think that she looked at it in an analytic way. So, I can certainly see Lydia questioning who she is in a fundamental way. Colleen, on the other hand, strikes me as a true 'Bi'. I'm guessing that she dislikes labels, especially putting them on herself. She sees herself as a free spirit, who does what she wants when and where and with whom she sees fit. Clearly, this has lead to inappropriate choices, like sleeping with fellow employees, and, frankly, Sean.

Anonymous

A cartoon in Christopher Street shows a woman walking arm-in-arm with a man, as she waves at two other women. One of the two women says, "Her closet's got a revolving door." I'm one of those who, like Gray's opinion of Colleen, dislikes labels. I borrow a line from the animated film "The Last Unicorn," when the prince declares, "I love who I love." 'Nuff said.

Seth T

This is a really heavy existential crisis. And there's never any one right answer. Everyone can discover new things about themselves over the years, or even sometimes learn the words to describe their feelings that they'd not known before.