Episode Transcript
Hey, viewers, Sniffy's Cruising Confessions is an explicit podcast about queer sex.
Filter dirty words and unfiltered descriptions of sexual activities.
If hearing about orgies, anonymous sex, kink, fetish, and more offends your sensibilities, you might want to skip this.
Viewer discretion is advised.
It's definitely not for kids.
Speaker 2Put your pussy up, put your put your pussy up, Put your pussy up.
Put put your pussy.
Welcome to Sniffy's Cruising Confessions.
I'm Gabelon Sadez and I'm christtison Rosso.
Each week we explore the sublime world of queer sex, cruising, and relationships.
We talk to queer folks of all kinds.
Speaker 1We'll ask some questions, swap sex stories, share intimate revelations, and provide practical advice that you can use at home.
Jo the put put Joe, pussy, put job, put put your put, put.
Speaker 2Your put up.
So Chris, so game, what are we chatting about today?
Oh gosh, we're doing a deep dive I think, and even deeper dive.
Yeah, into cruising, into cruising.
That's right, this is gonna be our cruising through a one episode.
But Chris I feel like at this point we should be experts.
I mean, I came into this kind of our radio as an expert.
I see, yes, so brilliantly stated in season one.
Yeah they have.
They watched me in action, Chris.
Speaker 1Is mech cranes like an owl when we pass people on the street.
Speaker 2I'm like, if that's not commitment to the art form, I don't know what is.
I'm wondering.
Though.
Speaker 1We host a podcast called Cruising Confessions.
We have done two episodes on cruising.
Yes, we should be experts on paper, but I feel like there's still a law for us to discuss.
Speaker 2For sure, And I'm always a student, so I'm always willing to learn more.
Speaker 1If you have listened to this podcast, as we mentioned, for the past two seasons we've covered cruising, you might have heard our Cruising one on one episode with Lee Horrera who we love, and are cruising two to one episode with Professor Joel Florencio, who we lovingly call Professor pig Well.
Speaker 2Today, students, it's time for another lesson.
That's right, the bell has rung.
Cruising through a one begins now and your professor for today's class, incredible Alex Espinoza.
Speaker 1I am so excited about this guest.
Alex's twenty nineteen book Cruising is a pretty essential read for anybody interested in learning the history of cruising, but it also offers uniquely personal insights into his experiences being a queer, disabled Latino in cruising spaces.
Speaker 2On today's episode, we're going to be talking with Alex about what he learned about himself and cruising while writing his book, how things have changed since it's writing, and get some practical tips for queer cruises of color.
Please welcome to Sniffley's Cruising Confessions.
Alex Espinoza.
Speaker 3Thank you for having me.
It's great to be here with both of you.
Speaker 2So excited, SOULEI, thank you for being here.
I'm really sexy that you hear.
We both are.
Speaker 1We're a huge frend of the book and we're so happy that you're hear from California.
Speaker 3Right all the way from Los Angeles.
Speaker 2Amazing.
Thanks for making the track.
How's the weather hot?
Speaker 3But you know where it's really hot?
Speaker 2Where on Sniffy's Oh?
I love that?
Speaker 1Are you an Avid Sniffy's user in La define Avid?
Speaker 3Okay, I do have a profile?
Speaker 2Okay?
Is its profile or is it an anonymous.
Speaker 3It's a registered profile.
Speaker 2Okay, you're like, yeah, the photos I.
Speaker 4Put the work in.
I don't mess around when it comes to that.
Speaker 1Well, if there's one thing we take seriously, it's cruising, Yeah exactly.
Speaker 4But if people want to be anonymous, that's completely fine also.
Speaker 1All right, So before we dive too much into our personal cruising practices, I do want to kind of start us off big picture.
Speaker 2I don't want to talk about your book Cruising.
Speaker 1It has become one of the major go tos for anybody interested in learning about cruising.
When you started writing it, what was sort of the inspiration behind it, and was the reaction what you expected.
Speaker 4I wasn't looking to write a book about cruising.
That was the last thing I was looking to do.
But I just happened to be having a conversation with my editor at the time, and I was talking about how I felt as though I think the literary landscape when it came to queer writing at the time was a little too polite.
I think it was catering to a non queer lens.
And I kept saying, like, why can't we go back to that era of sixties writers like John Reshie or Jim Grimsley, who were writing very unapologetically about sex and body fluids and just everything right.
That was my entree into queer literature.
And then my editor and her partner took me out to lunch one day and they cruised me.
Actually, they said, we think that you have it in you to write a book about cruising.
Speaker 2You got professionally cruised.
I did.
Speaker 4I got professionally cruise.
And I thought about it and thought about it and thought about it, and I think the reason why I said yes to it was because I really wanted to bring in the perspective of not just a queer person of color, but a queer person of color with the disability.
And I said, you know, that's an angle that I think I can I can lend to it.
That was the genesis of the book.
And I knew that when I was going to write it, I was going to have to put my own self into the book.
And I'm like, you know what, I'm going to write about my first experience.
I'm going to write about, you know, these sex clubs I've been to.
I'm going to write about all these places, and I'll worry about what people think about it.
Later, I was writing something that was kind of in between scholarship and personal memoir because I'm not a scholar, you know, I'm not I teach creative writing.
And you know, one of the things that was important for me were the interviews that I did with a lot of the men, and there were a lot that I didn't include.
Speaker 5Wow.
Speaker 4And you know, for all of all of the men that I interviewed, what was fantastic was just the complete intimacy of the details that they remember from me years ago.
You know, the color of the tiles in the bathroom at their college bookstore, the smell like the they remember, you know, the graffiti on the walls and the stalls.
Details that are just like when you're a creative writer, Like I tell my students, like, that's the shit that I want you pulling.
Speaker 3Yeah, right, and they had it all.
Speaker 4I knew that I wanted to be in conversation with that because I had denied that for so many years.
I'd been you know, participating in it and doing it and feeling really ashamed and you know, carrying this cross, feeling like I'm the only one that's like this, you know muro in Spanish.
And then I have these conversations with these men and they were like, no, I did too.
Yeah, right, And it was revelatory.
You know, it was revelatory for me.
So it was a really fantastic experience.
Speaker 2Well, now, Cochino Pig is quite empowering.
Speaker 3It's very empowered.
Speaker 2I was like, everybody's acino, everyone everyone's So I'm curious.
Speaker 1Take us back to sort of the beginning of your first encounters with cruising.
Did you find cruising or did it find you?
Speaker 3Oh, it found me?
Tell me about that it found me.
And I included this in the book.
Speaker 4I grew up in the San Gabriel Valley in the nineteen eighties in La the youngest of eleven.
Wow right, I know that's the reaction.
And you know, hyper catholic.
I was born with the disability, very insecure.
I have alopisia.
At a time when I think, you know, a lot of us are are coming into our own and discovering our urges and our desires, my body was starting to betray me and it was, you know, losing my hair.
And I was an athletic.
I couldn't do a lot of the things that my peers were doing.
I knew that I was gay, and I knew that.
You know, I liked men.
I remember being very attracted to Harry chests because I don't have.
Speaker 3Hair, what you don't have.
I worked at the mall.
Speaker 4It was my first job, and I was sixteen years old and I was waiting at the bus stop.
I was going to the mall to get my paycheck.
And this guy in a white Hyundai Excel, say, there are the details again.
Speaker 2I was.
Speaker 3El hatchback blue interior.
Still remember all this.
Speaker 4Drove by and pulled up to the bus stop, looked at me and drove away.
And he had spiky hair, I remember, and he was wearing a like a teal colored tank top.
Speaker 3This was the eighties.
Yeah, I mean it's like total Miami vice.
Speaker 4And he drove by and looked at me and then drove away, and then drove by again and did the same thing.
And I was I had a walkman.
I was listening to my Smith's cassette.
Yeah okay, And he drove by.
The third time, he pulled over and pretended to check the tire.
Speaker 2Oh wow.
Speaker 4He walked around and like kicked it and then looked at me and then drove away.
And the fourth time he pulled over and he said, do you want to ride?
Speaker 2Oh?
Speaker 4And I looked at him and I said yes.
And the minute I said yes, I knew exactly what was going to happen.
And he took me to a field and you know, we did our thing.
I remember, he didn't drive me all the way to the mall.
He just left me at another bus stop, which I thought was kind of shitty.
Speaker 3That damn after I did what I did the least I could.
Speaker 4You know, I mean, come on, I that was a pretty good blow job.
Say, it was my first, and I knew exactly what I was doing.
Speaker 3Yes, it was just instinctual.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 3And I was like, and he didn't even drop me off.
Damn them all.
He didn't leave me in front of the.
Speaker 2Well maybe he did have is shoes with the tire you never No, I don't know.
Speaker 3The tire looked fine to me.
Speaker 4And then the funny thing is he said to me, hey, if you know, if you have any other friends, oh, just let them know I'm usually at the park.
So I was like, okay, And then I take the bus and I get I get to work.
And I had one gay friend back then.
He was this Filipino guy, named Ed, and Ed was very out and very proud and very flamboyant, and d used to cruise and I was, you know, it's my first time.
It was I was a virgin and I said to Ed, Oh my god, you're not gonna believe what just happened to me.
I said what, And I said, I looked up with this guy and it was so hot and he had a huge dick and stopped me goes, wait a minute, was he in a white Hyundai?
Speaker 3No?
Speaker 2No?
Speaker 3And I said yes, and he looked at me and said it wasn't that big.
So that was my entre.
Oh wow.
Speaker 4And then after that it just it was like this homing beak And that was kind of my first cruising experience, was that.
And you know the strange thing is is I still remember how just instinctual it was like it was like this part of my DNA, you know, it was like a mutant power that was lang dormant inside of me, that like sprang Forth, And the moment that that happened, I realized that there was this whole other world.
Speaker 3It was like almost like.
Speaker 4A parallel world that existed outside of the norm that I could enter into and exit whenever I wanted, and I felt like that was really powerful.
Speaker 2It is kind of funny how instinctual it always let's it sort of rust happened, Like I think about my first cruising experience and it was just instinctual.
Like I don't know, I guess we're just born queer.
Speaker 1I mean, it's funny the way the body responds when you're like, oh, something feels good, right, especially after years of being told these are the people you should be attracted to.
It's like I tried making out with a girl in the sixth grade, Like it felt weird, and then the first time I kissed the boy, I was like, oh, what's that like?
Speaker 2You know what?
Speaker 1I like?
Speaker 2You just cut your body is gonna give you the cues and you pick them up.
Speaker 4Yeah, I kissed ahead a lettuce once.
That's what it felt like kissing a girl.
Speaker 3Oh for me, Wait, I didn't.
I didn't like make out with the head of lettuce, but like I kissed it on a dare.
Speaker 2Yeah, but how did this come about?
That?
Speaker 3That's a whole lot of stuff, Chris.
Speaker 2We've watched people fuck pumpkins.
I think kiss lettuce.
Yeah, I think we're going to be fine.
Yeah.
Speaker 1Well, I mean, I will say I'm kind of shocked that you had your first cruising experience in the Los Angeles area because I grew up in Florida.
Speaker 2That's a heavy driving.
Speaker 3There weren't a lot.
Speaker 2Of places to be outside and walking.
Speaker 4Yeah, and it was for me, it became a very different experience when I started driving, you know, when I and then you know, back then, it was all word of mouth, you know.
It was it was my friend Ed, you know, Size Queen and my friend Eric who you know who.
They were the ones that would would tell me, like, there's this alley, you know.
I mean, it was like West Hollywood, or it.
Speaker 3Was Griffith Park.
Speaker 4You had to go to these places, and rarely did it happen spontaneously.
We didn't have you know, apps, and we didn't have you know, you know, the access to the technology that we have now, So it was a very different kind of experience.
It was really spontaneous and it could happen, you know, any time in any place.
I think now we're seeing cruising taking on a new form.
You know, a lot of the conversations I've had with men over the years since the publication of the book, is you know, there are the purists to say, no cruising is you know this, it's it's pre Internet, it's you know, it's going to you know, a Macy's bathroom and waiting or attacking your foot.
Speaker 3Or it's this or that.
Speaker 4And I think I'm of the mind where it's just it's evolving into something different, you know, it's it's just becoming a new thing.
Speaker 2So, as a brown man living with a disability, what has been your experience navigating queer or social spaces.
Speaker 4I grew up in a time when, again and in a culture, in a gay culture where it was all about looks.
I remember West Hollywood in the eighties and nineties, it.
Speaker 3Was all about looks.
Speaker 4It was all about you know, the hard bodies and the great hair and the you know, all of those things.
It was very superficial.
I always felt like I was the ugly duckling of my group of friends where we would go to these clubs in West Hollywood.
We're all like closeted, you know, Mexican queers.
We'd get in the car and we'd drive to West Hollywood and we go party and they would always get invited to dance, and I was always the one sort of against the wall, just like watching and like like drinking, you know, a cocktail or something.
And so I never felt comfortable in those spaces.
I felt very insecure.
I didn't know what to do with my body.
And it wasn't until I started cruising that I realized that physically below the belt I was special.
Speaker 3And yeah, and let's.
Speaker 1Say ED would have given you a good would have given me a great review.
Speaker 4And so it wasn't until I was like, oh, I get it now.
So my confidence grew in no penitent it grew enormously, and so I realized that I could wield power, that my disability didn't matter, that I could you know, use it as a way to gain confidence.
So it was a really unique and strange and wonderful experience for me that that taught me a lot about myself and my body.
Speaker 2You know.
Speaker 3It was it was okay if I went to the clubs.
Speaker 4And wasn't looked at because I looked at certain or I had hair or this or that, but you know, you'd look at me if we were in another environment, you know, and then some so I kind of was able to walk between those two worlds right in a way that my friends couldn't.
I felt incredibly empowered and very special.
But it took me a long time.
It took me years and years and years of soul searching to be proud of the fact that I was a sexual person, and that I could be a sexual person with the disability, that I didn't have to be this sort of like, you know, very humble and very I'm so sorry, you know, please give me any kind of affection or attention that you feel that you can throw at me.
I was like, no, fuck that It was my sexual experiences that taught me how to be confident and how to walk a little more proudly in this world.
The minute I realized that that was the moment I met my partner of twenty five years.
Was that moment I realized, like, Okay, I'm good with who this person is.
Speaker 3And that was in like two thousand, so.
Speaker 1Alex we talked a bit about how these hierarchies are formed in kind of public facing queer spaces, right standing by the wall at the club, waiting for the muscle guy in West Dollywood to come grab you.
How are these hierarchies functioning or maybe torn apart in queer cruising spaces.
Speaker 4In cruising spaces, and a lot of men that I talked to is people assume different roles and kind of exaggerate them.
You know, you can subvert these roles in ways that you can't in regular society.
You know, if you're a brown person, if you're you know, a bus boy or you know, a gardener, and that's all that society sees you.
Speaker 3In these cruising spaces, you can become somebody else.
You can totally flip the script.
Speaker 4It was I guess it was that was the first time I learned that that there was a kind of a kink to it.
I remember doing that thinking it was really hot and I liked doing it, but I didn't I didn't have the language back then to be able to articulate it.
It wasn't until I became educated, when I when I went to school and I learned about things like hierarchies and those big buzzwords that we used to use in academia that I realized like, oh, that's what I was doing in these anonymous spaces and these spaces where you don't exchange names.
You see how these notions of flipping scripts and and and and playing off of each other and and donning a persona really play out in fundamentally potent ways that they don't, you know, in other spheres.
When I was in graduate school and as an undergrad and then realizing I know exactly what that is.
Oh yeah, because you know I hooked up with that guy and he was white and he made me do this, and you know I was just brown Mexican and he wanted me.
You know, it's like, I'm proof that you can walk in those spaces and assume that role and dominate in ways that society tells you, as a poor brown kid you're not supposed to.
Speaker 1I think there's something that you were kind of hinting at when you told us that story about that kind of aha moment where you're like, I've got a big dick and it's valued in this space, and it teaches you to value more of yourself besides facer dick.
Right, But it does seem like it's not like going to the bar and waiting by the wall and being like, oh, I hope the haughty picks me.
It's looking looking back and gestures and like pointing the eye to our areas you want to highlight.
Right, there are different ways that you can kind of make the approach when cruising that you can again, you know.
Speaker 4What it is, it's like, fuck the hot you picking me, I'm gonna pick you right.
Speaker 3It's not a question of whether you want me, It's a question of whether I want you.
Yeah, and you know what, You're gonna want me?
Speaker 4Yeah, because wait till you pull my till I see my my pants down, literally waiting.
Yeah.
Speaker 2When you you spoke about when you were writing your book, you did a lot of interviews, and I'm wondering what was a commonality through all of your interviews.
Speaker 4A lot of men that I that I interviewed really were driven by this uh insatiable lust.
Speaker 3I don't want to say lust, but like a it was a rush almost.
Speaker 4The danger of it, the spontaneity of it, the energy that comes with that.
They all talked about how exciting and hot that was.
This idea that you know, you're out there and you're doing something that you're not supposed to be doing, that you're not supposed to be participating in, and you're doing it in a public space is really hot.
But that's what makes cruising so unique is that you're doing it in these spaces that are you know, for lack of a better word, outlawed, right, and you're breaking the law, and you're doing it because you're thumbing your nose up to this larger society that's constantly told us that our wants and our desires don't fit into the larger mainstream narrative that we've been fed.
A lot of them, you know, love the thrill and the chase of it.
They love going back and repeating the steps.
I think that sort of and as an immigrant who's studied a lot of migration, you know, patterns of migration, that's a migratory pattern, right, it's going back and again and again and again in the same space and crossing it over and over.
A lot of men talked about the almost almost like meditative You can participate in this act and the veil of reality gets torn, and suddenly that bathroom in that Macy's becomes more than just a bathroom in a Macy's.
It becomes a really special, intimate, very powerful, impotent space that changes the air around you.
And then you finish, you go off and do your thing, and then the next person that walks into that bathroom is just trying to buy shoes that Macy's.
Speaker 2So the book has been out for a while and I'm wondering, is there something that you left out that you wish you would have been included?
Speaker 4You know, I think I would have liked to have included more of the experiences of this younger generation of gay men who are on you know, a prep and taking all of you know, these preventative steps, and it's I think it's freed up a lot of it's led the way for a lot of that sex positivity.
And you know, the funny thing is is the younger generation, like my nephew you I had to explain to him how frightening it was being queer in the nineties, getting them to understand that that there was this fear about getting AIDS and dying and being outed.
But you couldn't say no to it.
You couldn't like, what do you gonna do?
Like become celibate.
The conversations I had when I was on book tour was I'd have, you know, this younger generation of of of gay men who would come up to me and would.
Speaker 3Say, like, was it really that scary?
Speaker 2Yeah?
Speaker 4And that goes to show you how much of our history has been just completely obliterated, right, And why it's important to have books, you know that that that traced the trajectory you know, of this history, to have podcasts that discuss it and and and shed light on it and talk about it honestly, because we've we haven't been doing that for so long, and you know, it's it's led to, you know, not very good things.
Speaker 2Sorry, emotion no, because I love this project and I love what we do here.
I am gonna cry sorry.
I do love what we do here, and I do love the conversations that we're able to have, and what we're doing here is really important.
Speaker 1Yeah, well, I think that sounds like a good place to take a break.
Speaker 2When we come back, we're gonna hear Alex's tips and tricks for both cruisers of color and disabled cruisers, and maybe here a cruising confession or two.
Speaker 1Don't go anywhere the spirit of ed compels you will be right back, Welcome back.
We've been having a lot of fun and a very incredible discussion with author Alex Spinosa.
But in this act we're going to hear some practical advice for both disabled cruisers and cruisers of color.
Speaker 2What should disabled cruisers be thinking about when they're looking for cruising spaces or things like that, or how should they approach cruising.
Speaker 4I think it's important to remember what your own sort of limits and capabilities are, right like what you can and can't do physically, and you have to let that dictate how you cruise and the spaces that you occupy.
I think it's important for cruisers to remember that safety is important, that their safety is a priority.
When to reveal your disability or when not to is you pretty much have to gauge it depending on how the conversation's going with the person.
You have to get used to and be comfortable with the possibility of rejection, right of knowing that someone is not, you know, going to have a taste for this or for that, and you as a cruiser have to be comfortable with that.
And I think I think for cruisers of color, particularly Latinos, right now, we're seeing because we're seeing a lot of things happening in the major cities, like ice raids.
If you're undocumented, you know, I had plenty of conversations with men when I was writing the book who talked about the fact that they were the breadwinner of their family and if they got arrested and sent back, then that was it.
So you know, remembering what's at stake for you, right and letting that dictate engage how and when you participate and in what you participated, and to stay informed.
You know.
One of the things that I think is really fantastic about some of these apps is that they do post warnings.
I've seen, you know on apps heads up, you know, I saw ice raids here, or I saw cops here, or you know, be wary of this park.
So that's a really handy tool that we need to start really paying attention to and being a little more cognizant.
So I think I think it's all about education for me.
Speaker 1And you were talking a bit about how to grapple with rejection.
Was there something that helped you sort of deal with that in cruising spaces or to sort of rediscover your confidence and keep looking after potentially fear seen rejection walle cruising.
Speaker 4I think it's just that knowing that there are plenty of other fish in the sea, right that for all of the times that I've been rejected, there have been plenty of times when I haven't been and and just just remembering that and putting that in perspective, and it's all about recognizing that if you are going to participate and play the game, know that you are participating in an act that one has had a long you know history, right, it's been around for a long time.
Speaker 3And know that you are one in a series of.
Speaker 4Many, many, many, many many men who have gone through the exact same thing.
There's there's solidarity in that.
There's solidarity in recognizing that.
Speaker 3I think I've just become.
Speaker 4A little wiser now and just been like, okay, well, you know, if I go and there's no chemistry, then that's fine, that's okay.
You know what's the worst thing that could happen right to me?
You know at that moment, my feelings get hurt.
Speaker 2Yeah, right, okay, you know I'll get over it.
Yeah, my feelings have been hurt before.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah.
And I feel like a lot of times it's more about that person than.
Speaker 3It is about exactly exactly.
Speaker 2I don't know what they're looking for, you to know what their circumstances are.
Like.
Speaker 1I remember the first time I went to a video store and I paid to go into the little basement cruising area.
I became so fixated on this I was very young too, it was like twenty two.
Speaker 2I don't know what I was doing.
It's my first time there.
Speaker 1I became so fixated on this guy and I kept looking at him and looking at him and looking at him, and he'd catch me and look away like like clearly not interested, like clocking up, but not interested.
Speaker 2And at some what I went up to him.
Speaker 1I sort of verbalized.
I was like, hey, what's up, and he's like, sorry, I'm just here to look like.
That's what I'm looking for.
I want to watch other people hooking up and like masturbate to that, but I don't want to particy.
Speaker 3I don't want to participate.
Speaker 1And I was like, oh, this is what you're into, is what you came looking for.
Speaker 2You're not gay with anybody in.
Speaker 3This room, right, It's not me, it's right what you've got going on.
Speaker 4Yeah, And then think of those spaces we all wear, are desires out in the open totally, We're all just sort of showing it all out.
What might seem like a snub to you is somebody else's preference.
It's just all temperature.
You know, you just and you take it for what it is.
Speaker 1So We've touched on this a bit, but do you think black and brown men are more likely to deal with internalized shame when it comes to sex and cruising and what are some of the factors that might contribute to that.
Speaker 4Yeah, I think I think certainly there is because we have also the added stigma of always feeling like our brown bodies have been scrutinized and policed and watched.
So we carry that as immigrants and as minorities, we're it's indoctrinated into us that we're not supposed to rock the boat.
Speaker 3We're supposed to be good.
Speaker 4We're supposed to contribute to society, you know, we're supposed to stay out of trouble, and so we carry we have that added you know pressure.
And then also you know, growing up sometimes in hyper religious households.
I was raised in a very staunch Catholic family.
You know, my mom was very very religious.
There's that added guilt that just hangs over you.
So yeah, I think it manifests differently.
And that's not to say that it doesn't exist in Anglo or white culture.
Speaker 3It does.
Speaker 4It just manifests itself differently, but we do carry it a lot more intensely, And I think our shame and our guilt lingers a lot longer and is tied to our skin color and to the history and legacy.
I think of oppression that a lot of our communities have faced.
A lot of the men of color I talked to felt like they were betraying that legacy.
I'm supposed to be the good immigrant.
I'm supposed to be the godly, you know, the good saintly, you know child who's supposed to protect everyone.
Speaker 3And I'm going against that.
Speaker 4That linger for me along For a long time, I was the savior of my family, the youngest of eleven.
I was going to be the one that was gonna pull everyone out of the muck.
I needed to keep my nose clean.
I needed to be a good moral person.
But I had these desires, and every time I acted on them, I felt horrible.
And then it took me a while to realize, like, you know what, it's not my responsibility to pull you out of your ship.
You got you got yourself into it, you get yourself out of it when it comes to my family, and so, you know, it took me a long time to realize that.
But that shame and that guilt as a person of color with the disability, came from a marginalized background, hung around for a long time.
Speaker 2Yeah, that kind of guilt goes hard, baby, it does hard.
It's when it comes to overcoming this shame.
Speaker 3How did you do it?
And maybe what's some.
Speaker 1Advice you'd offer to folks who are struggling with unleashing their inner scene but.
Speaker 4Wins therapy therapy, no, I think, And I think also it's you know, I'm lucky that I have a partner who has taught me a lot about the difference between you know, sex and love.
We've been in relationship for twenty five years.
We know everything about each other, in and out, upside down, left and right.
We've been through so much together.
That's love.
And I think that has really taught me how to overcome that right, to understand that I can participate in both, and I'm lucky enough to be able to do that.
And also again being in conversation with other queer folks and talking about it openly and honestly it helps.
And remembering that if you do have the sense of shame or you know, seeing veduenza, you're feeling like a mucrosso or you know dirty that you're not the only one, that there are plenty.
Speaker 3Of other people that have felt that way, and that.
Speaker 4There's nothing wrong with it, And you'll get to a point where you'll understand that your desires and wants and needs are human, that we're all just human.
And again, you're participating in a practice that existed since there have been civilizations.
Speaker 1So you talked about your partner and how you all have been together for twenty five years and it sounds like you're open.
How did you sort of navigate that before that that was in the zeitgeist right before open relationships are hot?
Speaker 2And do you all cruise together sometimes?
You know what?
Speaker 4We began discussing it when we're deep into our relationship.
I think that's what I would advise.
We had many, many, many years together before we decided like, let's let's try this, because I know he was looking at the menu and I certainly was.
Speaker 3So it's like, growing up.
Speaker 4My model for a successful relationship was a successful heterosexual relationship.
Speaker 5Right.
Speaker 3That's not to.
Speaker 4Say that that, you know, in the in the queer community, if you want to have a close relationship, that's great, that's great.
But if you if you want to have yourself.
Oh that's great too, we should have that option, right.
I didn't think that that option was available.
I always thought like, well, I need to follow this rate pattern, right.
And it wasn't until my partner and I were together that I realized like, oh, okay, like I get this now, like we're in love.
But then, you know, you have desires and I have desires too.
We certainly had our experiences with the same you know men, but then we began to realize, like, we have different tastes, and then sometimes it would get too complicated because it's hard to orchestrate those things.
Speaker 1Yeah, I'm free, You're not free.
Speaker 3He's not free.
When the two of them are free, I'm not free.
Speaker 4You know, it was a whole other ballow acts that presented itself, and I don't know what it's like for other people, but for us, it just kind of became a little awkward and cumbersome.
And so right now we're in a good place.
Like I do my thing, he does his thing.
Sometimes we tell each other, sometimes we don't, but we always come home to each other.
Speaker 3And it's also important to have rules.
But what are your rules?
Speaker 2You know?
Speaker 4Do you host, do you travel?
You know, do you do it when one's at home and on's not.
Like it's important to lay down those rules to understand it and to stick with them, because at first, I mean, when we first started doing it, it was it was just trial by fire.
I'd get jealous and he'd get jealous, and then I.
Speaker 3Thought that guy was hot.
Nah, he wasn't your taste.
Speaker 2You know.
Speaker 3It is just a lot of that, and then we just learned.
Speaker 4We just kind of learned like, oh okay, like let's right this way, and it's just sort of it's just sort of evolved into its own thing, and it's good where it is right now.
Like that's what I like, is that it sort of became its thing and we're both happy.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 3Yeah, So I'm curious.
Speaker 1Season one, when we first talked about cruising, we sort of touched on this idea of utopia, right, which J.
S.
Muno's postulates is a very like theoretical kind of vibey thing was always in the future.
I think it's an interesting thought experiment, and I'd like to know what would an inclusive utopic cruising experience look like to you.
Speaker 3I think it would it would look like a culture or.
Speaker 4Community where we could do what we do and participate in what we participate and not feel so guilty about it, not.
Speaker 3Feel so bad about it afterward.
Speaker 4A space that's that's welcoming of every body, every shape, every size, every every color, every you know, ability slash disability, whatever.
And again, if somebody isn't into you, that you don't feel bad about it, that we're secure enough and confident enough to know that.
That's that's just how it is, right, That's that's what it would look like for me.
Speaker 1Okay, Alex, Now we've reached hand of the interview, but there's quite a bit more we'd like to ask you.
Speaker 2So we're gonna go into some rapid fire questions.
Okay, okay.
Speaker 1So the first one is describe your Sniffy's profile pick if you could ed approved.
Speaker 2Good, amazing.
What's the last message you received on Sniffy's.
Speaker 3The last message I received?
Hot?
Speaker 2All right, let's flip this around.
What's the last message you sent on Sniffy's Thank you?
All right?
Speaker 1If you can describe the last person you fucked in three words or less?
Speaker 3Converse high tops?
Speaker 1Oh right, god, I'm sensing a fetish all right?
Speaker 2When you hook up is it your place, their place, or a third place.
Speaker 4It's their place or a third place, not out of some weird you know, respect, but it's just my I have really, really, really badly behaved dogs who are total cock blockers.
Speaker 3They'll just ruin the moment.
Speaker 2Yeah.
And I had a dog pee rain next to someone's bed.
Speaker 4Just yeah, that sounds like my dogs.
No, no, my dogs wouldn't.
They would bite the person attack them.
Speaker 2Before, So it's not good.
I stayed all right.
Speaker 1So this is a two parter.
Part one, name an unproblematic straight person.
Speaker 4An unproblematic straight person.
I know it's probably hard, but oh my therapist good.
Speaker 3Yeah.
Speaker 2And the second part is name a problematic queer person.
Speaker 3Oh me, you got the ass.
Speaker 2And that's why you're here.
Yes, I love that.
I'm the problem.
Yeah, I love all right.
Speaker 1And if you can remember, what's the corniest opening line that's ever worked on you?
Speaker 3You look like Lex Luthor?
Speaker 2Wow, and that will worked.
I love that.
Speaker 4Okay, he's a hobby, he's like a very like.
Speaker 2He's a smart one.
I'm not a DC person, so I don't.
Yeah.
So you got two nerdy latinos in the room.
Speaker 1Yeah, yeah, all right, this is our last rapid fire question, what is your most controversial take related to cruising, sex or queer life.
Speaker 4I think the most controversial one is that apps aren't cruising.
Speaker 3Wait wait, wait, no, no, no, but I don't believe that.
Oh so that's not controversial.
Okay, okay, that's not gonna work.
So you say that apps are cruising you.
Speaker 2Your controversial take is that apps are our cruiser.
Speaker 4Because I again, I am of a generation where I cruise pre apps.
So for a lot of men of my generation, using apps isn't cruising, But for me it is like you can't call you know, you can't call it cruising if you're using Sniffy's regrinder or whatever.
That's not the same, but I think it is.
Speaker 2Yeah, all right, Well this has been an incredible discussion, Alex.
Thank you so much for stopping by.
It's been it's been really lovely having you here much.
Thank you, thanks for making me cry.
Speaker 3And thank you for the work that you're doing too.
Speaker 4I have to say thank you for both of you and for you know this this podcast and this opportunity for us to come together.
Speaker 3I think it's really important.
Speaker 2Where can folks find you and your work on Sniffy's.
Speaker 3If you I'm just kidding, you know what to look for.
Speaker 2Now you.
Speaker 4Know you can find me on I have a website, Alexispinosa dot com.
I have an Instagram TikTok every now and again, excepted on dance.
You can find my work at bookstores.
So I'm out there.
Speaker 2Amazing, amazing.
Speaker 1Thank you again Alex for joining us, and congrats to our listeners for completing Cruising three to zero one.
Speaker 2Yeah.
I love being a teacher.
Speaker 1Next up, we're going to hear another scandalous true sex story from our special Cruising Confessions hotline.
I can't wait to hear what y'all are getting up to in the park.
Speaker 5The park was hot.
Speaker 2Today, Hey, diffies.
Speaker 5I live in West Hollywood, California, and I had the hottest public play experience.
I love to jerk off and play in public.
And there was a profile two hundred three hundred feet away from me, no face, just a torso, and I messaged the profile to catch me jerking off outside.
When I was outside, I took a snapshot of my dick and a location of like where I was by.
This guy walked out of a building nearby and walked past me.
And I was like, what's up?
And he didn't respond, and I was like kind of anxious about it because I was like, oh shit, what if this isn't up the person?
And then he turned back a couple times, and I was like, this is definitely him.
Had that happened?
One came out of their building walking their dogs, and I quickly put my clothes back on and continued to walk after the guy.
He turned back and I was like, shit, where am I supposed to go to?
Like have this guy watch me jork off?
And there was these little stairs between some bushes and a building.
I went right on top of the steps just between there, and I got super nervous, but I heard like six steps coming back, and I took my short sauce started stroking, and this guy stopped and watched me jerk off passionately.
I was moaning softly.
I would like gesture to him to like come closer, but he never did, but he watched me play with my nipples and just stroke my dick until I came.
I coated those steps with my load, and when we were done, I saw that he was online again and I said thanks for watching, and he just replied, damn that was really fucking hot.
Speaker 1I'm so interested in these kind of like stoic figures that are interested in watching but aren't like pleasuring themselves at all, aren't They're like, I'm just I'm here to be an observer.
Speaker 2I'm here to be a witness.
And I think that's so fun.
Speaker 1I think that's like I don't know, because I'm wondering if it's like does it take self control?
Speaker 2Yeah?
It must.
Speaker 1It's like or you just like, oh, I just like like you go bird watching, you, you know what I mean?
Speaker 2You go like jerk off watching.
Okay, I don't know.
I feel like if I'm watching someone jack off, I'm gonna want to participate.
It doesn't matter who they are.
Speaker 1Well, it seems like a preamble, Yeah, something exactly right, exactly Yeah.
And also like very daring to like go to a public spot and be like, all right, let's let's go together to another spot.
But then like kind of like staggering your walk.
That's commitment, that takes a lot of coordination.
Speaker 2It's a hot story, yeah, because.
Speaker 1I would have been like, can we go back to your place?
But then it wouldn't be as fun.
Speaker 2Yeah.
The mystery of it all in sort of taken out of it because now I'm seeing your apartment.
Speaker 1Right exactly, and then I know too much about it, and then and then I see the poster of your favorite movie and the books that I judge and your DVD.
Speaker 2Collection, and I don't want to know that.
I want your eyes on my dick while I'm jerking off on the stairs.
Now, would you do this kind of maybe?
Speaker 1Yes, I am a little bit of an exhibitionist, but it has to I'm also like very paranoid about like either exposing myself to somebody should not be exposing myself to, or like getting in trouble for doing stuff out in pub So I do enjoy public play, and I do kind of enjoy cruising and like having.
Speaker 3Other people watch, but it's rare.
Speaker 1Then I'm doing it not in the context of like a queer event or a queer vacation spot or like a known queer location.
Speaker 2Yeah, I mean, I'm not out in the streets of LA being like, hey, you know what I mean, like right, and it's kind of a neighborhood area.
Speaker 1Yeah, but that's the thing, because you're walkable too, is there's way more foot traffic.
Speaker 2But like if you're thinking about, like what time of night, you know, like there're that many people walking in the street, people drive like yeah for sure.
All right.
If you want to hear your own cruising confession on an upcoming episode of this podcast, you can call our Cuising Confessions hotline at three zero two two one nine three eight nine eight.
That's three zero two two one nine three eight nine eight.
Speaker 1All right, what a show we should think.
Alex Espinosa again for stopping by.
What incredible guest.
I've been such a fan of his book for so long.
We were gagged in very starstruck.
And just what a refreshing combo have at Approove, Yeah, Approove.
Sniffy's Cruising Confessions is directed by Adam Barron, produced by Amanda Kuper and Cameron Femino, and executive produced by Eli Martin.
Speaker 2Cruising Confessions is presented by Snippy's, the ultimate map based cruising platform for kay by and curious people ready to cruise.
Check out the map at snippies dot com and fall snitches at Snippy's app.
Cruisers are a community.
Do your part in keeping us safe.
Speaker 1Learn more about protecting your sexual help at Healthy Sexuals dot com.
Speaker 2Put jo put put jo, put put your put
