If you think respecting others comfort zones affects your ability to lead a full life then something is wrong. Now if their comfort zone was gays cannot exist that would be a different story. But if the comfort zone is we are not comfortable seeing public displays of homo affection isn't that a bit different? I'm not asking you to go away or not exist, just asking you to respect me. Maybe some point we will even come around to being okay with it as the occasional slip up is seen and forgiven and as we as a society gets more used to it.
By "we" in the above, you really mean "you".
But doing it what I would call the right way isn't going to give gays instant gratification. It will take time.
They shouldn't have to wait on you deciding it's okay for them to be able to live their lives. Black people didn't wait for white people to be okay with them before pushing for equality. Before challenging separate but equal.
This is the crux of the issue.
People don't change until acted upon by an outside stimuli. You're *never* going to be okay with it unless you're exposed to it. You're not going to just wake up and be okay with same sex people people kissing.
It's taken decades to get this far. The first male homosexual kiss on television aired only seventeen years ago, while the first interracial kiss was back in '68. How much longer should they have to wait to be able to hold their partner's hand in public? Kiss them goodbye? Tell them they love them at a bus stop? Or any of the many, many things heterosexual couples can just do without a thought.
People are not slaves to their desires, I personally know people who are attracted to others of the same sex but choose to live an asexual or heterosexual life because according to their religious beliefs, homosexual behavior is morally wrong. Lifestyle is a perfectly good word for behavior. One of the reasons liberals and conservative (US definitions) tend to talk past each other on this issue is that conservatives think in terms of behavior while liberals think in terms of desire.
That's not cool.
First, because it's not about desire. That's reducing it to physical urges. It's about love and attraction. You can control your physical urges but you
cannot change who you fall in love with. You
cannot change who you find attractive. You can pretend. But that's living a lie.
It's totally fine for someone who has LGBTQ urges and leanings to decide to abstain from sexuality for religious reasons. Just like it's okay for heterosexual and cis people to do the same when they join the priesthood or a convent.
But it's NOT okay for them to adopt the pretence of a heterosexual lifestyle, because that's involving someone else in their lie. Being in a loveless marriage is not an ideal situation for any party, and it's denying the other partner the opportunity to find someone who loves them in return. (Unless they know and are wholly aware of the situation... and aren't fooling themselves into thinking their partner can change.)
Especially when kids become involved.