The difference between "gays" and "comfy" is that while gays usually are comfy, not all comfies are gay.
Which is why the gay people who are comfortable would be grouped under "comfies" together with straight and bi and asexual people. Regardless of sexual preference. Unless you're trying to define the reasons for people being or not being comfortable, in which case just "comfies" and "uncomfies" are far too simplified and meaningless.
That is, if you are totally gay, not bi or anything, then there's no sexual tension between you and the opposite sex. Additionally, gays have a few worries with women other people don't (see: being outed unintentionally by a girlfriend). .
However, sexual tension is far from the only thing that makes men uncomfortable with women (or any other group with any other group). I mean, I'm almost completely straight and I have a lot easier time hanging around women than men, mostly due to social pressure. And even if it were about that, you would do better to call the group "asexuals", seeing as that is what they are in this context and it includes other asexual people. It just seems redundant to have such a grouping when it basically just creates a Scotsman fallacy for no discernible reason.
The "huh" thing was just me being silly, though. Oh, and I'm sorry for nitpicking your definitions. Just some things that came to my mind.
IMO you're oversimplifying. I really don't think you can group everyone's reasons for social awkwardness (or lack thereof) concerning gender into 5 groups (or even 20).
Now if you're just listing common causes then sure.
"There seem to
generally be five types of guys as they deal with females" Yup. Anything and everything anyone says about human nature is going to be an oversimplification. Truthfully, I'm not sure you could do it with 1000 groups and... O well. I never claimed to be writing a definitive tome on how males see females, just broad strokes that are common enough causes.
"Comfies" and "uncomfies" are far too simplified and meaningless:No, there's tons of meaning right there; in fact, it's nothing but useful. Are you, as a male comfortable around females or not, generally. I'm not trying to get an encyclopedia answer, in detail or certainly not in length, out of anyone. All the same, it's a question to ask yourself. It's a "yes or no" answer with qualifiers. The "yes or no" is for your reference to see how serious a problem you think you have, and from there, the qualifiers tell you problem areas you might consider working on or in the case of a "no" answer the good spots you can work from:
"Yes, unless there's someone I think is cute."
"Yes, unless there's feminist in the room, or someone from the opposite political party, or an ex."
"No, unless I know the girl really well."
"No, because I'm scared I'll look stupid."
See how that is an incredibly useful thing to ask yourself? Categorical statements help a lot. Are you depressed? (Implied yes, or no), anxious? tired? I could write a book on any of these oversimplified catagories, but saying "Yes I'm depressed except around my boy/girlfriend." tells you something. <---- This statement both is admitting you're depressed and giving a key piece of information.
As for the "gays" as a separate category, we're different enough and have different underlying motivations to warrant our own category in my view. Screws and bolts are both fasteners and good but they are different, not better, not worse, different, with different concerns about their use and application (you often have to drill holes in wood for bolts whereas screws... screw right in). If it's a question of being more inclusive with other groups then fine but I was just simplifying it because it gets ridiculous if you don't. GLBTAQCGQIA: Gay, Lesbian, bisexual, Transgender, Asexual, Questioning, Curious, GenderQueer,Intersex, Allies. <--- See that? It's getting out of hand with everyone wanting their own letter in the alphabet soup. I can't pronounce that, and that is when its time to stop using acronyms and come up with a better all inclusive term. Until and unless we do, I'm using gay. Though I've been told I'm not gay myself because I'm trans? [confused look].
The only practical way to be all inclusive would be to come up with a new term that everyone can latch onto.In summation, yup, it's oversimplified. It kind of has to be, because if you even could accurately write it all out about humanity, we'd be talking about a multi set, multi volume encyclopedia with each book larger than I am tall. Thus, yeah, I really wish I could write that, but I don't think I could in my lifetime to be perfectly honest.
http://www.pamshouseblend.com/diary/16309/lgbt-alphabet-soup-discuss-at-ones-own-risk-because-its-about-a-much-larger-conversationhttp://ourcommunitycalendar.wordpress.com/2007/12/11/%E2%80%9Clgbtqrstuvwxyz-gay-rights-movement-or-alphabet-soup%E2%80%9D-%E2%80%94-by-eric-marcus/