“…Moreover, the historically-contingent personal, social, and community relationships that lesbians and gay men form likely vary more widely and come into play at later points in the life course than they do among heterosexuals, whose sexual identities are typically formed in late childhood and young adulthood, and typically (although not always) remain the same over subsequent years. As Miller (2023 , p. 2) recently wrote, ‘LGB [lesbian, gay, and bisexual] people have not historically met heterosexual-centric markers of adulthood (i.e., marriage, childrearing) and, in other cases, these major life events were delayed until fairly recently’. Thus, ‘the’ life course plays out differently in gay contexts, enmeshed as it is in ‘queer temporalities, where cultural narratives provide for alternative articulations of life courses, futures, and ageing, away from “straight time”’ ( Sandberg and King, 2022 : 4).…”