‘ALL I really wanted was to be a wife and mum,’ Anna told a national daily on Wednesday.

She met Dave, ‘fancied him like crazy’, and ‘I said yes straight away’ when he proposed.

Anna had three children, but at 35 fell in love with a woman and moved out.

Research, stated the newspaper, confirmed ‘more and more previously straight women’ are going gay.

A BBC executive’s own research concluded that the majority of viewers are now comfortable with homosexuals and lesbians on TV.

He explained this while introducing BBC Two’s autumn drama Christopher and His Kind, about a homosexual author, the inspiration behind Cabaret.

The nature/nurture debate rumbles on.

Is homosexuality something you’re born with, or is it perhaps a bad nurturing experience?

Christopher Isherwood, for example, was on the run from an overbearing mum.

Nature may create gays, but growing evidence reveals nurture is the greater cause.

People can be changed, especially among those for whom sex is a grey area.

Roman and Greek histories tell us that gay behaviour was once rife.

The Sodom story in Genesis reveals that things had reached the stage where every man wanted to ‘biblically know’ visiting angels.

I’ve spent the last fortnight in Spain where religion shuts the gay issue firmly behind Mediterranean shutters.

But back in the UK we meet it on screen, street and TV soap, and especially among the young.

Here, being gay is becoming a fashion statement.

God ended Sodom when it got too bad.

Likewise, ancient Rome and Greece perished.

History seems to teach that excess equals extinction.