Most importantly, coming out is not just about living your personal truth. It means standing to be counted with members of our community who are being bashed.
It humanizes the LGBT+ community for your family and friends, forcing them to confront their biases. 5)
If you’re LGBT+, coming out is essential to your well being and health. The closet is poison. It feeds self hate, and warps our views of other people.
If you’re living in the closet, you know the toll the fear has on you. Coming out frees you, it saves your life. 6)
I wrote this thread about my struggles as a closeted young man last year.
If you’re a parent, please pay attention to the roll the religion and politics I was raised in played.
Homophobia is often not communicated explicitly, but implicitly. 7)
My greatest regret in life is not coming out earlier, and that’s true of many LGBT+ people.
What may seem to you in the closet as the end of the world is actually a huge weight off your shoulders, a freedom you can’t imagine from within the closet. 8)
Still, the right time and place to come out is a personal decision that only you can make for yourself. There are, sadly, places in this world that it just isn’t safe to come out, including in the US.
It’s important to consider the circumstances you live in before coming out. 9)
If you’re a young person living with homophobic parents, the danger of being disowned is a real one. The percentage of homelessness in teenagers is highest among LGBT+ teens.
Here are some strategies for coming out to homophobic parents. 10)
For many young people, the natural point to come out is when leaving home.
It means a reboot of your life, a chance to find an accepting area to live, a school to nurture your growth, a chance to build relationships with people who accept you for who you are. 11)
If you’re planning to go to college, that is the perfect time to come out. Where High School can be oppressive to you young LGBT+ people, college is a new start surrounded by more open minded people looking to make more diverse friends. 12)
Coming out doesn’t mean that everyone will accept you, but it is a good way to sort out those who truly care about you from those who don’t.
If a family member or friend can’t accept you as an LGBT+ person, as much as that hurts, their relationship just isn’t worth anything. 13)
If you’re in the closet, but you consider yourself LGBT+, congratulation! You’ve already taken the first step! You’ve accepted for yourself who you are.
After determining that the time is right to come out, the next step is choosing your first person to come out to. 14)
For many people, coming out to a close friend is an easier first than family. An LGBT+ person in your life that you trust may be your best choice. They’ve been where you are.
Practicing with people you trust will make it easier to come out to those you’re unsure of. 15)
The hardest thing you’ll ever say is not “I’m gay,” it’s “there’s something I have to tell you.”
Then you’ll freeze. It’s ok. The person you’re talking to will see you’re in agony. Ask them for their patience. Then, force yourself to spit it out. You’ll feel better. 16)
Prepare before you start the conversation. Think about what it is you want to say. Think about different scenarios on how they might react, and how you should respond.
People react differently. Some will ask you questions, some will be casual and accepting. Both are natural. 17)
Remember that however long it’s taken to accept yourself, the person you’re coming out to is just starting to deal with your revelation. Be patient.
Expect questions, and be prepared with answers, even to annoying ones. It’s not a choice, or a phase. You know who you are. 18)
If you’re a straight person reading this thread, then you probably consider yourself an ally. You have to come out too!
Be open with your friends and family about your allyship. Tell them that you’re available to talk about things they’re going through. Be a listener. 19)
If you’re a parent or friend to a person you suspect is LGBT+, it’s natural to consider telling them what you suspect to spare them the pain of coming out.
That may be a relief to some, but for many, it may trigger a response of panic and denial if they’re not ready. 20)
Here are some great sources on coming out to read through:
If your the parent or friend of an LGBT+ person, consider joining your local chapter of PFLAG (Parents and friends of lesbians and gays) pflag.org
22)
For me, as a closeted gay teen, the idea of coming out was like the end of the world to me. My way out was suicide.
Please talk to someone if your considering hurting yourself. You have too much love to give, and too much joy to experience. ❤️ 23) thetrevorproject.org/#sm.00001tkmb9…
I wish I could tell the young, closeted me how happy being gay has made me. It’s become my joy, the light of my life.
Coming out wasn’t an end, but a beginning. A huge weight lifted off my shoulders, a relief.
It’s never too late to come out, and it always gets better. ❤️ 24)
Join #LGBTVoices in celebrating 50 years of #Pride! New tweets on LGBT+ topics every day in June.
How far has the LGBT+ community come? What work do we still have to do?
RT and join in on the discussion.
Tell us your stories!
Born in 1944, Felice (pronounced “feliz”) Picano grew up around NYC. He was an extremely gifted student, graduating Cum Laude from Queens College in 1964, at the age of 20, with English Dept Honors.
He had some notion of becoming an author, but wouldn’t begin writing for 10 yrs.
Felice became a published author in the mid 70s. His first novel “Smart as the Devil,” met with acclaim and was a PEN/Ernest Hemmingway Award nomination.
By 1980, Picano’s career was transitioning from main stream popular literature to pioneering the genre of gay literature.
🏳️🌈#LGBTVoices Celebrates🏳️🌈
FIFTY YEARS OF PRIDE
Today: How to Survive a Plague
By the end of the 20th century, 33 million people were living with HIV, and 14 million had died world wide.
Today, 1 in 7 infected are unaware of their status.
HIV is still a killer. #Pride 1)
HIV appears to have originated with the Simian Immunodeficiency Virus (SIV), and jumped to human infection through the consumption of wild chimpanzees. It mutated to the Human Immunodeficiency Virus by the early 20th century.
By the early 70’s, infections were global. 2)
The earliest well documented case of HIV originates from the Congo in 1959, the earliest retrospective case of AIDS was in Norway in 1966.
The vast majority of none sub-saharan infections can be traced to one carrier who brought it to the US in 1969. 3)
Some say that elections aren’t as important as other issues.
This attitude led many not to vote for Hillary out of ideological purity. 2 GOP additions to SCOTUS later, and Roe v. wade is in jeopardy.
Remember that when someone says impeachment is more important than elections.
While 70% of Dems favor impeachment, 2/3rds of Americans are against. Most importantly, independents, whose votes we need, are narrowly against, more so in swing states like PA, MI, and WI.
We worked hard to build a Dem majority in the House, including many hard fought red districts, put in peril if Dems start impeachment now.
When facing real electoral consequences, why insist on impeachment now if we have no chance of removing Trump without the Senate? 1)
3 mos of House control, televised hearings continue to expose Trump’s lawlessness. Dems prepare for hard court fights over subpoenas, particularly the full Mueller report.
The narrative that Dems are idle, not using every practical tool available to them, is false. 2)
There may come a time when impeachment is the only way. The courts may deny the Mueller report subpoena, and impeachment may be the only way to get access to grand jury testimony.
Why put our hard fought red district seats in jeopardy by putting the cart before the horse? 3)
I’m worried about some tweets I’m seeing. #Resisters attacking blue candidates or insisting on only support candidates of a certain identity.
I’m not saying discussion about privilege is invalid. But for god’s sake, where do you think this rhetoric comes from? Who benefits? 1)
In 2016, Russia stoked divisions between the left and center flanks of our party. We all took the bait, myself included. In the end, enough people in 3 states voted 3rd party, or stayed home to sink a close race.
In 2018, we united and won. That is our way to victory in 2020. 2)
Don’t begrudge a candidate’s turn in the sun.
Be aware that most of your favorite candidates are going to lose. That’s democracy. We need to unite around the winner with as little baggage as possible.
The GOP will pile plenty of dirt on the winner, we shouldn’t add to it. 3)
Asylum seekers are legal immigrants, and our country IS NOT too full to recieve them.
Immigrants contribute to our nation culturally and economically, new consumers that expand our econ.
Fear of demographic change fuels anti-immigration sentiment.
They’re just not white enough.
The Trump admin has been busy limiting LEGAL IMMIGRATION:
💢Refugee admissions lowest since 1980, even as America caused the violence most flee from.
💢Slowing lawful immigration to a crawl. Green Card backlog increased by 35% since 2016.
💢Unconstitutional Muslim ban.
💢Increase in referrals for denaturalization, a process with few legal grounds.
💢Greatly increasing deportation proceedings, limiting discretion of judges and over taxing resources for defense. Discourages applications for visas for victims of trafficking and Dom violence.