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- Newsgroups: soc.motss
- Path: sparky!uunet!haven.umd.edu!darwin.sura.net!newsserver.jvnc.net!princeton!phoenix.Princeton.EDU!dem
- From: dem@cs.princeton.edu (Doron Meyer)
- Subject: Re: Tips for coming out to friends?
- Message-ID: <1993Jan25.224344.5405@Princeton.EDU>
- Originator: news@nimaster
- Sender: news@Princeton.EDU (USENET News System)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: phoenix.princeton.edu
- Organization: Princeton University
- References: <1993Jan24.131549.1209@Princeton.EDU> <1993Jan25.001637.19673@reed.edu> <1993Jan25.184923.7160@osf.org>
- Date: Mon, 25 Jan 1993 22:43:44 GMT
- Lines: 85
-
- In article <1993Jan25.184923.7160@osf.org> coren@speed.osf.org (Robert Coren) writes:
- >In article <1993Jan25.001637.19673@reed.edu>, nelson@reed.edu (Nelson Minar) writes:
- >>
- >> [our story so far - Doron asked for advice on how to come out, nervous
- >> about what could go wrong, how his friends would react. Arne wrote
- >> back saying "why is it such a big deal? Coming out is easy. It should be."]
-
- >> Well, actually, I think coming out *is* a big deal. I don't think that
- >> Arne was necessarily being insensitive, but he was broadcasting his
- >> own worldview to others.
-
- I didn't mean to say that he was, only that I at first thought
- that he was. I really appreciate Arne's response.
-
- >> Coming out means so many things. It means being self-assured enough
- >> that you can say "I'm gay" to people and not flinch, not experience a
- >> worry about "gad, I'm a pervert". It means being willing to tell
- >> people what you are, even if they might not like it. It means changing
- >> existing friendships, possibly risking them. None of these are small
- >> things.
-
- Unfortunately, I don't have the guts to come out to the whole school.
- It simply would be hell.. I'm living in enemy territory so to
- speak, among tons of reactionaries who are bigots not because
- they believe it so much rather than because they think it
- makes them 'cool.' A bunch of teenage boys trying to outdo
- each other, with an easy target, living with them 24 hours a day..
- no, this isn't a good place to come out. I just need
- to tell a few close friends. I'm sick of hiding it from them.
-
- >> It's nice if you can stop thinking about coming out to people as a
- >> "big deal". But that takes time, and experience, and lots of work.
- >> Personally, I don't know if I'll ever get there.
- >
- >Nelson speaks wisely here, and helpfully, from a perspective near in
- >age to Doron, and not that far removed in situation. I'll try to add
- >another perspective, which I hope Doron (and anybody else in a similar
- >situation) will find helpful.
-
- I did find it very helpful. I've gotten lots of great advice.
-
- >[great advice deleted for sake of brevity]
-
- >Which is not to say that, the first few times you do this, your
- >stomach won't churn or your hands tremble. But it defuses some of the
- >emotional intensity that comes from conversations that start with,
- >"I've got something real important [read: threatening] to tell you."
-
- I can agree that coming out casually is much better, but it
- somehow seems fake with close friends that you've been deceiving
- for however long.
-
- >[more great advice]
-
- >Another approach, if you're unfortunate enough to be in an applicable
- >situation, is not to let homophobic jokes or remarks pass. This is a
- >good idea anyway, but it's often hardest for closeted gay people. If
- >the offender, when challenged, says, "What's it to you?" or, even,
- >"what, are you queer or something?" you have to be ready.
-
- Ready to do what? I'm not asking this rhetorically; I honestly
- don't know what to do. In fact, I've become more leery
- of challenging homophobic jokes and anti-equal-rights discussions
- recently (and believe me, I hear them practically every day) for
- exactly this reason. What am I going to do if they ask if I'm
- gay? Before, when I was lying to myself, I could always retreat
- to the famous, "Oh, but *I'm* not gay," read as, "Leave
- the fucking faggots alone, but thank God I'm not one of them."
- Now I don't know what I'd do. I'm certainly not going to out
- myself to the whole school.. so what do I do? Lie? That's
- not me, and I can't do it convincingly.
-
- >> You've got an amazing sense of perspective. But if it feels like the
- >> world is being flipped on its ear, well, it is being flipped on its
- >> ear. You can't suddenly decide "OK, I'm not going to feel like this is
- >> a big deal" - that peace takes time. You can say "this is a major
- >> upheavel but I'm going to survive it."
-
- >> Nelson, pretending to be wise.
-
- >Pretty convincingly, I'd say.
-
- I would agree wholeheartedly.
-
- Doron (trying to tie together the multiple branches of this thread.)
-