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- Path: sparky!uunet!mcsun!sunic!dkuug!diku!storner
- From: storner@diku.dk (Henrik St|rner)
- Newsgroups: soc.motss
- Subject: Re: Advice needed-Bad comming out experience
- Message-ID: <1993Jan22.224344.5344@odin.diku.dk>
- Date: 22 Jan 93 22:43:44 GMT
- References: <1993Jan22.192938.27090@cs.ucla.edu>
- Sender: storner@ask.diku.dk
- Organization: Department of Computer Science, U of Copenhagen
- Lines: 73
-
- mchan@oahu.cs.ucla.edu (Ming-Hing Chan) writes:
-
-
- {a friend came out to his parents}
-
- >They sent him to a psychiatrist to try to 'CURE' him. The worst thing is
- >that the psychiatrist told his mother that he could change if he wanted to.
-
- Hmmm - why doesn't he get another psychiatrist ? My parents tried pulling
- the same stunt on me. Fortunately, they sent me to a guy who realized within
- 30 minutes, that my problem wasn't with my sexuality, but with my parents. So
- he offered to have a talk with my parents and tell them, that if anyone
- had a problem, they were the ones.
-
- >His mom truly thinks that he can be cured. She told him that it wasn't bad
- >to have a disease as long as you try to cure it. She said, "why don't you
- >want to take some pills just like your father does to control his
- >high-blood pressure.'
- >Her mom wanted him to date some girls. She wanted him to give her 2 yrs
- >to try dating girls. She placed this guilt trip on him: "I have
- >done so much for you in my life, why can't you just give me 2 yrs. Just
- >try dating for 2 yrs. That's all I ask" -- his mom.
-
- >The worst thing is that his mom is really suicidal. She cries almost every
- >time he sees her. His father said to him, "see what you've done to your
- >mom, you little monster." His father said that he had never seen her
- >this way. My friend is also very depressed too.
-
- Can't blame him for being depressed. But seriously, his parents do need some
- kind of counseling. Trying to force their child into their own view of how
- the world should be is - IMHO - plain sick.
-
- If possible, your friend should leave his parents alone for a while. Don't
- let them argue whether it is right or wrong, what he is doing. If they want to
- talk about what this means to him, fine - but it must be based on the clear
- understanding, that this is *not* something that will "go away".
-
- Does he have any sisters/brothers who might be more sympathetic, then try
- to get their help. They will of course be under some pressure from the parents,
- but maybe they will be easier to convince that he is doing what is right for
- him.
-
- >What should he do? He doesn't have many friends and he doesn't have any
- >one close to talk to either because him parents made him promised not to
- >tell anybody related or anyone who knows the family. He is in a very bad
- >situation with no one to turn to. I'm just a casual acquaintance.
-
- I would not let my parents decide who I could or could not talk to about
- such an inportant matter. If there is someone that he trusts, talk to
- him/her. Right now, what he needs is support from someone that knows him
- and his parents. Letting the parents decide who he may talk to is yet another
- way for them to control him - this is definitely *not* in his own best interest.
-
- >On top of that, he has 2 homophobic roommates who suspect him to be gay and
- >constantly harass him. He had to go home every weekend (I think his
- >parents are monitoring him).
-
- >Any advice to deal with this will be welcomed and forwarded to him.
- >Email is preferred.
-
- >Thanks in Advance
-
- >Hing
-
- >--
- >*-----* Hing Chan (mchan@cs.ucla.edu chan@gsaup.ucla.edu)
- > \ /
- > \ /
- > *
- --
- Henrik Storner (storner@olivetti.dk / storner@diku.dk)
- Tech. Support
- Olivetti Denmark
-