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- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!torn!news.ccs.queensu.ca!qucdn!burger
- Organization: Queen's University at Kingston
- Date: Sat, 23 Jan 1993 05:51:43 EST
- From: bb <BURGER@QUCDN.QueensU.CA>
- Message-ID: <93023.055143BURGER@QUCDN.QueensU.CA>
- Newsgroups: soc.motss
- Subject: Re: Tips for coming out to friends?
- References: <1993Jan21.035753.5353@Princeton.EDU>
- Lines: 38
-
- In article <1993Jan21.035753.5353@Princeton.EDU>, dem@cs.princeton.edu (Doron
- Meyer) says:
- >
- >Hello again everyone.
- >
- >I'm starting to contemplate coming out selectively to very
- >close friends. However, I want to make sure to do it right,
- >as I can't undo things if I screw them up.
-
- True. Once you're out to someone (read: the world through that grape vine)
- you can't go completely back in. Mind you, who would want to? ;-)
-
- >What I'm asking is what things that worked and what you
- >wished you had done when coming out to your best friends.
-
- Remember that everyone is an individual and will have differing responses to
- what you have to say. My route was to select my most catholic friend and work
- stuff out on/with her. This was, although, my second attempt. My first attempt
- to be myself took place when I was a teen and the "adult/friend" was so
- disgusted that I locked myself away for a couple more years and a new city.
-
- >Did it work better to mention it in passing, as if it was
- >inconsequential (i.e. "I can't wait until the next meeting of <insert
- >gay and lesbian organization here>") or to be straight out? (i.e.
- >"Bob, I have to tell you something important that I've been hiding;
- >I'm gay.")
-
- I found that I had to do the straight out approach with all of my family
- members and some of my more dense friends. I don't think that I used the
- "hiding" line -- it sounds like a "What do you mean? Don't you trust me?"
- generator.
-
- What I did notice when I started this coming out process was that with some
- people I used the term "not heterosexual" as opposed to "gay" or "homosexual."
- Semantics? Maybe. But I just found that term easier with/on a few of my more
- straight friends.
-
- Bob
-