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- Path: sparky!uunet!ogicse!reed!nelson
- From: nelson@reed.edu (Nelson Minar)
- Newsgroups: soc.motss
- Subject: Re: Tips for coming out to friends?
- Message-ID: <1993Jan25.001637.19673@reed.edu>
- Date: 25 Jan 93 00:16:37 GMT
- Article-I.D.: reed.1993Jan25.001637.19673
- References: <1jrdj1INNe5a@mizar.usc.edu> <1993Jan24.065752.2143@macc.wisc.edu> <1993Jan24.131549.1209@Princeton.EDU>
- Reply-To: nelson@reed.edu (Nelson Minar)
- Organization: Reed College, Portland, OR
- Lines: 48
-
- In article <1993Jan24.131549.1209@Princeton.EDU> dem@phoenix.Princeton.EDU (Doron Meyer) 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."]
-
- >When I first read Arne's response, I was first upset at what
- >I considered its insensitivity. But the more I thought about it,
- >the more I realized how right Arne is. It *isn't* a big deal.
-
- 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.
-
- 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.
-
- 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. Right now I'm in a
- situation now where most of the people I meet figure out I'm gay, so I
- don't have to really come out to them. I feel "out". But when I go
- back to Houston, where people I knew from high school have no idea, I
- still get nervous when thinking about coming out to them.
-
- I know Arne fairly well, and I'm getting to know Doron. I think that
- when Arne says "coming out isn't a big deal", it is completely true
- for him. But I have a hard time seeing how it could be true for
- someone in Doron's position. As Doron says:
-
- >This doesn't mean everything is peachy keen. It's not. But, like
- >a lot of changes for teenagers, it can seem like the whole world
- >has flipped on its ear. Not everyone has known or let themselves
- >know since an early age.
-
- 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.
- __
- nelson@reed.edu \/ Civil rights or civil war
-