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Coming Out . . .
Adult Resources . . .
Empty Closets --
Online Guide to Coming Out.
This section of EmptyClosets.com examines the common stages that
a person typically goes through when coming out as lesbian, gay
or bisexual. It is important to realize that everyone is unique
and not everyone will follow these stages exactly how they are
presented here. It is perfectly normal for a person to go
through these stages in a different order or to even skip entire
stages. It is also very common for a person to be going through
multiple stages at one time. Everyone's situation is different
and, therefore, everyone's process of coming out will be equally
individual. The stages listed on this web site are offered as a
guide so that you may know what to expect when coming out of the
closet. The trick is to take this guide and apply it to your
situation and your life. Again, everyone's coming out process
will be different, and you should only do what seems best for
you.
African American Lesbian And Gay History: An Exploration -- By
Barbara Smith . . . [S]cholars have uncovered
valuable evidence of Black lesbian and gay existence before
Stonewall, especially during the 1920s in Harlem. The analyses
of this information, however, sometimes overlook important
meanings, advance inaccurate interpretations, or fail to place
Black lesbian and gay experience into the context of Black
American life. The most distorting error is either to ignore or
give inadequate weight to the realities of racism, segregation,
and white supremacy as they shape African American lesbian and
gay people's existences.
A Guide to Coming Out -- Being attracted to someone of
the same sex can be frightening... so frightening that you may
deny your feelings, or throw yourself into dating the opposite
sex, just to prove you are not gay or lesbian.
All the facts about gay people
[Courtesy RFSL pamphlet "Lesbian and Gay -- The Swedish Way"]
Coming Out Introduction -- For too long we have been
told that we must hide our homosexuality. We have been
asked to live a lie. We have been forced to lead double lives.
We have been told by our homophobic society to deny who we
really are and whom we really love.
DO YOU KNOW A LESBIAN? As women's organizations and
other progressive groups endeavour to address the diversity of
the Canadian community and to seek to open themselves to a broad
range of concerns, a frequently invisible minority speaks out.
We are lesbians. We are in most of your families. We are your
daughters, your sisters, your friends and your mothers. You know
us and love us, whether you realize it or not. We struggle
alongside you, often on issues that touch your lives far more
than they touch ours. As we have supported you, it is time for
you to support us.
The
Coming Out of a Lesbian's Mother
This is the story of my learning and accepting that my daughter
is a lesbian. I publish it here in the hope that 1) it will help
other parents to accept their child's sexuality; 2) it will help
young lesbians and gays to understand their parents' reactions
to learning that their child is homosexual; and 3) it will be
used by gays and lesbians who are just coming out as a
conversation-starter with their parents, a way of saying "I'm
gay and I desperately need you to understand." It's a long
essay. Please feel free to print it out to read at your leisure
or to pass along to someone if you think it might help them to
understand.
Resources from Parents And Friends of Lesbians and Gays (PFLAG)
PFLAG
-- PFLAG's Vision
We, the parents, families and friends of lesbian, gay, bisexual
and transgendered persons, celebrate diversity and envision a
society that embraces everyone, including those of diverse
sexual orientations and gender identities. Only with respect,
dignity and equality for all will we reach our full potential as
human beings, individually and collectively. PFLAG welcomes the
participation and support of all who share in, and hope to
realize this vision.
For Family
and Friends -- If you're like many people, your first
reaction to learning that your loved one is gay, lesbian,
bisexual or transgendered is "How will I ever handle this?" Most
people aren't prepared for the words, "I'm gay."
Our Daughters & Sons: Q&A for Parents of GLBT People.
A booklet (in PDF format) produced by PFLAG. Requires
Adobe Acrobat viewer.
Other Publications by PFLAG
Our
Trans Children
American Psychological Association:
Q&A About Sexual Orientation
& Homosexuality
Dos and Don'ts
for Families & Friends
Find a
PFLAG chapter near you
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Hot
Topic:
Linda
Villarosa
Former
Executive Editor of Essence Magazine
"My
imagination of how people were going to react was so much worse
than the reality."
As an African-American lesbian, Linda Villarosa went through
a similar learning experience. Confused and not sure about her
sexual orientation, she did not explore her feelings because she
was trying to fit into a white neighborhood and didn't want to
do anything others could think of as wrong.
Finally, in college, "I came out because I couldn't stand not
being myself any more." But then she went to work at Essence
magazine and was again afraid to come out. "I think what happens
when you're black is you feel your community is an oasis against
some of the white racist people you know, and you become really
afraid you're going to lose that."
But, once again, she found she couldn't stand hiding any
more, and she took the chance: "My boss and I were in her car
coming back from a weekend editorial retreat, and she was saying
something about fixing me up with her brother-in-law. And I just
blurted out, I'm a lesbian. She was embarrassed about the
brother-in-law and very kind. And that Monday, I came out to
just about everybody else at work, and everyone was fine."
A year later, she came out to seven million readers in a
widely acclaimed Essence article she wrote with her mother and
was later promoted to executive editor of the magazine. |
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