Tuesday, April 10, 2007

A cocoa puffs moment

People sometimes ask why it takes so long for some people to come out (or why it took me so long to understand I was gay, and have a name for it). A few people assume it means I chose to be gay, because it was later in life, and well past puberty, and after dating guys. Some say it was because I went to a secular (i.e., non-Christian) college. Or that I went to public school my senior year.

But the funny thing about growing up without a lot of television, newspapers or magazines is that you don't really know what you don't know.

An example of this is when I asked a friend at college "Whatever happened to that John Lennon guy?" In 1993.

Or when I was listening to a new Elton John song and said, "Wow, I like this song. Has this guy recorded anything else?" In 1994.

Coming out of my closed family and sheltered Christian school life, I felt constantly amazed by the big world out there. And constantly surprised at learning new things.

Folks who weren't raised as I was may not understand what this is really like. I compare it to the time my parents took my sister and I to see a movie at "the movie house" (i.e., a movie theater). I was eleven, and Savannah Smiles was a family movie. It was a big deal for us to go to a movie theater.

I was sitting in my seat, looking up at that big screen, and heard Savannah ask for cocoa puffs (which, incidentally, I'd never tasted, but knew existed). Completely blown away by this, it was like my mind was doing a huge double-take.

You see, at age eleven, I didn't know that movies could be made about the present day. I had absolutely no idea, and I continued to feel shock, and a shiver down my spine as we were watching the movie. I pondered this a lot when I went to sleep that night. I'd watched Heidi, Little House on the Prairie, The Sound of Music, Carousel, It's a Wonderful Life, and even a John Wayne movie (and I still laugh about my younger sister asking "Why is he talking about our pastor?" when someone said "Bastard"). But it had never entered my mind that a movie didn't have to be about something 50 years ago. I didn't have any category in my head for that, and struggled to come to terms with this new reality.

This is what it felt like when I started to realize I was gay. I didn't even have any framework in my head for thinking about it. I didn't know how to even conceptualize it. It was so far out of my realm of thought, that I didn't know how to categorize what I was feeling.

Because of that, it took me a long time to realize I was gay. It doesn't mean I wasn't gay before, and it doesn't mean I didn't know there was something a little "off" about me; it just means I didn't even know what all I didn't know.

Sometimes people (gay folks especially) can't understand why I would want to change who I was. All I can say was I didn't know what I didn't know. Now I know that I'm fine just how I am. Accepted and loved. Not in spite of something, but just because of my character, personality, humor and compassionate nature. It's nice to know that finally.

I really hope this next generation of kids don't have to wait to find that out in their thirties.

(The painting is one I did in 1994-1995 when I was trying to come to terms with being gay)

5 comments:

  1. Oh Christine! I certainly hope you have found people who don't tell you "Why did it take you so long!!!" but rather "I hear you sister. It took me that long too." I guess this note is to say just that: " I hear you sister. It took me that long too." In my case I just happened to be born in a country where homosexuality is not even a subject of conversation.

    I grew up in a heterosexual society where I saw a few gay men here and there (who we all thought were freaks), and never ever encountered a lesbian woman. We were all hiding, getting rotten inside the closet, in anguish to know why we were the only unfortunate ones born with such sick aberrations.

    My heart goes out to you as you step into the world as the beautiful woman God has made you to be. Your story inspires me to do the same.

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  2. It took me 40 years to come out. (you little whipper-snapper, you!)

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  3. I'm just amazed you've come out of it (no pun intended...) so well! Seemingly, that is... A friend of mine, being asked when he knew, said he'd always been gay, but - as you - just didn't know there was such a concept. After almost 10 years with his now husband, he's not doubting, though ;)

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  4. Thanks to BoxTutle Bulletin I'm new here. I understand where your coming from, being homeschooled for my entire grade school did a number like that on me too. I love your way of puting it, I know I've had those moments!

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  5. I am sitting hear laughing so hard. I did not know who Elvis Presley was. The only group I did know of was The Bay City Rollers because my sister (a lesbian) had it in her room!

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