October 11 is National Coming Out Day — meant to be a reminder of the power of coming out as gay or lesbian.* The day marks the anniversary of the National March on Washington for Lesbian and Gay Rights in 1988.
Why is coming out so powerful? Simple. It’s easy to pretend gay rights don’t matter when you don’t personally know anyone who is gay. It’s easy to think the haters and bullies have nothing to do with you. It’s easy to pretend your friends and family aren’t affected.
But chances are, you actually DO know someone who is gay. You just may not know it. And as an acquaintance said after reading my son’s powerful post about growing up a gay sports fanatic (which makes me cry every time I read it):
“When it involves someone you know and like, it causes you to be a lot more open-minded and accepting to things that are normally foreign.”
Yes, it’s foreign to some, but it’s not a lifestyle choice, as some people call it. Do you think anyone would choose to be discriminated against, to risk being beaten up or even killed, depending on where you live and what the local laws are? No, as Lady Gaga sings, we’re all “born this way,” whether “this way” is gay, straight, male, female, white, black or any other variation of human.
That’s why coming out is so important. As more people come out, others start to realize they actually DO know someone who is gay; and oh my gosh, it’s not the end of the world! Sometimes, they change their minds, or at least become slightly more tolerant.
Changing minds one at a time is a slow process, but it’s having an effect. In March 2013, the Pew Research Center for the People and Press reported that:
“[T]he rise in support for marriage equality over the past 10 years was among the largest changes in opinion on any policy issue over this time period.”
Of those who said they changed their mind on the issue, 37% said the reason was they have gay friends or family. And whether you know it or not, guaranteed you DO have gay friends or family.
As the Human Rights Campaign says, “Every person who speaks up changes more hearts and minds, and creates new advocates for equality.” And so, in May 2019, Pew Research found that 61% of Americans support same-sex marriage. In 2004, 60% of Americans opposed same-sex marriage.
That’s why coming out is important. That’s why there is a Coming Out Day.
Getting off my soapbox now. 🙂
*Gay and lesbian has expanded to LGBTQ2: lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer (or questioning) and two-spirit.
This post updates one I wrote in 2013. Image by Stavrialena Gontzou on Unsplash.
Related reading:
- Why the careless use of “fag” and “gay” hurts.
- The locker room is apparently a homophobic place. You Can Play is trying to change that.
- A moving (and rare) show of support from a Christian pastor.
- The Trevor Project has a handbook to make the coming-out process easier.
I missed the first posting of this article. Thanks for the re-post.
Thanks for commenting, Jim!