ALL I HAD; I FEARED
I
was raised in a society that equated homosexuality with the worst of all sins. Naturally,
that presented major problems for a homosexual teenager. It was important that
I present myself as a normal kid. Therefore, in regards to my homosexuality, I
had to, hide it, deny it, reject it, fight it, closet it, condemn it, control
it, alter it, and most of all, fear it. Fear became my Cult Leader, because
what I feared was fear itself. I feared being made fun of as a teenager. I
feared being rejected by my friends. I feared the embarrassment it would bring
to my family. As an adult, I feared being fired from the job I loved. I feared loosing the years I spent in preparation
for public school teaching. I feared loosing customers in my retail establishment.
I feared being kicked out of my church. All I had; I feared.
Even
though I spent too many years living in the closet, I always knew it was not
right for me. However, at the time, my mind-set told me it was the road to
least resistance. It is terrible to recall how the lack of courage prevented me
from standing up for the homosexual that I am, and for other homosexuals around
the world. Nevertheless, in my retirement, I plan to make up for the time lost.
I
will never forget the day when I decided to tear down the walls of the closet,
burst open the door of restriction, open the windows of freedom, and shout to
the world, “I am a free man.” No more pretense, no more secrets, no more guilt in sexual expressions, and no more
fear in demonstrating love. Freedom is my master and free is what I will always
be.
Now,
I wish I could be the Moses of all the oppressed homosexuals in the world, and
lead them out of the dark, shadows of the closet and into the bright, sunshine
of freedom. However, I understand the social bars that limit freedoms for
homosexuals, for I also have encountered being captured in the prison of fear.
I can only pray for the day when all homosexuals will have the courage to say
to the world, “I am who I am,” and regardless of the consequences, I will live
my life as a free person.
There
is not an out-of-the-closet homosexual American who has not experienced
prejudice accompanied with discrimination. We have grown accustomed to being
called degrading slur words used by a straight society. We have learned to live
with fear because we never know what awaits us around the next corner. We never
know when a redneck’s baseball bat is going to find a home against our skull.
We never know when a fellow employee is going to expose our sexuality in an
attempt to get us fired. We never know when someone is going to accuse us of
some false sexual activity that will ruin our reputation. We never know when we are going to return
home and find a note on our door that demands we move, because gays are no
longer welcome in the housing project or the apartment complex.
Even though we live with fear, we have allowed fear to become our teacher, and we learn from what we fear the most. Even in fear, the Pope announced equality for all homosexuals. This will go down in history as one of the most important endorsements the world has ever encountered regarding the rights of minorities.
Although
this changes the subject somewhat, this is a required discussion. It would be well for Amy Coney Barrett to
know that homosexuality is not a preference. Ignorance astounds me for it is hard to
believe that Republicans are going to appoint a Supreme Court Justice to a
lifetime position with such limited knowledge. It is even more surprising that
in the 21st Century how little a so-called educated person knows
about homosexuality. If homosexuality was a choice no person in their right
mind would choose to be something that carries so many negative characteristics
in a heterosexual dominated society.
Like
so many other human characteristics, sexuality is established at conception. It
causes one to wonder how any individual could obtain even a four year college
degree without acquiring that knowledge. This is further proof that ignorance within
governmental officials causes social turbulence. Understanding minorities is
required for any government in order to establish peace, and when laws are
passed that discriminate social unrest occurs. These are hard lessons that
American governmental officials have failed to learn, and as a result, have
placed the entire
In
conclusion, of all the fears that existed in my previous life, what I am now, I
owe to being homosexual. I have found happiness and I have found love. I am
surrounded by good friends and I am enjoying a retirement that at one time I
thought was impossible. What time I have
left on this earth I dedicate to being a witness of encouragement to other
homosexuals to be proud of whom they are. To a gay, man, women, boy or girl;
you are a child of God and God made you the way you are for a purpose. When you
fulfill that purpose happiness will flow like a mighty stream and joy will
flood like a prodigious river.
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