Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
Ex gay husband - 2. Coming out
When I think back to my coming out, a few key data come to my mind: I came out to my parents on my eighteenth birthday. In the preceding weeks, I had already come out to my brothers, my aunt and my grandma. But in case of my parents, it was different: Even though, they were tolerant overall, I had huge difficulties to tell them. Since I'm twelve or thirteen, I know that I'm gay, but until my eighteenth birthday was coming closer, I hadn't given coming out any thought.
Sure, one could argue that coming out is not a necessity since straight people don't have to come out either, but that's comparing apples to oranges. There's an organization called "SpeakOUT", where volunteer speakers hold speeches about LGBT* topics at schools. They have an exercise where each student thinks about three traits that constitutes them. Then, they start discussions in groups while avoiding mentioning these three traits. This exercise should emphasize how hard it is, to hide an important part of oneself. And this was one of the reasons for me to come out: I accepted my orientation once I was certain about being gay and even though, I hadn't encountered homophobia personally, I experienced heteronormativity in my everyday life. For instance, if I was asked if I had a girlfriend yet, there were a few possible ways to react:
Denying it since having a female partner was simply ineligible
Denying but translating "girlfriend" to "boyfriend" in my head since I was single anyway
Coming out by correcting "girlfriend" to "boyfriend" verbally
The problem with this is, that I were forced to react to this in one way or the other. If I didn't come out, I would hide a part of myself; if I did, someone else determined when I had to come out. That's why I decided to flight forward: I came out on my eighteenth birthday.
∞
Mark and I didn't need to come out to each other, because the community where we met was specifically for young gays—so this was certain from the very beginning.
The day after my surprise wedding, Colin continued our conversation we had in the group chat. He hemmed and hawed and eventually informed us that he had to tell us something important. All with a sudden, he was unsure on how to begin. All the confidence he had yesterday when making his marital choice seemed to be gone. Yet, he was sure about one thing: That he wanted to tell us something. He wanted to tell us something, he seemingly hadn't told anyone ever before, or just very few people he trusted no matter what. Either way, that meant that he didn't only trust me in being a good husband, he also trusted us in general. The trust seemed to be that strong that he wanted to tell us something with which he had huge difficulties to call it as it was.
The safe space the group was eventually seemed to be enough to give him the confidence he needed. "I'm gay", he blurted out.
∞
A little later, he told us how the hare was set running: At school, Mark had always teased him, that he had to be gay. Of course, Mark couldn't have known how right he was—part of it was just his humor and the other part was just an assumption that could have been wishful thinking just as well. That recently reached a point at which Colin asked Mark to stop making these jokes, because he was indeed right. Surprised and happy to be right—exposing a gay person hadn't been his intention—Mark reduced his insinuations, because a complete discontinuation of his badinages might have been suspicious.
- 9
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
Recommended Comments
Chapter Comments
-
Newsletter
Sign Up and get an occasional Newsletter. Fill out your profile with favorite genres and say yes to genre news to get the monthly update for your favorite genres.