GAY TEENS COMING OUT EARLIER TO PEERS & FAMILY
By
Marilyn Elias, USA TODAY
Kate Haigh, 18, a high school senior in St. Paul,
recalls attending her first meeting at the school's
Gay-Straight Alliance club when she was in the ninth
grade. "I said, 'My name is Kate, and I'm a lesbian.' It
was so liberating. I felt like something huge had been
lifted off my shoulders, and finally I had people to
talk to."
Zach Lundin, 16, has brought boyfriends to several
dances at his high school in suburban Seattle.
Vance Smith wanted to start a club to support gay
students at his rural Colorado school but says
administrators balked. At age 15, Vance contacted a New
York advocacy group that sent school officials a letter
about students' legal rights. Now 17, Smith has his
club.
Gay teenagers are "coming out" earlier than ever, and
many feel better about themselves than earlier
generations of gays, youth leaders and researchers say.
The change is happening in the wake of opinion polls
that show growing acceptance of gays, more supportive
adults and positive gay role models in popular media.
"In my generation, you definitely didn't come out in
high school. You had to move away from home to be gay,"
says Kevin Jennings, 43, executive director of the Gay,
Lesbian and Straight Education Network, a national group
that promotes a positive school climate for gay
children. "Now so many are out while they're still at
home. They're more vocal than we were."
Still, many continue to have a tough time. The worst
off, experts say, are young people in conservative rural
regions and children whose parents cannot abide having
gay offspring. Taunting at school is still common.
Cyber-bullying is "the new big thing," says Laura
Sorensen of Affirmations Lesbian and Gay Community
Center in Ferndale, Mich. "Kids are getting hate mail
and taunts on MySpace or Facebook."
But as young gays become more visible targets, they also
have more sources of help, experts say. In the 11 years
since Jennings founded the education network, parents
have become more supportive of gay teens, he says. Also,
the network has trained thousands of school officials on
how to reduce gay bashing.
Schools are more likely than in the past to have openly
gay staff members who can help young people, says
Anthony D'Augelli, an associate dean at Pennsylvania
State University. In a recent national survey, one-third
of school psychologists said they had counseled students
or parents about sexual orientation.
In the mid-1990s, a few dozen Gay-Straight Alliance
clubs were in U.S. high schools; now 3,200 are
registered with the education network, Jennings says.
The Internet also has eased isolation for gay teens,
offering a place for socializing and support, says
Stephanie Sanders of the Kinsey Institute for Research
in Sex, Gender, and Reproduction in Bloomington, Ind.
Cultural diversity is prevalent
Teens are coming out in an era when more Americans than
ever consider homosexuality acceptable. In 2006, 54%
found homosexuality acceptable, compared with 38% in
1992, Gallup polls show.
Youths also swim in a cultural sea that's far more
pro-gay than ever, says Ritch Savin-Williams, a
psychologist at Cornell University and author of The
New Gay Teenager. From MTV's The Real World
to Will & Grace and Ellen DeGeneres hosting the
Oscars, "kids can see gays in a positive light," he
says.
The news in December that Vice President Cheney's
daughter Mary is expecting a baby with her female
partner has even brought gay parenthood into the Bush
administration family.
By the time parenthood becomes an option, many
homosexuals have known their preferences for a long
time. Gay males and lesbians often feel "different" as
early as grade school, Sanders says.
Vance Smith, who grew up amid cornfields in LaSalle,
Colo., recalls being made fun of and called "gay" as
early as first grade. "I didn't even know what it was,"
he says. "I didn't know why I didn't like 'guy-type'
stuff like sports or why I was always more comfortable
hanging out with girls. And I didn't know why I should
be punished for it." By middle school, "I always had a
girlfriend, hoping people wouldn't know." But he
couldn't make himself feel heterosexual, Smith says. And
nobody was fooled, anyway.
Zach Lundin had been taught in church that homosexuality
was wrong. "I spent a lot of time trying to convince
myself I was straight," says Lundin, 17, of Kenmore,
Wash. At age 14 he told his parents he was attracted to
boys. "I said, 'I'm not going to lie to you anymore.
This is what I'm really feeling.' "
His father, Roy Lundin, wasn't thrilled to hear the
news. "Any parent who says his first reaction isn't 'Oh,
no!' probably isn't telling the truth," he says.
"We felt some sadness. We just assumed we'd have a
daughter-in-law someday and grandchildren. It becomes
your disappointment, but it's a selfish disappointment.
Now we've gotten past that.
"There are some parts of it that I'll never be
comfortable with," he concedes, "but that doesn't mean I
can't support Zach. I love him and I will support him."
A struggle for the parents
How parents deal with such news has a huge effect on
their kids' lives, says Caitlin Ryan, a social-work
researcher at San Francisco State University who is
studying the families of gay young people. Families can
move gradually from rejection to warm acceptance once
the shock wears off, she says. Parents with strong
convictions that homosexuality is always wrong find it
hardest to accept their gay teens, she says.
At its most extreme, that means throwing a child out.
Nobody knows exactly how many gay teens meet that fate,
but a disproportionate share of homeless young people in
the USA are homosexuals, a new report from the National
Gay and Lesbian Task Force says. Family conflict,
including conflict over sexual orientation, is a key
reason they're homeless, the report says. Several cities
have shelters for gay kids, but there's less help than
needed, says Carl Siciliano of the Ali Forney Center,
which offers limited housing for New York youths.
Sorensen, who coordinates a drop-in program in suburban
Detroit, sees teens from all kinds of families. "Kids
from the suburbs drive up in new SUVs their parents
bought them. But sometimes they're afraid to come out to
parents because of talk against gays they've heard at
home. Other kids have to scrounge together bus fare to
get here. They all would like to tell their parents and
be accepted, but not all of them can."
Not everyone applauds the soaring number of school-based
gay/straight alliances and adult-led programs for gay
teens. "Homosexuality is harmful to society, and young
people have no business committing to a sexual identity
until they're adults," says Peter Sprigg of the Family
Research Council, a conservative policy group. The
council backs a new Georgia law, first in the nation,
that requires schools to tell parents about clubs and
allows them to forbid their children to participate in
gay/straight alliances.
Lobbying is underway to pass similar laws in North
Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee, Alabama and Texas, says
Joe Glover of the Family Policy Network, a Christian
family advocacy group. "Parents shouldn't have to check
their rights at the school room door," he says.
Researchers traditionally have emphasized that gay teens
have worse mental health and higher suicide rates than
straight teens. But Cornell's Savin-Williams says these
conclusions are primarily based on small, older studies
skewed to troubled youths. A few newer studies suggest
teens who are attracted to both sexes may have the worst
problems. But most research has grouped them with
homosexuals.
Gay kids are more likely than straight teens to think
about or try suicide, but there's no evidence they're
more likely to kill themselves, says sociologist Stephen
Russell of the University of Arizona. He has analyzed
findings from a study of 12,000 teens followed up to a
decade so far. Those with same-sex attractions are more
depressed and anxious, Russell says, but there's also
evidence that many who say they're attracted to others
of their sex grow up to be heterosexual. He says stigma
and prejudice still prompt undue stress for gay kids.
Studies on gay boys predominate, so young lesbians are
more of a mystery. Pioneering findings suggest lesbian
teens may be different from gay boys in key ways.
There's more variability in the age when they realize
they're not straight, says Lisa Diamond, a University of
Utah psychologist. Unlike boys, most girls also have
opposite-sex attractions. And strong emotional bonds are
more key in sparking girls' sexual attractions, Diamond
says.
She also has ventured into territory rarely trod in
studies on gay youths: friendships and romances.
"They're adolescents first, and adolescents are obsessed
with their friendship networks," she says.
Diamond has kids weigh in on the statement: "I sometimes
worry that I'll never be able to find the kind of
romantic partner I want." Gay teens worry about this
more than straight teens because best friends are
usually the same sex, she says. Gays are unique in
agonizing over whether to turn friendships into
romances, often fearing they'll lose a friend.
Worry about finding a partner was strongly linked to
anxiety and depression. When Diamond subtracted this
worry, gay teens were no more anxious or depressed than
straight teens. "We have to start looking at their whole
lives, not just sexual orientation. By focusing on
stigma, we may be missing the bigger picture: that
they're painfully normal teenagers."
D'Augelli, who studies homosexuality among the young,
says many adults might be surprised at the secret that
really lurks in the psyches of gay teens: "The
remarkable fact is, most are quite conventional. They
want long-term relationships. They want children."
PFLAG
CELEBRATES PRIDE MONTH AT STOCK EXCHANGE
PFLAG Prez Rings Closing Bell at NYSE
 |
Ringing the closing bell on homophobia...
PFLAG National President Samuel Thoron rings The
Closing Bell at the New York Stock Exchange |
On
June 30,
2006,
PFLAG
(Parents Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays)
visited the New york Stock Exchange to celebrate gay,
lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered Pride Month and to
introduce their new initiative, "Straight for Equality."
In honor of the
occasion, PFLAG National President Samuel Thoron rang
The Closing Bell.
PFLAG is the nation’s
foremost family-based organization committed to the
civil rights of gays, lesbians, bisexual and
transgendered persons. Founded in 1973 by mothers and
fathers, PFLAG has over 200,000 members and supporters
in more than 500 chapters throughout the
United States.
Managing Diversity at NYSE Group
NYSE Group believes that managing diversity is a
business imperative, essential to the company’s success
as the leading global financial marketplace and an
employer of choice. At NYSE Group, diversity means
enabling people of all races, ages, genders, sexual
orientations, disabilities, cultures, religions, and
styles to work together effectively to meet company
objectives and maximize individual potential in an
environment that promotes the growth and development of
all individuals.
Background
The New York Stock Exchange in 1999 established a
Diversity Council with Robert A. Marchman as chairman,
to advise senior management and acts as a sounding board
for employees about diversity issues.
The Council’s Mission Statement
“The mission of the
Diversity Council is to ensure the future success of the
NYSE by supporting its efforts to create and maintain a
culture that fosters an inclusive, diverse workforce and
an environment in which everyone has an opportunity to
be successful to the full extent of his/her ability.”