Family
Outing
by Billie Fitzpatrick and Chastity Bono
Introduction
As a child, I always felt there was something different about me. I'd look
at other girls my age and feel perplexed by their obvious interest in the
latest fashion, which boy in class was the cutest, and who looked the most
like cover girl Christie Brinkley. When I was thirteen, I finally found a
name for exactly how I was different. I realized I was gay. And suddenly I
made much more sense to myself. This first realization was just the
beginning of a process that continues today. I started coming out to a few
close friends, got involved in relationships, sought out other lesbians,
and made friends. Then, when I was eighteen, I came out to my parents. At
the time, my father was immediately supportive; it took my mother much
longer. But as we as a family began the arduous, confusing, often
frustrating process leading toward acceptance, I was derailed by an
uncontrollable outside force.
In the winter of 1990, I was outed by the
tabloid the Star, which published an unauthorized article that
disclosed my sexual orientation to the public. At the time, I was far from
ready to have this still-private matter exposed to people other than those
I chose to tell. I felt so violated and vulnerable to other people's
judgment of me that I retreated into the closet: for over four years, I
went into virtual hiding, constantly afraid of being exposed again by the
tabloids. I rarely went out in public, especially to places where I might
be photographed.
This was an extremely difficult, painful
time that exacerbated all my self-doubt and negative feelings about being
gay in a mostly straight world. It wasn't until I became involved with an
older woman and then, soon after, lost her to cancer that I began to
reevaluate living in the closet. I then made the decision to come out
publicly: I needed to take my power back.
In April 1995, I appeared on the cover of The
Advocate, and for the first time told my version of my coming-out
story to a national audience. Though I knew that this act would forever
change my life, I had no idea how positive the outcome would be. I
received piles of letters from lesbians and gays across the country
telling me that they admired my courage and saw me as a role model. While
coming out in public began as a personal decision, it catapulted me into a
political role that has transformed my life, providing me with affirmation
as a lesbian, as a woman, and as an individual. And not only has this
public role provided enormous personal and professional fulfillment, it
also allowed my family to accept me in a much healthier way. Even my
father, with whom I had political differences, felt proud that I had
become an activist. And because I now truly accept myself, my family is
able to do the same.
There is a vital connection here: a
family's acceptance of a gay or lesbian child or sibling is directly tied
to the gay person's ability to accept him- or herself. As gay people we
can't expect acceptance from those close to us and the world at large
until we are completely comfortable with being gay ourselves. Coming out,
then, is a dual process that both individuals and families struggle
through and ultimately learn to appreciate.
By August 1996, one year after I came out
publicly, my mother had progressed so far that she agreed to "come
out" herself on the cover of The Advocate as the proud mother
of a lesbian daughter. The response to my interview with my mom was
tremendous. I remember one letter in particular. A woman I'll call Chloe,
a single mother with two young children, wrote that she had known she was
gay for many years but was afraid to tell anyone — even though her
brother was gay too. After picking up a copy of The Advocate
because my mother was on the cover and reading the article, Chloe finally
felt ready to tell someone she was a lesbian.
I was stunned yet again. There was no one
she could tell she was gay before reading the article?
As I had begun feeling more and more
comfortable about myself, I had begun to assume that coming out was
becoming less of an ordeal, less of a struggle. I was wrong. I keep
thinking that society is making it easier for gay men and women to come
out and live a free and fulfilled life without censoring themselves and
without the risk of rejection, harm, and discrimination. But clearly,
though society has changed remarkably in the twenty-seven years since
Stonewall (and my birth) in 1969, and we have made legal and political
strides, being gay in America is still not easy.
Chloe is one of many people I have come
across in the past several years who either revealed complete emotional
paralysis about their homosexuality or were still firmly in the closet.
Before taking on an activist role as a spokesperson for the Human Rights
Campaign and more recently as entertainment media director for GLAAD (Gay
and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation), I had only experienced the
difficulty and rewards of coming out on a personal level. But when I began
to meet people from all different backgrounds and hear their stories, I
discovered with surprise and sadness that men and women are still afraid
to come out.
What became clear as I listened to the
stories of others and shared my own is that although the gay community is
diverse, the desire to tell our various coming-out stories is a constant.
And as I became aware of the individual struggles, I was confronted with a
general need for more understanding of how and when to make the journey.
These men and women from diverse ethnic, racial, religious, and
socioeconomic backgrounds were at different stages of self-discovery. Some
had told their families; some had only told a best friend; some had only
told their lovers; some had told no one at all. Some women and men had
come out to their families and close friends but still hid their sexual
orientation from their coworkers, their bosses, and some of their straight
friends.
I realized then that maybe I could make a
difference, that by sharing my story and especially my experience with my
family, specifically my mother, Cher, I might be able to help other people
arrive at the happy place I am now.
The goal of Family Outing is not
only to guide gay women and men through the closet door but also to give
them the tools with which they can complete the process by bringing their
families, especially their parents, along with them.
The book as a whole traces the stories of
gay individuals and their parents, allowing the reader to follow these
families, including my own, as the coming-out process unfolds. In the
first part of the book, I introduce the various issues we as lesbians and
gays experience in coming to terms with our homosexuality by first telling
my own story and then bringing in the stories of many others, taken from
extensive conversations with people who vary in age, gender, race,
ethnicity, religion, and geographic location. These narratives illustrate
the universal themes and stages that form the coming-out process for all
gay people. Yet within this framework a myriad of different feelings
exist.
In the next part of my book, I share my
conversations with my mother about my coming out, which introduce the
issues most families and friends confront when someone they love tells
them they are lesbian or gay. Again, this material is organized
thematically, mirroring the process itself, and includes experiences of
other families of gay people. As in the first part, a central framework
emerges here as representing the universal stages in moving toward
acceptance. But again, the individual feelings and experiences vary.
The social and political environment has
become more accepting of homosexuals and our need to be honest and open
about who we are. We are at the point now where people in high-profile
positions in entertainment, sports, and politics have taken the risk and
come out to overwhelming positive response. Elton John, Ellen DeGeneres,
Melissa Etheridge, k. d. lang, David Geffen, Amanda Bearse, Greg Louganis,
Barney Frank, and Colonel Margaret Cammermeyer: these men and women have
helped to break down the stereotype that openly gay and lesbian men and
women cannot succeed.
Family Outing reflects this spirit
of change — but it also challenges both those still in the closet and
those wanting people to stay in the closet to overcome their fears. I hope
this book will demystify the coming-out process for gay people and their
families and allow them to see that sexual orientation does not limit
people in any way. Once we learn to define homosexuality in positive,
life-affirming terms, lesbians and gays will move beyond acceptance to
true empowerment. I hope that by sharing my story and experience, as well
as the stories of others from across the country, I can help all readers
reach their own sense of freedom and personal pride in who they are.
© 1998 Chastity Bono
Excerpt posted with permission from http://www.twbookmark.com
Many thanks to AOL Time Warner
Book Group (Little, Brown & Company, Warner Books, A Time Warner
Company) at: www.twbookmark.com.
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