Pages

Sunday 21 October 2012

Victims of Nature

As I sit here and read, I come across an article about yet another young guy who has taken his own life. This person didn’t commit suicide because they had lost their job, nor was it because they had just been declared bankrupt. They did it because they were bullied, and they were bullied because they were gay. My mind wanders to a report about a man who was tied to a lamppost and sexually abused before being doused in petrol and set on fire, again because of his sexuality. These news stories focused around homophobia are becoming more and more regular, with a vast percentage of these tragic tales reaching us from America, the land of the free.

Being homosexual, bisexual or even heterosexual isn’t a part of our lives we have any control over, it’s an element of ourselves that is set and which no one can do anything about. It’s not the easiest time of someone’s life, realising your sexuality and growing anxious about a future where you’re potentially labelled as ‘different’. Hearing all these stories definitely doesn’t help. Some of these people must have gone through hell in order for them to feel that the only solution was to end it all. And for what? For falling in love with someone of the same gender? Now obviously we are all biased on this subject as LGBT individuals, but beyond our bubble, there cannot justifiably be claimed to be any reason why discrimination should follow from sexual attraction. It beggars belief that some individuals relentlessly pursue this end and actively make the situation even worse.

It takes an awful lot for a man, or woman, to come to terms with all that, even more so for them to be comfortable enough to ‘come out’. For me, I found it especially difficult, not because my family were homophobic (to this day I haven’t a clue what they actually thought of it all) but because of the society I grew up in. I tried to deny it at first and told myself over and over again that it was just a phase people go through. I’m not a religious person, but I did pray that one day I would wake up ‘normal’. I’m not one to be ashamed of who I am, no-one should be, but I did want to be straight.
Some critics say that homosexuals are a result of upbringing and environment. They theorised that a boy became gay because his father was cold and emotionally detached. Or a girl became a lesbian because she had an aggressive mother. But this theory is neither correct nor proven.

Sometimes, I wonder if it really is a choice, why would any intelligent person choose a way of life that opens them up to hostility, prejudice and discrimination from certain quarters? Isn’t it easier to be straight?

© copyright 2012-10-22 21:16:57 UTC - All Rights Reserved

Thursday 27 September 2012

Goodbyes

We've had to say goodbye more times than we would have liked. Some more than others, and no matter how many times we do it, even if its for good measure, it still stings. And though we never forget what we've given up, we owe it to ourselves to keep moving forward. What we can't do is live our lives always afraid of the next goodbye, cause chances are they're not gonna stop. While the saying 'What doesn't kill you can only make you stronger' applies to most things in life, on this occasion its void. As more goodbyes are put behind us, it never gets easier, sometimes its even harder to let go. The trick is recognising when a goodbye is a good thing, when its a chance to start again... Four years ago, I had to say goodbye, to not just one person but my whole life. My choice, but still a very hard choice. The place I was living, it just wasn't what I wanted. I don't wish I was born anywhere else, I'm so proud of where I am from, but in life, as most people I strive for better. On occasion, as with most people who have moved away from their family and friends, we miss it. But we just need reminding of the reason why we did it in the first place. For most its for University, to gain an education. For others, just a change of scenery. For me,my career. I'm one for taking chances, and taking risks. I always thought that if I moved back home, that the last four years were all a waste and i'd feel like a failure. But that is not true. I'd go back, and Id be a much better person than I was, stronger, more confident. I'd go back knowing that the goodbye we all had endured, had definately been worth it.