Current:Home > StocksComing out saved my life. LGBTQ+ ex-Christians like me deserve to be proud of ourselves. -Keystone Capital Education
Coming out saved my life. LGBTQ+ ex-Christians like me deserve to be proud of ourselves.
View
Date:2025-04-16 22:21:06
If you or someone you know needs mental health resources and support, please call, text or chat with the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline or visit988lifeline.org for 24/7 access to free and confidential services.
Months after coming out publicly, I told my mom it felt like she didn’t love me anymore.
“Loving you isn’t the same as affirming you,” she replied. I felt the words cut through my chest.
Taking pride in my identity doesn’t come naturally to me, but what Mom may not understand is that I wouldn’t be here if I didn’t start learning how to do it.
At its core, pride is a celebration of self-worth. I was raised to believe God hates it more than anything – that it’s a middle finger to his face, the deepest blasphemy. Raised in the church, evangelicalism taught me I had no beauty, worth or goodness outside my relationship to the all-powerful spiritual being known as God.
It turns out that when core aspects of your identity are stifled, your mind becomes a torture chamber. When I hit puberty, I dutifully wore bras and dresses – though I hated how they felt – and tried to follow the rules purity culture promised would ward off leering boys. I fought panic attacks at the thought of being touched sexually, yet I knew someday as a good Christian girl I’d be forced to endure that touch on my wedding night.
I felt trapped by roles that made me feel unsafe and unmoored, and my insular church community didn’t give me the vocabulary to express why.
A sign of hope:Judge struck down Florida ban on gender-affirming care for trans kids. It's the right move.
'Why am I still alive?'
By age 16, I was fantasizing about death and how to accomplish it. I spent my young adult years consumed with starving, freezing, hiding, cutting and numbing myself. One wintry night when I was 19 and engaged to a man, I snuck outside in pajama shorts and lay down in the snow until I thought my back was bleeding, gripped by a fear I still couldn’t describe. Years later when my Christian therapist fired me, she said it was because she couldn’t in good conscience watch me kill myself.
Why am I still alive? Because when I finally looked inward on my own terms, instead of finding filth and sin, I discovered wonder unmirrored by anything external – it was all my own. Terrified but anchored by a new resolve, I decided to leave the church in 2020, and two years later I came out publicly as a nonbinary lesbian. For the first time in a decade, I can trust myself to enjoy being home alone. I don’t remember the last time I felt tempted to skip meals or slice my skin. My mind is quiet. I take pride in that.
Coming out didn’t flip a magic switch and make life perfect, but it did make life worth exploring. I went back to school for a master’s degree and found new ways to channel my passion for writing.
In my first lesbian relationship, I felt a deep sense of safety I never knew romance could hold. Cutting my hair, overhauling my wardrobe and buying my first binder unlocked a joy so strong it almost scared me. And when I joined a budding sapphic kickball team one summer with my partner, we helped create a community that’s gone on to change more lives than my own. People tell me I look younger these days, and I feel it.
Evangelicals can't see the sin in dehumanizing people
Despite the joy and wonder I’ve found, evangelicalism says my sexuality and gender identity are abominations worthy of hell.
When my mom says she can’t affirm me, it’s because Christianity is the only metric she has with which to weigh the world. She can no longer see – let alone affirm – my humanity as an openly queer person. When she looks at me now, she sees sin. I wish she could see me again.
I'm a trans man.We don't have a secret agenda – we're just asking you to let us live.
Dehumanization starts with fixating on one facet of someone’s identity to the exclusion of everything else. It starts with putting conditions on someone’s inherent worth. It starts with saying loving someone doesn’t have to mean affirming them.
When you refuse to see someone’s full humanity, you give yourself permission to commit atrocities – and it’s happening right now across America.
For many LGBTQ+ people, coming out is an act of defiance involving sacrifice and danger. Being visibly queer cost me my family, and that hurts like hell. But being invisible in the church nearly cost me my life.
This Pride Month, I’m reclaiming the notion of pride from what evangelicalism taught me it meant. Our beauty, worth and goodness are inherent to our humanity; the real sin lies in any attempt to dictate the conditions of our worth. As LGBTQ+ ex-Christians, we deserve to feel proud of ourselves and the darkness we’ve overcome.
Mishka Espey is an avid reader and writer who lives in Silver Spring, Maryland, with their partner, Gianna. They hold a Master of Arts in journalism from American University, where they co-launchedan investigation into a Christian ministry called Cru.
veryGood! (6)
Related
- 'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
- Super Bowl overtime rules: What to know if NFL's biggest game has tie after regulation
- Delays. Processing errors. FAFSA can be a nightmare. The Dept. of Education is stepping in
- A Year Before Biden’s First Term Ends, Environmental Regulators Rush to Aid Disinvested Communities
- Grammy nominee Teddy Swims on love, growth and embracing change
- 'Below Deck' cast: Meet the full Season 11 crew after Capt. Lee Rosbach's departure
- How are atmospheric rivers affected by climate change?
- One state has a shortage of marijuana. Its neighbor had too much. What to do?
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Rapper Killer Mike Breaks His Silence on Arrest at 2024 Grammy Awards
Ranking
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Philly sheriff’s campaign takes down bogus ‘news’ stories posted to site that were generated by AI
- Fake robocalls. Doctored videos. Why Facebook is being urged to fix its election problem.
- Bills go to Noem to criminalize AI-generated child sexual abuse images, xylazine in South Dakota
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- NLRB says Dartmouth basketball players are school employees, setting stage for union vote
- NFL doubles down on 'integrity' with Super Bowl at the epicenter of gambling industry
- Watch live: NASA, SpaceX to launch PACE mission to examine Earth's oceans
Recommendation
Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
Yes, cardio is important. But it's not the only kind of exercise you should do.
South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem banned from tribal land over U.S.-Mexico border comments: Blatant disrespect
Derek Hough's Wife Hayley Erbert Shows Skull Surgery Scar While Sharing Health Update
US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
Heidi Klum Reveals One Benefit of 16-Year Age Gap With Husband Tom Kaulitz
US labor official says Dartmouth basketball players are school employees, sets stage for union vote
Taylor Swift Supporting Miley Cyrus at the 2024 Grammys Proves Their Friendship Can't Be Tamed