Open Question: Friend Outed Me At Lesbian (LGBT)?

Open Question: Friend Outed Me At Lesbian (LGBT)?
I am a 25 year old woman and i am lesbian and i am at university and my friend graduated and in her graduation speech she thanked me and my wife for helping her with the degree.

Her saying i have a wife basically outted me, I am not ashamed of my sexuality and i openly wear my wedding ring, though everyone who knows me knows i am lesbian, people at university didnt . I have another year left at university.

This is why i asked if outing someone is wrong, did she do wrong

answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20151023171606AAg459X

Houston Texans Owner Backtracks on Donation to Anti-LGBT Campaign

Houston Texans Owner Backtracks on Donation to Anti-LGBT Campaign

Houston Texans owner Bob McNair, under fire for his $10,000 donation to the campaign to repeal the Houston Equal Rights Ordinance, now wants his money back.

ThinkProgress obtained a statement from the NFL team owner Friday in which he said he does not approve of any type of discrimination, nor of the language used by those seeking to rescind the LGBT-inclusive law. He said he agreed to donate to the repeal campaign because he believed “a thoughtful rewrite would provide a better ordinance” and “would be less divisive of our city.”

“It was on these principles that I made my personal contribution to Campaign for Houston,” he wrote, referring to the anti-LGBT group that has made transphobic misinformation a hallmark of its campaign. “To my great dismay, Campaign for Houston made numerous unauthorized statements about my opposition to HERO in print, broadcast and social media — including attributing certain statements of belief to me. Their actions and statements were never discussed with nor approved by me. Therefore I instructed the Campaign to return my contribution.”

He added, “I do not believe in or tolerate personal or professional discrimination of any kind. I also believe that we Houstonians should have an ordinance that unites our community and provides a bold statement of non-discrimination. I encourage all Houstonians to vote on November 3.”

He closed with a quote from Robert F. Kennedy:

“Few will have the greatness to bend history itself; but each of us can work together to change a small portion of events, and in the total of those acts will be written the history of our generation.”

ThinkProgress had sought comment from McNair regarding the tactics of the ordinance’s opponents, which have centered on the provably false claim that women and children would be in danger if transgender people were allowed to use the restrooms and locker rooms that comport with their gender identity.

Former NFL player Chris Kluwe derided McNair’s donation as “douchetastic buffoonery” in an open letter this week, and Michael Sam, the first openly gay man to be drafted by an NFL team, has joined in the campaign to keep the ordinance on the books. The Houston City Council passed it last year, but opponents sought a referendum on it, and the Texas Supreme Court ruled that the city must either rescind the law or put it to a public vote. It is on the November 3 ballot as Proposition 1.

Richard Carlbom, a veteran pro-equality organizer who’s directing the Houston Unites campaign in support of the ordinance, praised McNair’s action in a statement to ThinkProgress. “Like Bob McNair, many Houstonians are taking a step back and realizing the opposition’s ads on the Equal Rights Ordinance are intended to raise anxiety with outright distortions and quite frankly lies,” he said. “When you take a second look, the Equal Rights Ordinance protects all Houstonians from discrimination and makes Houston a place everyone can be proud to call home. And why the majority of small and large businesses in Houston support Proposition 1.”

Jared Woodfill, directing the campaign to repeal the ordinance, told the Houston Chronicle that he thought McNair was reacting to backlash he’d received. “Any time you’re high-profile and you take a stance on this issue you get attacked,” Woodfill said. “But we appreciate the original donation and we believe, from his statement, that his opinion on the ordinance has not changed.”

Trudy Ring

www.advocate.com/politics/2015/10/23/houston-texans-owner-backtracks-donation-anti-lgbt-campaign

Ellen DeGeneres Reveals The One Side Effect Of Coming Out She Never Saw Coming

Ellen DeGeneres Reveals The One Side Effect Of Coming Out She Never Saw Coming
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When Ellen DeGeneres came out as a lesbian in 1997 both in her real life and as her fictional character on her self-titled sitcom, it was a monumental moment in entertainment history. The “Ellen” episode won an Emmy, media outlets clamored for interviews, the public became hyper-interested in Ellen’s love life and the Human Rights campaign even issued “Come Out with Ellen” party kits.

But the woman at the center of it all says she never expected her announcement to have such an impact — or lead to such a backlash.

As Ellen tells “Oprah’s Master Class,” the attention, scrutiny and controversy that followed her announcement reached surprising levels. All because the comedian uttered two words to the public: “I’m gay.”

“It became bigger than I ever thought it would be. Bigger than I wanted it to be,” Ellen says. “It overshadowed my talent, it overshadowed who I am as a person.”

Ellen hadn’t intended to create an uproar or even a national dialogue about sexuality, she adds. She just wanted to live authentically.

“It was only meant to be, you know, just being honest,” Ellen explains. “And it became this snowball, this avalanche, that just got bigger and bigger and bigger. There was no stopping it.”

In the course of this escalation, some people began to link Ellen’s announcement with politics, believing that her underlying motivation was to insert herself into the political area.

“It turned into people not liking me, because they thought that I was somehow political all of a sudden,” Ellen says. “It was the last thing I wanted to do, to be political.”

Ellen opens up about her childhood, her rise to fame and her marriage on the season premiere of “Oprah’s Master Class,” airing Sunday, Oct. 25 at 8 p.m. ET on OWN.

Also on HuffPost:

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More from Oprah.com:

Ellen appears on “The Oprah Winfrey Show” in 1997 to discuss her coming out

Oprah surprises Ellen in the middle of a show taping

Ellen DeGeneres and wife Portia de Rossi at home

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.



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Iconic Entertainer Tom Jones Responds To Criticism That He Was Once Homophobic

Iconic Entertainer Tom Jones Responds To Criticism That He Was Once Homophobic

04601b12915f462b3719e758df91fb9eSpeaking about his early days in the music industry, Tom Jones says he was “thrown off” after meeting his first gay person.

In an interview with The Big Issue, he confesses that he once held prejudices against gay men — even when it came to Joe Meek, his first producer.

In fact, he claims to have strongly considered going back to Cardiff after meeting his first gay person: “I was ready for most aspects of the music industry but, when I met [Meek], that threw me off a bit, because he was homosexual. I thought: ‘Wait a minute, is the London scene – the people who run British show business – are there a lot of homosexuals involved here? Because, if so, I’m going back to Cardiff.”

Jones says he became “paranoid” about gay people in general, suspecting that most people in the industry were homosexuals.

He once said to his manager Peter Sullivan: “You’re not one of those queer fellows, are you?”

Soon enough after moving to London, he says he discovered that “most people were normal.”

“I shouldn’t put it like that,” he says. “Homosexuals are normal. It’s not that they’re not normal. It’s just that they are what they are.”

Before you shred Tom in the comments, remember that this was a time when homosexuality was still a criminal activity in Great Britain and his attitudes reflect his upbringing in conservative Cardiff. We choose to believe that Tom’s opinion quickly evolved. He soon became somewhat synonymous with the Swinging ’60s. In fact, the singer just tweeted a response to criticism:

 

Context! The story is about knowledge/attitudes in the 50s & 60s. it’s called History!

— Tom Jones (@RealSirTomJones) October 22, 2015

Jeremy Kinser

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/jUW2jHlJjbo/iconic-entertainer-tom-jones-responds-to-criticism-that-he-was-once-homophobic-20151023

News: Bananas, Vin Diesel, Mormon Church, ‘Harry Potter’, Baby Hitler

News: Bananas, Vin Diesel, Mormon Church, ‘Harry Potter’, Baby Hitler

> Can bananas hold the key to a cure to HIV?

> Meditation and yoga helped Hillary Clinton endure 11-hour marathon testimony before Congress.

giraffe> L.A. Zoo welcomes a baby giraffe.

> 15,000 tourists have been evacuated from Puerto Vallarta as Hurricane Patricia bears down.

> Donald Trump interns don’t have access to his Twitter. So who sent that mistaken retweet?

> Meet Europe’s hottest prince, Carl Phillip of Sweden.

> Barney Frank bio-pic shows how soul-crushing the closet can be. 

> Conservatives admit Benghazi hearing was a disaster.

> And Democrats want the RNC to pay for it.

vin_diesel> Vin Diesel talks more about the body-shamers. 

> British Lord in 1960s went to ‘homosexual parties’ and ‘hunted’ young gay men.

> Jeb Bush is having some financial troubles and making cutbacks on his campaign.

> Mormon Church does not want to get in bed with Kim Davis, says duty to law trumps personal convictions on same-sex marriage: “All government officers should exercise their civil authority according to the principles and within the limits of civil government.”

> Anti-gay president of Zimbabwe Robert Mugabe wins China’s version of the Nobel prize. 

> Defense Secretary Ash Carter addresses death of commando in raid on ISIS prison that saved 70 prisoners’ lives.

HeroLogo_t580> Michael Sam endorses HERO.

> Jared of Subway paid $1 million to his victims. 

> J.K. Rowling to follow up Harry Potter books with a Harry Potter play.

> Kenny Chesney shows off in Malibu.

> The NYT Magazine gets embroiled in controversy over question on “baby Hitler.”

We asked @nytmag readers: If you could go back and kill Hitler as a baby, would you do it? (What’s your response?) pic.twitter.com/daatm12NZC

— NYT Magazine (@NYTmag) October 23, 2015

The post News: Bananas, Vin Diesel, Mormon Church, ‘Harry Potter’, Baby Hitler appeared first on Towleroad.


Sean Mandell

News: Bananas, Vin Diesel, Mormon Church, ‘Harry Potter’, Baby Hitler

Will Dallas PD Take Action After Attacks in Gayborhood?

Will Dallas PD Take Action After Attacks in Gayborhood?

Dallas police have finally agreed to address an epidemic of violence in the Cedar Springs stretch of the Oak Lawn neighborhood, which is lined with gay nightlife.

In less than two months, eight assaults have occurred in the area, with perpetrators mostly targeting men walking from gay bars and clubs at night. Only one has been classified as a hate crime, though.

Michael Dominguez was attacked in the early hours of October 2 — not only beaten, but stabbed. His eye socket was broken and his skull cracked. So far, police have categorized what happened to him only as an “assault,” not a hate crime.

“Nothing was stolen from [me], period, and I was left for dead. I don’t know what you call that other than a hate crime,” Dominguez told the Dallas-Fort Worth CBS affiliate.

At a recent community meeting, police promised more patrols and said they’re considering adding cameras to the area. Local officials also pledged to fix broken streetlights, something that has made walking dangerous for locals.

Neal Broverman

www.advocate.com/crime/2015/10/23/will-dallas-pd-take-action-after-attacks-gayborhood

Five Steps to Rediscovering Spirituality as an LGBT Person

Five Steps to Rediscovering Spirituality as an LGBT Person
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Despite recent civil rights advances, religion remains challenging territory for LGBT Americans. In fact, a 2013 Pew Research poll indicated that 48% of LGBT adults are religiously unaffiliated, compared to 20% of the general population. Being religiously unaffiliated, however, doesn’t mean not being spiritual. In my practice as a spiritual guide, many LGBT adults have told me how they want to reconnect with spirituality, but they’re uncertain about how they can do so.

I understand that feeling, because I’ve been there. I spent 26 years as part of a demanding, fundamentalist, anti-LGBT religious community. When I finally had the courage to come out as gay at the age of 39, I resigned my membership in that church and began to rebuild my life. I had strong feelings about how my religious tradition had impacted me. I wasn’t sure anymore what I thought about God. Was I an atheist? An agnostic? Something else? I tried to explore other religious traditions, but I couldn’t connect with them. It took me about four years before I could begin to pay serious attention to my spirituality again.

As I’ve researched, interviewed, and worked directly with LGBT adults, I’ve learned that some concrete steps can help us recover from the negative aspects of our religious pasts and discover an affirming, sustaining spirituality.

1. Allow yourself to grieve. Whether you were expelled or left on your own, you experienced a loss when you separated from your formative religious tradition. You may have lost family, friends, and a community where you once felt belonging. You may have lost a faith that you had invested years of your life following. Even though a part of you is probably relieved, you may experience feelings of grief and loss. Give yourself permission to experience those feelings, and eventually they will give way to healing.

2. Shift your focus from external to internal authority. Many conservative, anti-LGBT religious communities train their followers to rely on outside sources for truth, whether sacred texts, tradition, or authoritarian leaders. In order to move toward creating your own affirming spirituality, ask yourself some questions about different beliefs or ideas: “How does this feel to me inside?” “Do I really agree with this, or am I just accepting what someone else told me?” Instead of asking, “What is true?” ask yourself, “What is true for me?” Getting into a habit of asking these questions will help you rely on your own internal authority, an important step in discovering your own affirming spirituality.

3. Learn about other ways of connecting with the Divine. Take the time to learn about other spiritual traditions. Visit a Buddhist Temple. Investigate Paganism or Wicca. Find out what traditions your own ancestors practiced, and research them. In doing so, you can follow that internal authority you’ve been building to help you recognize what traditions—or parts of traditions—seem meaningful for you.

4. Rediscover your own purpose. Many LGBT individuals I’ve worked with felt as if their former religious tradition gave them purpose in life, or even a specific life calling. Examine how parts of that purpose may still apply to you in a way that feels authentic. Be open to discovering other opportunities and experiences that may reveal your own spiritual gifts and talents. Search out ways of making your mark on the world that can be filled with deep meaning for you.

5. Return to your community with gifts. As you’ve discovered what values and beliefs personally resonate for you, and begun to explore your own sense of purpose, ask yourself how you can bring those gifts back to your community–both our LGBT community and our larger human community. How can you make a difference? Where can you contribute to making the world a better place?

If you feel like you need support in taking these steps, reach out to others who have been there. In addition, trained spiritual guides can help you to explore these issues in your own way, at your own pace, in an atmosphere of safety and welcome. You can find trained spiritual guides through professional organizations such as Spiritual Directors International.

As I’ve seen myself and others apply these steps, I’ve seen LGBT people move from places of depression and longing to lives of fulfillment and service. Each one I’ve worked with has created their own personal spirituality that is affirming and sustaining for them. Each has their own legitimate and meaningful way of engaging with the Divine–and it’s a beautiful thing to see!

Seeking to discover or deepen your spirituality? You can contact Nick Literski to request a complementary initial consultation through his website, at “The Gay Spiritual Guide.”

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.



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