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GAMMA: The Gay
Married Men's Association
of
the Washington, D.C. Metropolitan Area
Providing
peer counseling, support, and outreach to gay married men, their wives,
partners, and friends.

A Letter
to My Dad
A wise person once told me that Christianity tried to make things black
and white. I thought about it and found it to be true. Thou shalt
not kill. Thou shalt not commit adultery. Thou shalt not lie. It
all seems so simple.
There are questions,
however, that do not fit this scheme; they lie outside the realm of right
and wrong, theology and expertise. Answers exist only in belief and faith,
both of which are intangible and elusive---that which cannot be proved
or disproved; answers that exist not in the spheres of black and white,
but in all the shades of gray.
Ill never
forget that day when my daddy told me that he was gay, or really happy
as he put it to make my face turn from its downward contortions into a
slight smile. It was late at night on Christmas day and I had just had
a long talk with my mother.
I had grown suspicious
over the course of two or three years at my dads behavior on the
computer, visiting gay Web sites and seemingly pornographic sites. I had
asked him on numerous occasions why he did that, and his answer was consistently
that he was helping some gay men out whom he had met via different chat
rooms.
At moms
suggestion, I finally got up the nerve to ask my dad about his sexuality,
Dad, are you gay? I was relieved when his answer was no, but
not satisfied. I figured I could trust my dad and leave it at that.
On this particular Christmas day, I was discussing with Mom the possibility
of doing a school oral report on homosexuality in a philosophy course
at school when the subject came up yet again. For the sake of being reassured
yet again by my mother that my dads answer had been the truth, I
asked my mother. She urged me even more strongly to ask my dad.
I was disturbed.
Was she being coy? Was his original answer a lie? I cried. The implications
were too great for me to handle. I asked again and said that I needed
to know. After some hesitance she went on to explain that she had once
asked that question and that the answer that she had received was I
dont know. Talk about confusion. I would have preferred a
yes or no answer. I dove in a little deeper, not really wanting to know
anything further, but needing to know. I asked Mom if she and dad still
had conjugal relations. She paused and said, Sometimes, on special
occasions.
I went to bed
rejecting her suggestion that I talk to Dad before I went to bed. I brushed
my teeth, picked up the dog from Moms bed and went to my own, knowing
that sleep would probably not come for another hour or so. I cried and
prayed.
I didnt
have a chance to say much. Dad was upstairs a minute or so later and after
a few words with Mother, he came in and got me. I told him Not now.
I need to sleep. He made me get up and follow him into his room
where I complained that Mom should not have told.
I did not want
to talk that night. I didnt sit next to Mom. I didnt sit next
to Dad. How could I face him? I was already embarrassed by my questions.
What business did I have asking the same questions that I had already
received answers to? What reason did I have to doubt my fathers
honesty?
He asked me what
the matter was. I thought to myself, What a dumb question,
when he obviously knew what was to come. I asked Mom to explain. Before
she could say anything, he just came out and said it, Yes, Im
gay. That was it. I cried again. My beliefs that I spoke of with
such conviction when needed were being put to the ultimate test. My daddy
was
is gay. A senior in high school, I was already accepted into
the college of my choice and had a dream of becoming a Contemporary or
Christian singer and my first thoughts were, What is this going
to do to my career? How low is that? My daddy, my best friend went
on to explain that four years earlier while my mom, sister, brother and
I were on a trip to Illinois to visit family, he came really close to
committing suicide. It hit home. I couldnt imagine life without
my daddy.
For the first
time I was told the true story of a man who tried for the longest time
to fit in to a society that dictated the rights and wrongs of sexuality
and could not; a man who tried programs sponsored by our then-Church,
which claimed to be able to change sexuality back to the presumed
norm; a man who married my mother and continued to struggle with his sexuality,
telling her of his suspicions on their first wedding anniversary; a man
who loves his wife and loves another man.
In the Church
I grew up in, homosexuality was a great sin separating men from God. It
was a choice and those who chose to live a life of sin are damned to hell.
Personally, I struggle with Christians and people in general who work
so hard to condemn that they forget that the ultimate judge, God is also
the ultimate advocate for outcasts. I know that God does not make mistakes
and I know that no person in his or her right mind would choose to live
the life of a homosexual.
My next concern
was if my parents were going to stay together. Why was my mother still
there? As a studying minister, how did she view my dads actions?
I developed a new respect for my mother and determined the cause of her
depression that had often caused great rifts in the house when I was younger.
My mom loved my dad and my dad loved her. It might not be the same as
other parents, but it was a love nonetheless that many couples lack. I
was later able to laugh at the irony in the situation. My parents had
lasted and were still going twenty years into their not-so-straight marriage
while my three aunts had each divorced and remarried.
I also wondered
what I would do about dating? I have always dreamed of meeting a man like
my father. My dad has always been sensitive towards things that most fathers
and men in general I know are not. The next question that went through
my mind echoed a similar question asked in the movie In and Out, Is
everybody gay? I doubted any chance in this world at finding a good
man, especially with my experience with guys at school.
I had two days
to contemplate this new information on my own. I woke up the next morning
wondering if it had all been a dream. No such luck. I tried to get used
to the idea, My dad is gay. Such a simple but loaded phrase.
My dad had been scared to tell us. What would we think of him? What discrimination
would we face at school if anybody ever found out? All legitimate worries,
echoing my own. My sister found out two days later. It was a relief to
have somebody to talk to and to cry with.
Nothing huge has
changed, only my perception of my father and my role in his life. My mom
and dad are still married; I still go to the same school; I have the same
dreams. Life goes on.
This idea for
this publication surfaced two days after I found out and on the same day
my sister found out. I have to face the facts. My dad is gay. He has told
me of a group that he met with twice a month, called GAMMA (Gay And Married
Men Association). It shocked me to learn that there were many men in the
area who were in the same situation as my dad, gay married men with children
and satisfied to remain just so.
Assuming that there are many more gay family men out there who struggle
handling their role in society just as my dad did, I have found my way
to cope--- a book of true stories on different men in the same situation
as my dad, might offer encouragement and above all, hope for those whose
lives are caught in Shades of Gray.
(Copyright,
Laura V., 2001)
If you have a story that you would like to share, you can email me at
Hope4Now@aol.com for more information.
If not, thank you for reading. I hope that this piece may leave you with
a better understanding of my perspective and my hope for the futurefor
acceptance and peace for my dad and men in his situation.
September 11th has taught me many things, one of which may seem obvious
enough. We dont have forever to make a difference on our world.
A story might be enough to save anothers life. What more could we
ask for?
Laura
G A M M A
The Gay Married Men's Association of the Washington, D.C. Metropolitan
Area
www.gay-married.com
gammainDC1@yahoo.com (703)
548-3238
PO Box 33282 Washington DC 20033-3282
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