by JAMES AITKEN
I’ll never forget the day I listened in on a conversation I heard my elder brother having with my mum during which he uttered the words: “mum, I am gay”. I’ll never forget because I felt my world fall apart around me in an instant.
I couldn’t believe what I was hearing and the words pierced through my ears, ringing as my heart raced. I ran to my room, shut the door and fell to the ground weeping.
I was fifteen years old. I was fifteen years old and angry. Angry that my brother, eighteen, had revealed this. Angry because now things were going to change within my family. Angry that there was nothing I could do to change the situation. Angry because he didn’t even encompass characteristics of what I had understood a “typical” gay man to embody. But mostly I was angry because he had taken this away from me.
Yes, I was gay too.
I was fifteen and in year 9 at high school. He was in first year university. Worlds apart in our stages in life. From then on things changed. I became reserved and quiet, restrictive and cautious about what I revealed about myself. I locked my soul away and felt the burden of a very secret shame. I was ashamed of myself and the genetics of which I was carrying. I was ashamed of my parents and their ability to produce two homosexual children. The unnaturalness of this made me sick and I couldn’t bear to be around them.
Top Comments
I think all mamamia readers would be horrified to know that homosexuals in Islamic countries are treated as criminals.
http://www.cato.org/publica.... The punishments are flogging and death.
According to the Iranian constitution (1991) the punishment for sodomy is death!
in 1998 under the Taliban in Afghanistan 3 homsexuals were buried alive under stones and a wall was pushed on top of them by a tank.
In Saudi Arabia April 7, 2005 100 men were sent to prison or flogged for gay behaviour.
We should be trying to help these people, as people living under sharia law would to too afraid to protest about these human rights violations, as criticism of Sharia law gets the death penalty
Yes, Catherine, that's why we need a lid on Muslim immigration. Did you see the protests in Paris against gay marriage? It's a strange thing - the left champion Islam yet Islam is against everything the left believe in. Strange.
A voice in the wilderness. Why is such a small minority make such a big noise about being married? Marriage protects spouses in property rights and protects children. Defacto laws go a long way these days to doing the same thing, which is why a lot of people don't bother getting married. You can't have children so why do you want to get married? Don't get me started on two mums and two dads.
I'm pretty sure people don't get married these days simply so they can have children, and lots of people have children outside of wedlock so your argument really has no grounding
"Why is such a small minority make such a big noise about being married?" ...
The institution of marriage is not reliant on numbers of people who want it. It's about two people. There are more LGBT people in this "small minority" than you would probably imagine.
"You can't have children"
Perhaps you need to get out more?... People are coming into relationships with children, whole families even. Just like divorced hetero people.
Think: The Brady Bunch... only lesbian, with more profound marital sex :-)
I'm sure you've heard of various ways couples can get pregnant - insemination, donors, IVF, a gay father and lesbian mother - raising a child.
Most people who marry plan on having children. Gay people can't have children, so why get married? Adding step children, ivf has no grounding either. Female/female and male/male do not procreate. Do the maths.
Sandra, I am heterosexual but unfortunately infertile. Do you believe that I should never marry?