If we're talking something that's an important part of their identity,I'd rather be sure about it and that it's not just an adolescent infatuation that the kid ends up paying for the rest of his life.
Emphasis mine... RG, it sounds like you're saying that being gay is a
bad thing, that you will be
ruined for life if you come out as gay, that if you grow and develop in a different way afterward you won't be able to shake the
terrible stigma of gayitude.
I'm sure that's not what you meant. That being gay is
only OK so long as you have
no other choices. You didn't mean
that, did you?
I was always out: I mean I never had to tell anybody I was gay... I just looked and sounded gay, and never bothered denying it; but the first time I said it aloud to someone was at age 15. And I don't see how it made my life any worse than if I had lied about it...better an honest pariah than an accepted fake.
But it
was horribly lonely, not knowing any other gay people when I was young. I mean, I knew they
existed, that I wasn't the only one... but I never
met any. But just in a numbers game, as many people as there were at my middle and high schools (1,250 and 3,300 respectively), there should have been at least a dozen fellow travelers in there. But not until my senior year, when I transfered to an arts magnet, did I meet another out gay person.
If young gays can be there for each other (and to be there, they have to be recognizable to each other), there would be a lot less suicide and drug-abuse, a lot more safety and healthy relationships (platonic
and romantic). I think it's a great thing to come out young: the more the merrier!