-The story of the Moran family and how their daughter overcame leukemia (written by my identical twin brother 'Michael White')
- Anna Nolan and I both wrote our coming out stories for today's magazine. Mine is below. Click on Anna's name for her's.
The legendary drag artist Charles Pierce once quipped: "I'd rather be black than gay because when you're black you don't have to tell your mother". Like many other gay people, I grappled for a long time with the question of if, when and how I should come out to my parents and family.
I didn’t do it for quite a while. From age 18 on, I spent four years coming out to various friends, gradually shaking off the fears and inhibitions that had long kept me down, in every sense of the word.
By the time I did tell my clan, I was well rehearsed. I was in my early 20s then, out on Dublin’s lively scene, and making up for lost time. I just had to wait for the right opening to bring the family in on the new arrangement.
For me, that opening came on  a Good Friday five years ago. I was home from college for the Easter  break without a penny to my name, so I was spending my evening watching  the Late Late Show with my mam and dad. My mother, sly minx that  she is, had been goading me for quite some time at that point, trying  to get me to confess all. She just knew. I suspect mothers always  do, but there’s still a big difference between knowing and knowing.  During a commercial break, she turned to me, with a knowing glint in  her eye and asked the killer question: “So Dec, have you a girlfriend  at the moment?” 
I froze. I could fob her off  with some line, as I had done for years. But something in me just clicked  that evening. I thought to myself, ‘I’m 23 years of age and here  I am about to talk make believe with my parents’. So I turned down  the volume on the TV, looked at both of them, and said: “No, I don’t  have a girlfriend [here I paused for dramatic effect]. And I never will  because I’m gay”.
They both just nodded and didn’t  say anything for a moment. I don’t think they were shocked at the  news – just shocked that I had actually told them.
 
Then my mother, bless her,  came out with her own admission and people don’t believe me when I  tell them this, but I swear it’s true. “I knew you were gay, and  I always knew you would be,” she told me mysteriously. “Why’s  that?” I asked?
She continued: “When I was  pregnant with you, I didn’t know what sex you were, and I prayed and  hoped you would be a girl. I was convinced you were going to be. Then  when you were born, and you turned out to be a boy, I said to your father,  ‘I bet he’ll turn out to be gay now because I so wanted him to be  a girl’.”
I just burst out laughing.  I wanted to hug her for inadvertently breaking whatever tension there  was in that moment. My dad simply said he wanted me to be happy. It  was all very calm, just as I had always hoped it would be. By the time  I told them I was confident enough in myself to be able to reassure  them and not cause any panic. I do firmly believe that in most cases  you can set the tone when coming out. If you’re not stressed or  panicky, then those you’re telling won’t be either.
 
In my case I underestimated  all of my family’s reactions. At least one of my brothers seemed genuinely  hurt that I hadn’t confided in him. I always assumed my family would  be upset if I told them. It had never even occurred to me that they  could be upset for not telling them. 
I know I’m lucky. Not everyone  is in the same position. Some Irish gay men and women never come out,  sometimes by choice, sometimes by necessity. I don’t judge them for  it. It’s an intensely personal decision, and if a person feels that  they are not in a position to confidently neutralise any fears and prejudices  their loved ones might have, then perhaps they’re right to stay quiet  until such time as they’re ready.
Looking back, I was so afraid  my parents and family would look at me differently, think less of me,  be ashamed of me. That hasn’t been the case. They mightn’t fully  understand it all, but that’s fine. I know, ultimately, they have  my back, even if they don’t always say it. 
Take my dad for example. My  mam told me recently about something he said to her when they were on  holidays in Portugal two years ago. They had gotten to know what my  mam describes as a “gorgeous, friendly young waiter” who served  them every night in their resort restaurant. On their last night dad  said to my mother: “Wouldn’t he make a nice boyfriend for Declan?”  I was deeply touched by that. I guess parents can still surprise us  as much as we do them.
Sometimes I can’t believe  I stayed quiet for so long, but it’s what made sense to me at the  time. Today I see the generation directly after mine coming out younger  than ever before, which can only be a good thing. There’s a burgeoning  confidence that allows gay people to realistically focus on the possibilities  as much as the challenges. Why settle for a closet when you can have  the world?
 
 

3 comments:
Great piece Declan, really touching.
Thanks for that Eoin
Aw Dec, I'm in tears here. So lovely- I knew that bit about when your Mam was pregnant with you but having read the whole thing, I love your Mammy even more now- what a lady :) xxx
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