Candace Gingrich gives support to Coming Out Day
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Deirdre Newman
Alex Tran, a freshman at UC Irvine, is in the process of coming
out as a gay male. While he has already talked to friends and family
about his sexuality, he is still coming to terms with accepting
himself and feeling comfortable to disclose his orientation if people
ask.
So he was inspired to hear Candace Gingrich speak on campus Friday
at the UCI Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender Resource Center in
advance of National Coming Out Day Oct. 11.
Gingrich was thrust onto the national radar in the mid-90s as the
“lesbian sister of Newt Gingrich,” the former conservative Speaker of
the House of Representatives. Since she had already accepted her
sexual orientation and come out to friends and family, she said she
was psychologically equipped to deal with the torrent of publicity
that followed.
She then channeled her energy from the notoriety she received to
become a spokeswoman for the Human Rights Campaign. Gingrich
crisscrosses the country, encouraging people to live their lives
openly as a way to empower themselves and educate those around them.
“It made me feel like [gay] people are out there and are taking a
stand,” Tran said.
Gingrich, who jokingly describes herself as a “professional
homosexual”, said coming out is important because it enables people
to share their stories with others who may have experienced the same
conflict in dealing with their sexuality.
She shared her story, recalling how she felt there was something
different about herself as a child, but wasn’t sure what it was until
high school, when she chose to ignore her feelings because she didn’t
think she was able to deal with them and didn’t know anyone who was
gay.
“There were no teachers or guidance counselors [to talk to] so it
was easy to push my feelings down as far as I could,” Gingrich said.
It wasn’t until college, when she played on the rugby team and saw
lesbians open about their sexuality that she felt comfortable enough
to come out. For Gingrich, it was a positive, cathartic experience.
“I felt fortunate because I felt like my life was coming together
instead of falling apart,” Gingrich said. “I didn’t stop smiling for
the next year because I knew who I was.”
Telling her parents was a little more difficult, since one of the
first questions her mother asked was, “Where did we go wrong as
parents?” Gingrich said.
She told them that her being able to confide in them meant that
they had done everything right.
But she was startled a few years later when Newt Gingrich said in
an interview to a gay newspaper that gay people should be tolerated,
like alcoholics.
So, seven years ago, when Human Rights Campaign asked Gingrich to
share her story on a national level to humanize gay America, she
accepted.
Gingrich told the UCI crowd of about 50 that coming out is one of
the most empowering acts a person can make.
“Coming out turns the personal into the political,” Gingrich said.
“It frees yourself and people around you, but you’re also freeing
others from ignorance.”
And although gay people have made a lot of strides in being
accepted in their community and at the state and national level,
there is still a lot of work to be done, like the struggle for gay
parents’ rights, Gingrich asserted.
“We’re still not treated like other families,” Gingrich said. “We
can’t rely on the same legal protection ... We’re just seeking
equality federally, statewide and locally.”
Coming out is also important to show the full spectrum of the gay
community, Gingrich said.
“We have to come out because if people just watch TV, they will
think all gay people are white,” Gingrich said.
She also encouraged audience members to write letters to their
high school guidance counselors letting them know why they chose not
to come out at that time in their life or how their coming out
experience could have been better.
Senior Renee Geathers, 21, who came out as a bisexual during her
freshmen year, said she was impressed that Gingrich tackled a variety
of issues.
“I think it’s really important that she included socio-economic
and ethnic issues,” Geathers said.
Tran said he would like to see more lesbian, gay, bisexual and
transgender-related courses offered by the university.
In addition to providing a resource center and a new coming out
support group, the college has non-discriminatory hiring policies,
offers health care and survivor benefits for same-sex couples
registered as domestic partners and recently, a graduate family
housing facility started accepting same-sex couples, said Pat Walsh,
director of the resource center and assistant dean of students.
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