This is a pertinent question for me right now, as I’ve just started a new job, and I’m in the process of coming out. So, why am I doing it?
Mostly, I think, it’s because I like the people at work. The place has some really good, witty exchanges going on, and these people seem sharp, and fun, and basically nice. I’d like to have some of them turn into friends. But I can’t do that if I’m basing my whole relationship with them on a lie.
If I don’t come out, I’m stuck with not discussing, or lying about, the rest of my life outside of work. I can’t talk about what my boyfriend made for dinner, or what my boyfriend and I saw at the movies, or what my boyfriend and I did this weekend, without lying, or at least hiding the whole truth.
Lying sucks. I don’t like dishonest people, and I certainly don’t want to be one. Having to spend the time and effort it takes to maintain a lie, about something as normal as who I spend my time with, seems despicable. And I wouldn’t blame anyone at work for not trusting me, if I was evasive in every personal conversation I got into.
By keeping secrets, you build walls between yourself and the people around you. You keep people from ever knowing the real you. It’s a gesture of distrust; you’re not trusting them to like who you really are.
Personally, I’d rather be rejected for who I really am, than accepted because I’m dishonest.
Additionally, I feel that the longer I’m dishonest or evasive about who I am, the more of a big deal this becomes. If I put a lot of time and effort into keeping this secret, and then someone at work finds out about my secret sexual identity, it can actually be hurtful to the people who may have thought they knew me. The longer the deception goes on, the harder it would be for everyone if the truth is revealed.
So, I’m coming out.
Thus far, it’s going pretty well. Both the people I’ve come out to have been great about it; it’s no big deal to them. Hopefully, as word spreads, it’ll continue to be no big deal. Because, really, it’s not a big deal. The big deal part is finding ways to gently, gradually let people know, and hoping that nobody is so anti-gay that I lose my job.
That part is a big deal.