Subtitles section Play video
-
Thank you, Chad, for those kind words
-
and for the even kinder work that you and the Human Rights Campaign foundation
-
do everyday on behalf of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender young people here and across America.
-
It is such an honor to be here at the inaugural Time To Thrive conference,
-
but it's a little weird too.
-
Here I am in this room
-
because of an organization whose work I deeply deeply admire.
-
And I'm surrounded by people who make it their life's work to make other people's lives better,
-
profoundly better.
-
Some of you teach young people.
-
Some of you help young people heal and find their voice.
-
Some of you listen.
-
Some of you take action.
-
Some of you are young people yourselves,
-
in which case it's even weirder for a young person like me to be speaking to you.
-
It's weird because
-
here I am — an actress,
-
representing in at least some sense an industry that places crushing standards on all of us;
-
and not just young people.
-
Everyone.
-
Standards of beauty,
-
of a good life,
-
of success.
-
Standards that, I hate to admit, have affected me.
-
You have ideas planted in your head,
-
thoughts that you never had before
-
that tell you how you have to act,
-
how you have to dress
-
and who you have to be.
-
And I have been trying to push back,
-
to be authentic and to follow my heart.
-
But it can be hard.
-
But that's why I'm here.
-
In this room,
-
all of you, all of us
-
can do so much more together than any one person can do alone.
-
And I hope that that thought bolsters you as much as it does me.
-
I hope that the workshops you go to over the next few days give you strength
-
because I can only imagine
-
that there are days when you've worked longer hours than your boss realizes or care about
-
just to help a kid who you know can make it.
-
Days when you feel completely alone,
-
undermined or hopeless.
-
And I know there are people in this room who go to school every day and get treated like shit for no reason.
-
Or you go home and you feel like you can't tell your parents the whole truth about yourself.
-
And beyond putting yourself in one box or another you worry about the future;
-
about college or work
-
or even your physical safety.
-
And trying to create that mental picture of your life,
-
of what on earth is going to happen to you
-
can crush you a little bit every day.
-
And it is toxic
-
and painful
-
and deeply unfair.
-
And sometimes it's the little insignificant stuff that can tear you down.
-
Now I try not to read gossip as a rule,
-
but the other day a website ran an article
-
with a picture of me wearing sweatpants on the way to the gym.
-
And the writer asked,
-
"Why does this petite beauty insist upon dressing as a massive man?"
-
Because I like to be comfortable.
-
There are pervasive stereotypes about masculinity and femininity
-
that define how we're all supposed to act, dress and speak
-
and they serve no one.
-
Anyone who defies these so-called norms becomes worthy of comment and scrutiny.
-
And the LGBT community knows this all to well.
-
Yet there is courage all around us.
-
The football hero Michael Sam,
-
the actress Laverne Cox,
-
the musicians Tegan and Sara Quinn,
-
the family who supports their daughter or son who has come out.
-
And there is courage in this room.
-
All of you.
-
And I'm inspired to be in this room because every single one of you is here for the same reason
-
You're here because you've adopted as a core motivation
-
the simple fact that this world would be a whole lot better if we just made an effort to be less horrible to one another.
-
If we took just five minutes to recognize each other's beauty instead of attacking each other for our differences.
-
That's not hard.
-
It's really an easier and better way to live.
-
And ultimately it saves lives.
-
Then again it can be the hardest thing.
-
Because loving other people starts with loving ourselves and accepting ourselves.
-
And I know many of you have struggled with this.
-
And I draw upon your strength and your support in ways that you will never know.
-
And I am here today because I am gay.
-
And because—
-
Whooo! Hahaha.
-
Thank you.
-
And because...
-
maybe I can make a difference
-
to help others have an easier and more hopeful time.
-
Regardless for me I feel a personal obligation and a social responsibility.
-
I also do it selfishly
-
because I'm tired of hiding
-
and I'm tired of lying by omission.
-
I suffered for years because I was scared to be out.
-
My spirit suffered,
-
my mental health suffered,
-
and my relationship suffered.
-
And I'm standing here today with all of you on the other side of that pain.
-
And I am young, yes.
-
But what I have learned is that love—
-
the beauty of it,
-
the joy of it
-
and, yes, even the pain of it—
-
is the most incredible gift to give and to receive as a human being.
-
And we deserve to experience love fully,
-
equally,
-
without shame and without compromise.
-
There are too many kids out there suffering from bullying, rejection
-
or simply being mistreated for who they are.
-
Too many dropouts.
-
Too much abuse.
-
Too many homeless.
-
Too many suicides.
-
You can change that
-
and you are changing it.
-
But you never needed me to tell you that.
-
And that's why this was a little bit weird.
-
The only thing I can really say is what I have been building up to for the past five minutes
-
thank you.
-
Thank you for inspiring me.
-
Thank you for giving me hope.
-
And please keep changing the world for people like me.
-
Happy Valentine's Day. I love you.