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My mom when she ... when I told her I was gay, actually took me to like, a psychiatrist.
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And I remember coming out, and the psychiatrist being, like, there's nothing wrong with your daughter.
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She's perfectly healthy.
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(laughs)
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And I was like, "Yeah!"
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And my mom was like, "No!"
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Watching TV you see a lot of, you know, fairy tales.
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And you see men and women, men and women getting married.
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You hear it in songs.
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You, just everything you're surrounded by ...
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Like hetero norms.
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So, I was really trying to mold myself into what a straight man looks like.
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A lot of it's kind of blur because I was trying to be someone other than me.
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It was just like kind of a transition from like "I'm a tomboy, I'm a tomboy," to like "Oh, I'm like, really, really different."
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I had a best girlfriend.
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A friend that's a girl who's my best friend.
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And about the same time that I came out, she did as well.
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And it was just really helpful to have two people doing that at the same time.
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And it kind of brought us closer together.
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Even when I was coming out, like, I still had the things that I've heard from like friends and family growing up.
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About, you know, gay people.
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There was still those attitudes leftover in my mind.
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So I had to, like, really educate myself, and immerse myself into that community and that world.
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I've been more comfortable with talking about it.
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But it's still not something that I'll come out and say: "Hi, I'm Jen. I'm bi."
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One of my closest friends, I had been talking to her about how I had been dating a girl.
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And I really thought she was really cute.
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But I also liked a guy, too.
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And she said, she got really fed up with me, and she said, well you have to pick sometime whichever one you're going to be with.
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What does their gender have to do with how I feel about them?
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When people find out you're gay, it raises something in them.
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They feel in danger.
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They wanna change you.
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And I've even had a priest, once in high school, tell me that I need to redeem my life.
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In my sociology class, in front of the whole class.
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And I had an argument with him.
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Speaking up for myself, publicly,
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was a really, really, empowering moment for me at such a young age.
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There are so many different colors on the LGBTQ spectrum.
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You know, there's trans,
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there's, you know, lesbians, bi, you know,
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gender fluid, gender queer.
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There's so many subgenres of, like, you know, people that exist in our community.
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At the end of the day,
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I really had to accept that there wasn't really a single subculture that was gonna define me.
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I had to accept that I was made
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of all of these things,
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and that all of these identities
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don't necessary make me.
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Be accepting of yourself.
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Even though other people might not do it.
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Maybe I lost a few Facebook friends over it,
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but at the end of the day, that's okay.
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How you feel is not what everyone says that you are.
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I know that sounds really confusing.
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You're gonna have to own it.
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You're gonna have to get your spoon,
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and you're gonna have to dig down deep,
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and be, like, all these layers are mine.
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And the sooner you do it,
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the sooner you'll really know yourself.