When I first started this blog back in 2015, I had very recently come out to about half my family. In a lot of ways, joining tumblr is what I did instead of whatever self-destructive else I wanted to be doing.
Since then, in October, I try to write slapdash little essays about coming out and being out.
I haven't written one in a long time, not just because I've not been on tumblr as often, but also because... I've been out for a while, now. I don't have the immediate experience of coming out anymore--not in the big-ways, anyway. So I sort of thought that I probably shouldn't comment about it anymore.
But maybe I have a few more things to say to those just in the closet and those just out of it. I want to talk about found family.
I know this is one of those phrases that's sort of... all over, now. I'm not going to define the term beyond its own denotation because the definition of 'family' is such a fluid one. You have to supply your own definition. That will make it harder to talk about, yes, but I want to just put forth my observation and leave it to you to see if it applies to you, hm? M'kay.
Long before I knew I was gay, I knew I was different. I can't say that my connections to boys or girls were fundamentally different than that of my other classmates who ended up straight. But something felt off from a very early age. I think queer people start to realize they are not matching the growing-up program correctly long before they can actually point to queerness as the cause.
I felt this in my family, too. Youngest of my siblings, I had a really firm idea of how I was supposed to grow up, I'd watched my sibs go through it. I didn't know I liked boys, but I knew there were certain things I just couldn't talk about with anybody--especially not my family.
Part of being in my family meant that I could not be gay. So as I grew up and realized, first, that I was not into girls the same way other boys seemed to be, and second, that I was into boys. Shit. I was confident I had the mental fortitude to shake that and live a life with a wife and a family and my parents' blessing and approval. Being gay was quite literally the worst thing they could imagine a human being could do, short of outright murder. This is not hyperbole, this was an explicit statement.
When my family said "We love you", I heard, "We love you so long as you're not gay."
They could not imagine one of their wonderful Christian sons could be gay, it was the furthest thing from their minds. They had never even considered what it would mean to try to love a son who is gay. They just had no conception.
I don't interact with my family anymore, and mostly that is my choice. My parents still claim to love me, though they unequivocally condemn me: they believe the best way to love me is to constantly urge me to repent. This is the best they can conceive of "family" with me in it. So I removed myself from it.
They just had no other conception. Neither did I, not of what family was supposed to be. The queer imagination is a powerful thing. We imagine over and over how our family will react when we come out. We imagine--or try!--a world where we fit in. We've asked ourselves questions and imagined whole other worlds because you sort of have to in order to come to grips with your own queerness: there's not as many models of that in the popular consciousness.
But that imagination was flawed, because ultimately I could only build futures with the blocks I had. I look back now at my time with my family, feeling that splinter of otherness lodged beneath every good and otherwise loving memory. What I imagined, even up to a few years ago, was those memories, that happiness, with the splinter removed. That seemed the best I could imagine. It's a subtractive way of looking at life: the good life would be basically my life, with all the bad parts subtracted.
I found something else with my found family. It's not just that they accept my sexual identity, not as if the only difference between them and my blood family is that there is no splinter in our interactions. These people understand me. These people love me unequivocally.
I have MORE life with them, I have an additive way of looking at the world. They've brought things into my life I could not have imagined with the tools I was given growing up.
This is supposed to be an essay where I break down what that means, but honestly it is so ineffable and magical to me, the best I can do is to say that my found family love me not because we are linked by circumstance and proximity, but because that love energizes them. I love them, and I want to love them more.
Maybe this is old hat for people with pretty welcoming families. It was new for me. So if you look at your family and you feel like there is a splinter between you and them, I just want to suggest that out there in the world there may be a family who will show you all new kinds of love, and teach you how to grow in it.