TW// mention of depression and anxiety, emotional manipulation and bad relationships
Being queer has been a journey for me. As cliché as it sounds, it has been very much like a
rollercoaster. I climbed up – the feeling of elation, of finally feeling ‘right’, like everything
had fallen into place – before tumbling down – the fear set in, the shame, the guilt of hiding
it from my family – and then suddenly I was twirling through loop after loop of emotions.
I realised that there was something a little bit different about the way I viewed girls when I
was around fourteen. I’d always admired girls, thought of them as beautiful, smart, lovely
people. I’d had ‘girl crushes’ and always dismissed them as something every girl had, no
matter what sexuality. But as I got older, I realised that there was something a bit more to
girls than just thinking they looked nice. I wanted to kiss girls, hug girls, be with girls the
same way my friends wanted to be with boys.
I struggled with this for a very long time. I was so fine with other queer people and couples –
I stood up for LGBTQIAP+ rights, learned as much as I could about sexualities and gender
identities I didn’t know much about, supported all my friends who were queer – but I just
couldn’t accept it when it came to myself. This negatively impacted my mental health and
by the time I was sixteen, I found myself in a very dark place, my mind full of depression and
anxiety. I couldn’t go a week at school without having at least two panic attacks, my
weekends were spent in bed most afternoons because I couldn’t muster the energy to get
out, and then my nights were crammed full of anxiety-ridden revision. Although these
mental health issues were caused by a huge range of different problems, being unable to
come to terms with my sexuality was one of them.
Whilst at school, I also entered my first term relationship with a male. This was a very
strange relationship – it started off nicely and I really thought he cared for me, but as the
months went on, things started to go downhill. It was fair to say I was emotionally
manipulated throughout this relationship due to my mental health, my way of coping with
negative situations and how my feelings were different to my partners. The relationship
ended after a couple of months and for almost a whole year after, I blamed myself for the
break-up. However, this was where my turning point came in. I began to see people in a
whole other light, particularly girls. It took me a very long time to accept this, as I often
dismissed it as a phase because he’d ‘put me off men’. My friends and I joked that he
‘turned me gay’, and in the strangest way, he somewhat did. Because at this point, a good
five months after the breakup, I realised that although I liked boys, I also liked girls and non-
binary people. I just liked people, no matter what their gender.
I came out to my best school friend in a coffee shop before a Fall Out Boy concert. This was
by far the scariest thing I’d ever done, although looking back, it really shouldn’t have been
as she was bisexual so why would she put me down for it when we had similar sexualities?
This was in 2015 and it took me a good year before I came out to anyone else. I trusted my
best friend because she knew about sexuality, she knew what to say and how to comfort me
whereas I felt clueless about my own. On the 11 th of October 2016 (National Coming Out
Day), I came out over Twitter and told a lot of my friends. This was the biggest step I’d
made, as I’d been so scared they would reject me or be nasty, but everyone really
supported me. I went on my first date with a girl, I started talking about my sexuality to
others a lot more openly and felt comfortable overall with myself. Unfortunately, it’s a little
unsafe to come out to my family at the minute, as I’m unsure how they would react, but one
day I’ll do it! Baby steps.
So, what does queer mean to me? If you’d asked me this a few months ago, I would have
said it meant shame to myself, but pride to others. For me, it meant hiding away in the dark,
pretending to like boys completely, diverting my eyes away from any girl I found attractive.
It meant I would support others but calling myself queer was strange and scary. It was
something I wasn’t ready to face, something that made me nervous.
But asking me now?
Queer means acceptance. Queer means loving yourself and loving those around you. Queer
means being open and honest about who you are. To me, queer means total love. It means
having a support network of friends who love and care for you. It means feeling positive
about attractions and feelings you have towards people you would never have considered in
the past. It means constantly learning. It means being fluid with who you love, not
restricting yourself for fear of judgement.
For me, queer means happiness.