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Preacher’s kid, football player and... gay | Brett Trapp | TEDxPeachtree

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    My mother was a teacher
    and my father was a preacher.
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    Our family lived in Florence, Alabama,
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    a sleepy little river town
    of Baptists and artists.
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    Mostly Baptists.
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    Florence is quintessentially southern,
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    and growing up there
    is Sunday lunches after church,
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    Little League baseball
    and high school homecoming parades.
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    I made good grades, followed all the rules
    and even played football.
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    This made me a good southern son.
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    From a young age,
    we're taught to tell the truth,
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    but no one teaches us to tell our truth,
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    maybe an eating disorder
    or some childhood trauma,
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    or something simple like a love for art
    in a world full of jocks.
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    Nope. Nobody teaches us
    to tell those truths.
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    I began to uncover my truth
    at an early age.
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    It's a truth discovered alone,
    grappled with alone, denied alone
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    and, when you are young,
    it feels like a ball of lead in the soul,
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    both heavy and toxic.
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    This football-playing
    preacher's kid was gay!
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    What do you think it would feel like
    being a gay preacher's kid
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    in the American south?
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    Well, this was my two-ton truth,
    but telling it was not an option.
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    The good-old-boy ghost
    of southern culture was clear:
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    "Zip it up, lock it down. We don't talk
    about that down here, preacher boy."
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    I love my southern roots and I love
    the people I went to church with,
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    some of the best people on the planet,
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    but, in 1988,
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    a resolution was passed at a meeting
    of our national church leaders,
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    declaring homosexuality was
    "a manifestation of a depraved nature,
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    a perversion of divine standards
    and an abomination."
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    This very fierce language was mimicked
    by lots of other religious organizations
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    in the 80s and 90s,
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    and those strong words did not go
    unnoticed by little ears in the pews.
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    To be gay is to be a unique minority,
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    living with a physiology you did not
    choose, in a tribe not your own,
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    amongst families that struggle
    to understand you.
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    And to be a gay person of faith
    in the American south
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    is its own unique challenge.
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    Flannery O'Connor famously wrote,
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    "While the south is hardly Christ-centered
    it is most certainly Christ-haunted."
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    To be gay in a community
    steeped in religion
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    is to know that you are welcome
    only if you remain single and celibate.
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    It's to feel forced to choose
    between spiritual faith and earthly love.
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    It's to beg God to change you,
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    hoping for a golden ticket
    into straightness.
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    And so, I made my way through high school
    and college with no dating, just denial.
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    I was serious about my faith,
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    hoping to one day discover
    a tonic of spiritual disciplines
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    that would cure me.
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    And, in the meantime,
    I perfected the art of numbing the pain:
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    work, work, work,
    nights out, big vacations
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    and the continual incantation,
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    "I don't need love, I don't need love,
    I don't need love."
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    Forget coping mechanisms.
    I had built a coping machine.
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    And it worked!
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    Until it didn't.
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    Some time around 30,
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    I woke up and realized all of my friends
    had moved on with their lives,
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    matriculating into the world of wedding
    dresses and children's birthday parties.
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    My loneliness grew and,
    as the sleepless nights began to add up,
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    I eventually gave up:
    I decided to stop hiding.
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    And, through one painful
    conversation after the other,
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    I began to come out to friends and family,
    most of whom were very religious.
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    The conversations were tough at first.
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    Red wine was my courage,
    Pepto-Bismol was my peace.
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    (Laughter)
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    For years, I had imagined
    the worst reactions,
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    with people freaking out
    and casting judgment,
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    but, each time, every time,
    I was met with love, and a tear,
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    and one of those lingering hugs you give
    someone who's been fighting a hard battle.
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    And so, in my 30s,
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    I finally, clumsily, stumbled my way
    into the light of telling my truth,
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    something I wish I'd done so much sooner.
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    Many people seem to think
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    that the religious folk of the south
    are fueled by hate,
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    but I know that's not true
    because I know these people.
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    They are wildly generous
    and kind beyond belief.
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    For centuries, they have been the ones
    helping the poor in our neighborhoods
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    and providing relief after disasters.
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    We need our faith communities,
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    and outsiders typecasting them as bigots
    are peddling the fallacy of composition.
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    Vocal zealots do not represent
    the benevolent majority.
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    I don't think our faith communities
    have a problem with hate.
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    I think we have a problem with love.
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    We just haven't loved
    our LGBT children well!
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    (Applause)
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    We've not loved our LGBT children well.
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    We haven't listened.
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    We've offered theology before empathy.
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    We've protected a tabu that quietly
    boils kids in their own shame.
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    We haven't given them the space
    and the grace that we give everyone else,
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    and we've defended
    disembodied spiritual doctrines
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    while missing the actual
    bodies in our pews.
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    Kids in our religious communities
    dare not speak their truth, out of fear!
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    Many of them are struggling alone
    and we need to ask ourselves the question:
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    why is the word H-E-L-P so hard for them?
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    Now, the good news is
    that I see faith leaders rising up,
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    changing the conversation.
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    I see our churches pivoting,
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    as they have so many times
    across the centuries, towards love.
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    I see the rhetoric being replaced
    with a lexicon of grace.
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    I see people of faith learning a sacred
    song that keeps rhythm with orthodoxy,
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    while shouting a chorus of love.
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    And I see believers united,
    reminding every child,
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    "You are loved and you are lovely,
    and your future is incredibly bright ."
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    Thank you.
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    (Cheers) (Applause)
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    Thanks. Thank you.
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    (Applause) (Cheers)
Title:
Preacher’s kid, football player and... gay | Brett Trapp | TEDxPeachtree
Description:

Brett Trapp gives a poignant talk about coming to terms with being gay in a deeply religious community in the American south, with a surprising realization about himself and the community.

Brett Trapp recently left Corporate America to pursue his dream of becoming a writer and storyteller. He shares stories of self-discovery and identity on www.BlueBabiesPink.com , which is inspired by his experience of coming to terms with being gay in the American south.

This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at http://ted.com/tedx

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
06:36

English subtitles

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