Eight years ago, my life changed with the push of a button.
I had recently turned 39 and was seriously questioning what I was doing with my life. I was working in St. George, Utah at the time on a travel assignment when I had one of the most profound, eye-opening, life-altering experiences of my life. It was just a few weeks before the end of my assignment there and then I would be returning home to Salt Lake. But I was feeling restless, unsettled. I felt like I just needed to go somewhere and do something out of the ordinary. I was close enough to Las Vegas that I thought I would just go down on a whim and spend a couple of nights there over the weekend. (I should emphasize at this point, I’m a planner – this is NOT like me!)
I had no interest in gambling, or shows, or “the strip” in general, so I was looking at other places and found a good deal at the Golden Nugget, which was also not too far from the Outlet stores, so I thought I would just walk around, do some shopping, and just generally relax. The Golden Nugget, as I would come to learn, was also on Freemont Street. Now, back in the day, there was something called the “Freemont Street Experience.” At the time, they only did it once a month, and I just happened to book my stay that same weekend.
Essentially, they shut down Freemont Street to any traffic and allow people to roam up and down the street, visiting the bars, shops, vendors, etc. Stages had been set-up at each end of the street and bands would play. Down a large portion of the street overhead displays were set-up and would show videos/light shows timed to music. And in case that wasn’t enough, there were two stretches where you could zipline down the middle of the street! At the time you had to have a wrist band to prove you were over 21, which I thought was “alcohol” related (and I’m sure that was part of it), but also because there were street performers. I ain’t talking clowns and magicians here – this is still Vegas, after all. There were shirtless cowboys giving lap dances; winged, bikini-clad female dancers, also giving lap dances, among other people wearing racy costumes – all of which could be enjoyed, or get your photo taken with, for a little donation, of course!
Normally, this would have been a little bit much for a good, little Mormon boy from Salt Lake, like me, but something was different this time. It didn’t feel evil, or even scandalous, it felt… fun? One of the reason’s I felt like I just needed to “get away” was because of how much I was struggling to understand my sexuality. I knew that I was “in the closet” at that point, but that I was still doing “all the right things,” (church, temple, etc.) and that – even though I genuinely felt blessed for doing those things, I also felt miserable, stuck – trapped really, and I didn’t know how to come to terms with what I “felt” (being attracted to men) and what I “knew” (that I was going to hell for being attracted to men).
Even now, I don’t know if I can describe my thought process. I saw what was going on around me and wanted to be a part of it somehow. I went back to my room, freshened up, got a bunch of cash, and acknowledged that because I had felt something inside me telling me that I just needed to “get away,” that I was just going to enjoy this night and maybe more importantly, I was going to LET myself enjoy it WITHOUT judgment.
And enjoy it I did! (No, I did NOT get a lap dance, because I’m still pretty shy, BUT I got pretty close!) Reflecting on that experience, part of the enjoyment was the anonymity. I didn’t know anyone there and no one knew me. They didn’t know “who I was” on the regular day to day. They didn’t know me with any labels. More importantly, they didn’t know my past or what I was struggling with internally.
This was the first time in my life that I felt like I could just be me.
I got my picture taken with several of the street performers – male and female alike – and I loved it! The only real challenge that night was trying to find other people to take pictures for me with my phone, but people were friendly and great and more than willing to help me out.
During all of this “letting my proverbial hair down,” one moment stands out in particular. One of the vendors had been watching me ask for pictures with a bunch of the male dancers walking around. I was standing by his cart at one point and he flat out asked me – without any reservation – “are you gay?” It wasn’t a judgmental question. It wasn’t dripping with disgust. He was genuinely curious about me. But no one had ever asked me like that before, with that amount of candor. I hesitated for a split second, but then nodded my head and said, “I am.” And the shackles around my heart fell away. The weight of all the shame, guilt, and fear I had carried with me for YEARS flew from off my shoulders. It was the first time I allowed myself to admit it – to say it! And to say it out loud – without fear of retaliation, without fear of being shamed or condemned? Well, it changed something within me.
That night will go down as one of the most influential experiences of my life. It was a turning point for me. Later that night I went back to my hotel room and prayed. I thanked God for an experience that I knew He had a hand in. It wasn’t accidental that I felt a need to get away. It wasn’t circumstantial that I happened to be close enough to Las Vegas to get away. It wasn’t coincidental that I was directed to stay at that particular hotel on that particular street on that particular weekend. That whole night, I felt a spiritual companionship that I still can’t fully explain. I didn’t feel dirty. I didn’t feel depraved. I didn’t feel lost, confused, or condemned – basically all of the things I would have expected to feel. I just didn’t.
I felt seen. I felt accepted. I felt like I could be myself AND still be acceptable. I had never experienced that before.
Which left me with a conundrum. Sure, I could go to Vegas and “be myself” where no one knew me, but what about when I go back home? It was heart wrenching in a way, because I now had had a taste of a kind of freedom I had wanted my whole life, but was convinced wasn’t possible for me. And yet, there it was. I had been “out,” I had been openly gay, and I had been accepted, not just in spite of it, but BECAUSE of it. But could I be that at home? Could I be that where people DID know me?
I ended my travel assignment and headed back to Salt Lake City. On the one hand, my heart lightened for having experienced true "authenticity," but on the other hand, my heart was also a bit heavy in a way, fearful of knowing what I needed to do…
I selected 2-3 close friends – friends that I knew would be supportive, even if they couldn’t relate – and I came out to them. I shared with them what I felt and who I really am. And they were so kind and loving and I will never forget how much that meant to me. While it felt liberating to a degree to finally be honest with a few people, I realized that – even though I was “being honest” – it didn’t mean that I was being “authentic” with myself. It was a little bit like opening up the closet door a bit and peeking out. And I was terrified. Terrified to come out fully because it meant never going back. It meant opening myself up to criticism, rejection, shame, punishment, condemnation, being thrown out of the church – I mean, I just didn’t know what the consequences were going to be or how hard it would be to navigate them. It meant voluntarily giving up safety for the unknown.
But I did know something. God knew ME. He led me to Freemont Street that night and stayed with me. He was there when someone asked me if I was gay and he was there to hear me say, “I am.” And He didn’t condemn me. He didn’t punish me. He didn’t cast me off into outer darkness. Quite the opposite actually. He supported me; He comforted me; He encouraged me. Ultimately, my fears were not about God, my fears were about what I had been taught about how God would see me. But what I had been taught, did not match my experience.
I sat down and I wrote. I poured out my heart and expressed the understanding I had at the time. Then I copied that into a blog post and waited for several minutes, my mind whirling, my breath quickening, my heart racing. There would be no going back. One more quick, silent prayer – than I clicked “publish.”
And there it was – in black and white; publicly expressed for all the world to see. “Other types of closets,” published on May 16, 2017, the day I formally came out of the closet; making 5/16 my “coming-out-of-the-closet-iversary,” or my “birthgay?” My “De-closeting Day?” My “Gay Day?” I’m not sure what to call it yet! 😊
While I’ve chosen this date to celebrate a turning point in my life, it certainly didn’t happen on just one day. I wrestled with my heart, my mind, with God – and I struggled, for years, to understand myself. Celebrating coming out of the closet isn’t just about “admitting” I’m gay, it’s so much deeper. It’s about accepting myself as person, for who I am, the way I am, without guilt, without shame, without judgment, criticism, or condemnation – all of which are the negative practices I spent a lifetime “perfecting.”
And it is still a journey. I still find deep-seated fears that need to be addressed. I still find new layers of acceptance that need to be achieved. While I had previously seen that as “evidence” that I wasn’t “there” yet (whatever that means), I realize now that those are not proofs that I’m not okay, they are, in fact, proof that I am on the right path – MY path, the path God meant for me to walk. Even though the road and the obstacles and scenery are different from anyone else, I know it’s my path and I’m grateful to be on it.
I’m not going to lie and say that after I came out everything was wonderful. In fact, kind of the opposite. Coming out made life harder because of the uncertainty; because I didn’t know how to “be this way” in the world, when all I had known was secrecy, shame, and hiding myself – my real self – from everyone. I’m still learning. I’m still growing. I’m still changing. But I am so grateful today to be who I am. I am so grateful for what I am learning on this journey and for finally finding peace within myself. And I am grateful to God. I am grateful that He has not only understood me, but encouraged me to be myself and to accept myself and has not once made me feel like I was someone deserving of punishment or condemnation. No one has ever punished me for “being me” more than I have.
I am learning to overcome that deep-seated, learned self-hatred. I am learning what compassion, love, acceptance, and forgiveness really mean. It will take more time, but I am also learning to offer myself what I have never been able to do before – unconditional love.
I just needed to come out of the closet to find it.
Enjoy some photos of my Freemont
Street Experience! 😊