Friday 28 March 2014

Pink News - David Cameron

[Source]

David Cameron: I’m proud that allowing gay couples to marry will strengthen this country

28th March 2014, 10:00 PM
David Cameron

David Cameron celebrates same-sex marriage in
England and Wales
Writing exclusively for PinkNews, Prime Minister David Cameron celebrates the introduction of same-sex marriage today, comparing same-sex marriages to his own, and noting the work still to be done for equality.

This weekend is an important moment for our country. For the first time, the couples getting married won’t just include men and women – but men and men; and women and women. After all the campaigning – not least by readers of PinkNews – we will at last have equal marriage in our country. Put simply, in Britain it will no longer matter whether you are straight or gay – the State will recognise your relationship as equal.

This is something that has been very important to me. I have been so lucky to find the most incredible lifelong partner in Sam and our marriage has been a very special part of the commitment we have made to each other. Of course any marriage takes work, requires patience and understanding, give and take – but what it gives back in terms of love, support, stability and happiness is immeasurable. That is not something that the State should ever deny someone on the basis of their sexuality. When people’s love is divided by law, it is the law that needs to change.

The introduction of same-sex civil marriage says something about the sort of country we are. It says we are a country that will continue to honour its proud traditions of respect, tolerance and equal worth. It also sends a powerful message to young people growing up who are uncertain about their sexuality. It clearly says ‘you are equal’ whether straight or gay. That is so important in trying to create an environment where people are no longer bullied because of their sexuality – and where they can realise their potential, whether as a great mathematician like Alan Turing, a star of stage and screen like Sir Ian McKellen or a wonderful journalist and presenter like Clare Balding.

The campaign for equal marriage brought many people together – gay and straight, in and outside Parliament – and it is right to recognise them for their work. People like Mike Freer, Guy Black, Peter Tatchell, Benjamin Cohen and Tina Stowell; campaigns such as Freedom to Marry, the Coalition for Equal Marriage, Out4Marriage and Lobby-a-Lord; colleagues from across the political spectrum; and the Ministerial and Civil Service team who did such a good job on it.

Together we should be proud to live in a country judged to be the best place to live in Europe if you are lesbian, gay, bisexual or trans. But we should equally be far from complacent about the challenges that remain – and I am just as committed as ever to working with you to challenge attitudes and stamp-out homophobic bullying and hate crimes.

We are a nation that is growing stronger economically because of our long term economic plan. But I hope we can also be a country that is growing stronger socially because we value love and commitment equally. Let us raise a toast to that – and all those getting married this weekend.

David Cameron is the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom and Leader of the Conservative Party

10 Horrific Videos Of Russian Violence Against LGBTs - Queerty

[Source]

10 Horrific Videos Of Russian Violence Against LGBTs

It’s been nearly a year since Vladimir Putin’s staunchly anti-gay regime passed legislation allowing the beating and assault of any LGBT person for any reason.Despite a number of charitable campaigns and viral news stories designed to raise awareness and spark resistance, as well as political pressure abroad, Russia continues to allow shocking human rights violations against LGBTs or anyone merely perceived to be LGBT.

Below are some of the most horrific instances of anti-gay enforcement in action. None of the aggressors below have or will ever be charged with a crime.



Last August, a video surfaced on the Putin-friendly Russian social network VK.com showing a gang of five men brutally beating a trans woman in the middle of a park in broad daylight. In the video above, she is referred to as a “homosexual,” kicked in the head and body, thrown onto the grown, and stripped of her clothes.



Gay activist Kirill Kalugin was attacked and punched by a group of paratroopers last August while standing in St. Petersburg’s Dvortsovaya Square with a rainbow flag in support of Russian LGBTs. As you can see in the video above, police intervened only to arrest Kalugin for the promotion of “homosexual propaganda,” allowing his attackers to walk away scot-free.




Ukrainian X-Factor contestant Alexander Bohun was captured by skinhead vigilante group Occupy Pedophilia in December 2013 and filmed being tortured by the extremist group’s leader, Maxim Martsinkevich. In the video above, Bohun has his head shaved, is forced to suck on a dildo and drink a cup of urine. “I was referred to as ‘pedophile,’ mocked, and forced to admit actions and desires that I have not committed in any circumstances,” he later said in a police report.



Members of the feminist punk rock protest group Pussy Riot were immediately beaten, whipped and pepper sprayed after staging an impromptu protest of Russian anti-gay legislation outside an Olympic venue in Sochi this February. Russian police forces even whipped and beat some who were not involved in the protest, including photographers and reporters, and subsequently arrested the Pussy Riot members involved.



Members of extremist vigilante group Occupy Pedophilia made headlines last summer when they began luring gay men to meet so they could bully, harass, and sometimes beat them — acts that are completely legal under Putin’s anti-gay regime. In the video above, Occupy Pedophilia members capture, taunt, kick, and pour urine on a 15-year-old boy they found in a park.



Two weeks after Russia’s legislation banning “gay propaganda” was passed, LGBT activists met in St. Petersburg to urge President Putin not to sign the bill into law. Demonstrators were soon met with brutal force, detained, and beaten by Russian riot police.



A video showing Occupy Pedophilia members torturing 20-year-old South African student David Smith surfaced on VK last November, prompting Smith’s immediate expulsion from Shukhov State Technological University. In the video, antagonizers can be seen humiliating Smith by shaving his head, smashing watermelon in his face and forcing him to perform fellatio on a beer bottle.



In March 2013, gay activist Artem Kalinin was assaulted and punched in the face during a television interview in Syktyvkar. Kalinin was discussing his attempt to get clearance to hold a Pride parade in the city when neo-Nazi activist Alex Kolegov lurched at him, bringing him to the ground. Kolegov was never arrested.



Last weekend, a group of homophobic thugs assembled to take down students performing in a dancing flashmob to celebrate St. Patrick’s Day. The performance was not related to the LGBT community in any way, but participants were attacked because they were merely perceived to be gay.



The granddaddy of all videos documenting human rights violations in Russia was compiled by Human Rights Watch early last month. The four and a half minute video above documents a number of acts that would be considered criminal offenses anywhere else in the world, from brutal assault to kidnapping and, in extreme cases, attempted murder. These things are all perfectly legal in Russia, so long as they are directed toward someone who is perceived to be “promoting nontraditional sexual relations.”

By:          Matthew Tharrett
On:           Mar 29, 2014

Tuesday 25 March 2014

Advocate.com - Tyler Glenn comes out

[Source]

Tyler Glenn, Frontman of Neon Trees, Urges Fans: 'Come Out as You'

The 30-year-old gay singer revealed conflicts with his Mormon faith and how he was inspired by NFL hopeful Michael Sam.

March 24 2014 4:09 PM ET               UPDATED: March 25 2014 3:10 PM ET

The lead singer of Neon Trees has come out as gay, and he's urging his fans to strive for an honest life as well.

After first revealing his sexual orientation in a Rolling Stone interview, musician Tyler Glenn posted a long note on the Neon Trees Facebook page late Monday night thanking his fans old and new for "so much compassion and love." He then urged them to "come out as you."

"I guess the last thing I want to say tonight and for now is if you're like me, a wanderer, a questioner, a soul searcher, a dreamer, or misunderstood for any reason at all: Come out," Glenn concluded. "Come out as a wanderer. Come out as a questioner. One day it wont matter. But it still does. Come out as YOU. That’s all I really can say. That’s what i’d say to me at 21, the scared return mormon missionary who knew this part of himself but loved God too. You can do both. Don’t let anyone tell you you can’t."

Read the full note on the Neon Trees Facebook page.

In an interview to be released Friday in the upcoming print issue of Rolling Stone, Glenn, 30, revealed his sexual orientation and the conflicted emotions he had toward his Mormon faith, which resulted in years of repression.

"I had my crushes on guys throughout high school, but it was never an overwhelming thing until my 20s," the frontman revealed. "Then I'd be dating girls and in love with my straight friend and it was the worst feeling in the world."

"We were always taught, and I hate this word, 'tolerance,'" he said in reference to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saint’s opposition to same-sex love both morally and politically. "The only time that felt different was when the Prop. 8 thing came up.”

Glenn began coming out privately to family and friends in October 2013 while writing music for the upcoming Neon Trees album Pop Psychology, which includes lyrics that speak about his experiences as a closeted gay man. He says his coming out was partly inspired by athletes like NFL hopeful Michael Sam, who recently came forward about his sexual orientation.

"I really love all of the sports figures that are coming out recently," he said. "I appreciated Michael Sam was like, 'I want to be able to go to the movies and hold hands with my boyfriend.' Even hearing him say 'boyfriend,' I was just like, 'that's cool.'"

Neon Trees - Facebook

[Source]

I don’t think I’m special for being a gay man. That’s not why I came out. I didn't come out so all of you could say “i knew it” based on the clothes I wear or the way I dance. I never even thought I’d have to come out.

I’d be the 50 yr old living with dogs hiding my relationships living on a beach somewhere. Maybe then i’d be comfortable with it. But it was last summer, writing songs for the new album, being so fed up with “hiding” and being so ready to be “free” that I poured my heart out into music more than I’d ever had before. Music indeed was my first love. Not a boy. It was music that I had always had a torrid love affair with. I felt I owed him, the music, or her, the song. I had to be honest with that relationship.

It was the moment I let myself write about the years spent in falling for my straight friend or the song I let myself write about thinking it was ok to be alone forever because it was better than explaining myself. It was those truths that came out before I decided to. You can’t hide away forever. I don't think i was even trying. But music never let me lie. Something always would come out in the songs.

So now you know what you may have always assumed. Good for you. How does it feel? Do you want a “gaydar” award? Do you want to be pat on the back because you can “spot them”?

It is not news. It is not meant to be salacious. Until you know what it’s like to hide, to keep away true happiness out of fear. That’s when you truly understand what it’s like. It’s not about coming out to wave a flag in another’s face. At least it’s not for me. For me its about finding the purist of peace. The absolute settling of my soul. The clearest vision of the road I want to take.

I’m 30. I don’t want to die anymore. I want to really live. Honestly, and fully. What an amazing place to be. For me it was a place I never cared about. Now all I want is to be honest.

That’s what this whole “coming out” thing is for me. It’s been quite a real and beautiful day to have so much compassion and love coming from strangers, fans that have been there since the beginning, new fans, family, friends. For someone like me, the eternal self deprecator, i just want to say thank you.
I guess the last thing I want to say tonight and for now is if you're like me, a wanderer, a questioner, a soul searcher, a dreamer, or misunderstood for any reason at all: Come out.

Come out as a wanderer. Come out as a questioner. One day it wont matter. But it still does. Come out as YOU. That’s all I really can say. That’s what i’d say to me at 21, the scared return mormon missionary who knew this part of himself but loved God too. You can do both. Don’t let anyone tell you you can’t.

All my love and hope, and for now, back to the music.

XO Your friend, Tyler.

Monday 24 March 2014

CNN - Neon Trees singer comes out as gay

[Source]

Neon Trees singer comes out as gay

By Caryn Ganz, Rolling Stone
March 24, 2014 -- Updated 2203 GMT (0603 HKT)


(RS.com) -- Tyler Glenn — lead singer for Provo, Utah New Wave-pop quartet Neon Trees and a Mormon his entire life — reveals he is gay in the new issue of Rolling Stone (on stands Friday, March 28).

"I've always felt like I'm an open book, and yet obviously I haven't been completely," he tells the magazin Caryn Ganz.

But he is now: Glenn speaks candidly about his first gay experiences, his band's reaction to his coming out and his complicated relationship with his conservative religion.
Artist of the Week: Neon Trees

Glenn says he's known he was gay since he was a young child, but kept his sexuality a secret — until now. "I had my crushes on guys throughout high school, but it was never an overwhelming thing until my 20s," he admits. "Then I'd be dating girls and in love with my straight friend and it was the worst feeling in the world."

"We were always taught, and I hate this word, 'tolerance,'" he says, regarding his church's stance on homosexuality, which is notoriously fraught. "The only time that felt different was when the Prop 8 thing came up," he says, referring to when the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints spent an estimated $22 million fighting same-sex marriage in California in 2008.

Neon Trees talk about wanting to always sound like Neon Trees

Glenn started to tell close friends and family members his big news in October 2013, as he was finishing up writing songs for Neon Trees' upcoming third LP, "Pop Psychology," many of which address his years in the closet.

Today, he's inspired by the variety of men and women from all corners of pop culture who have been coming out publicly, especially athletes facing high stakes.

"I really love all of the sports figures that are coming out recently," he says. "I appreciated (that) Michael Sam was like, 'I want to be able to go to the movies and hold hands with my boyfriend.' Even hearing him say 'boyfriend,' I was just like, that's cool."

Read the full story for reaction from Glenn's Neon Trees bandmates and his mother, plus Glenn's take on straight artists acting as the gay community's spokespeople and his explanation of the events that led to his big coming out.

See the original story at RollingStone.com.

Rolling Stones Magazine - Tyler Glenn comes out

[Source]

Neon Trees' Tyler Glenn Comes Out as Gay in Rolling Stone

Mormon frontman speaks for the first time about his lifetime in the closet in our new issue

Tyler Glenn of Neon Trees performs in New York City.
Lloyd Bishop/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank
March 24, 2014 2:00 PM ET

Tyler Glenn — lead singer for Provo, Utah New Wave-pop quartet Neon Trees and a Mormon his entire life — reveals he is gay in the new issue of Rolling Stone (on stands Friday, March 28th). "I've always felt like I'm an open book, and yet obviously I haven't been completely," he tells RS' Caryn Ganz. But he is now: Glenn speaks candidly about his first gay experiences, his band's reaction to his coming out and his complicated relationship with his conservative religion in our new story.

Gay, Mormon & Finally Out: read our full Neon Trees feature

Glenn says he's known he was gay since he was a young child, but kept his sexuality a secret — until now. "I had my crushes on guys throughout high school, but it was never an overwhelming thing until my twenties," he admits. "Then I'd be dating girls and in love with my straight friend and it was the worst feeling in the world." (Read the full feature on here).

"We were always taught, and I hate this word, 'tolerance,'" he says, regarding his church's stance on homosexuality, which is notoriously fraught. "The only time that felt different was when the Prop 8 thing came up," he says, referring to when the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints spent an estimated $22 million fighting same-sex marriage in California in 2008.

Glenn started to tell close friends and family members his big news in October 2013, as he was finishing up writing songs for Neon Trees' upcoming third LP, Pop Psychology, many of which address his years in the closet. Today, he's inspired by the variety of men and women from all corners of pop culture who have been coming out publically, especially athletes facing high stakes.

The Hidden War Against Gay Teens

"I really love all of the sports figures that are coming out recently," he says. "I appreciated Michael Sam was like, 'I want to be able to go to the movies and hold hands with my boyfriend.' Even hearing him say 'boyfriend,' I was just like, that's cool."

Read the full story for reaction from Glenn's Neon Trees bandmates and his mother, plus Glenn's take on straight artists acting as the gay community's spokespeople and his explanation of the events that led to his big coming out.

Tuesday 18 March 2014

Undercover Doctor - Cure Me, I'm Gay

[Source]

'You're gay because there are demons in you': Dr Christian Jessen breaks down in tears as he goes undercover to investigate bogus 'gay cures'

  • Embarrassing Bodies Dr Jessen goes undercover in C4 documentary
  • Tests out 'right brain therapy' which he deems as 'nonsense'
  • In aversion therapy is made to vomit while viewing images of nude men

By Scarlett Russell
PUBLISHED: 14:45 GMT, 18 March 2014 | UPDATED: 19:46 GMT, 18 March 2014

Dr Christian Jessen, the British TV doctor who presents Embarrassing Bodies, tonight goes undercover in an alarming documentary, testing various therapies which claim to 'rid' people of homosexuality.

In the Channel 4 documentary, Undercover Doctor: Cure Me I'm Gay, openly gay Dr Jessen explores the various controversial methods being deployed in the UK and US to ‘cure' gay patients.

These include 'aversion therapy' in UK and 'gay rehab' in the US.

Scroll down for video

Dr Jessen undergoes various therapies deployed in the UK and US that claim to 'cure' his homosexuality, in the C4 documentary

Dr Christian Jessen at a rally in Washington with patients claiming they had been 'cured' from being gay

Dr Jessen is shown pictures of naked men whilst being given syrup to make him vomit, shown in C4's Cure Me I'm Gay

Dr Jessen is seen vomiting after during his 'Aversion Therapy' in C4#s documentary, Cure Me I'm Gay

We see Dr Jessen given bottle of ipecac syrup to drink, to make him vomit for hours while looking at pictures of naked men and listening to tapes telling him he is ‘worthless,' that being gay was evil and that he should want to have sex with women.

This ‘shock therapy' used to be deployed by doctors for treating homosexuality, ‘since probably the 1920s, 30, 40s and going on well into the 1970s and 80s,' Dr Jessen tells Mail Online.

Patients were given injections every two hours which would make them vomit and have diarrhoea.

The theory was that, afterwards, seeing images of naked men or having homosexual thoughts, would cause a physical reaction.

No patients claimed to be cured by this method.

‘I can't believe that people like me ? a doctor ? would actually prescribe this to people like me ? gay,' Dr Jessen told This Morning.

The documentary then shows Dr Jessen visit the southern states of America, known as the Bible Belt.

Dr Jessen drinks ipecac syrup to make him vomit during 'Aversion Therapy' (left) and waiting for the syrup to take affect, Dr Jessen sits in the doctor's room, looking at images of naked men (right)

Dr Jessen is handed ipecac syrup to drink (left) to make him vomit for hours whilst looking at pictures of naked men and listening to tapes telling him he is ‘worthless,' because he is gay

Some in these deeply religious areas believe that being gay is a state of mind - one that can be treated.

‘The most shocking thing, was that these religious leaders do not believe we were born gay, but that  it's a condition caused by childhood trauma,' says Dr Jessen in the documentary.

Worried about how these views would affect young people, Dr Jessen contacted many Evangelistic churches within the Bible Belt, but they refused to grant him interviews.

Instead, he spoke to young church-goers outside the building to ask their views.

We see him speak to various teenagers, who stated that being gay is a ‘state of mind.'

Two teenage girls, aged 16 and 20, explain that being gay ‘happens when bad spirits are inside you. Demons.'

Dr Jessen is visibly upset by this.

‘Imagine being gay and being told that?' he says, before crying in frustration.

‘I think you should get me out of here, I've had enough,' he says to the camera crew before walking away.

‘I'd been doing reasonably well before then, keeping myself together and regarding all of this as just nonsense,' Dr Jessen tell Mail Online.

‘Rather stupidly, I thought younger people must share different views and I hoped to see some open-mindedness.

‘It saddened me deeply that this wasn't the case.

‘They don't come up with these ideas themselves, they are taught them, and that's incredibly worrying.

‘They go to schools where creationism is taught over evolution, it's unbelievable.'

During ‘right brain therapy,' Dr Jessen went undercover, posing as ‘Adrian', a gay man who wanted to be cured.

He visited Jerry Mungadze, an ex-church pastor, who claims to be a doctor. However, as Dr Jessen found out, Mungadze has no medical qualifications beyond a minor degree in psychology.

His ‘right brain therapy,' which costs $250, claims to spot how gay the patient actually is, and why, by getting them to colour in a drawing of a brain.


Add captionJerry Mungadze, an ex-church pastor, claims to be a doctor but, as Dr Jessen found out, has no medical qualifications beyond a minor degree in psychology.

Dr Jessen watches videos of Jerry Mungadze, amazed at his 'Right Brain Therapy' theories which he deems as 'nonsense'

Posing as ‘Adrian,' Dr Jessen did this, with no prior medical consultation from Mungadze, who even admitted to being colour blind.

‘Adrian' had to describe which part of the drawing he had filled in which colour.

‘He told me the parts I'd drawn in black symbolised all the abuse I'd had as a child,' says Dr Jessen.

‘Which is odd because I had a happy childhood and a lovely relationship with my parents.'

Unbelievably, we see Mungadze tell ‘Adrian' that the thyroid gland (the gland located in your neck) and the adrenal gland (located above the kidney) are both located in the brain.

‘What a load of absolute nonsense,' says Dr Jessen.

‘It's damaging because people watch his videos and actually think you can retrain the brain.'

Dr Jessen also investigated ‘gay rehab.'

Dr Jessen visits John Smid, who is now openly gay, but for years was married and living in denial.

Smid used to run a rehabilitation programme for gay men before he accepted his sexuality and retired in 2007.

'As with drug or alcohol rehabilitation, the rehab attempts to completely isolate the patient from his addiction,' explains Dr Jessen.

In C4's documentary Undercover Doctor: Cure Me I'm Gay, Dr Jessen is tested at Cornell University in New York to confirm that he is, in fact, '100% gay.'

For $3,000 a month, Smid's three-month Love In Action programme would ‘take the patient away from anything he deemed gay,' such as clothes and music.

Smid then talks Dr Jessen through 'gay rehab', as if he were still conducting the course, rifling through his suitcase and discarding anything that might 'cause us to feel sensual or sexual.'

Sorting through Dr Jessen's CDs, Smid claims that music ‘rises up the senses,' so he should only listen to ‘Christian music.'

Smid says his Mozart CD would be identified as ‘not Christian,' and his Adele CD would be seen as equally inappropriate, as the singer is popular within the gay community.

Smid himself now admits: 'I've never met a man who experienced a change from homosexual to heterosexual.'

Dr Jessen says that he hopes the documentary raises awareness and helps the gay community feel more assured.

‘I hope young, vulnerable people who perhaps may have considered these therapies will watch the programme and realise it's all nonsense and they have absolutely nothing to be ashamed of,' he says.

Undercover Doctor: Cure Me I'm Gay is on Channel 4 tonight at 10pm

Thursday 13 March 2014

Darren Hayes: ‘Come out. In your own time. - attitude

[Source]

Darren Hayes: ‘Come out. In your own time.’

Posted On 13 Mar 2014 11:58 By : Nick Levine Tags: coming out, contributors, Darren Hayes


As a gay man I’ve come to accept that you never really stop coming out. As someone in the public eye the question of my sexuality is matter of fact. It’s Google-able. But it wasn’t always that way.

I’m a strange kind of public person: famous for some songs or performances but largely not a celebrity. My level of recognition varies wildly depending on the context. There are many moments when I’m buying flowers or sitting next to a stranger on a plane who has no idea what I do for a living and I have the opportunity to clarify who I am just like anybody does. It begins with answering and asking questions.

“Where are you from?” “What do you do for a living?” and so on.

If you chat for long enough invariably the conversation will launch a polite investigation about significant others. Now, while the public ‘me’ is very much ‘out’ – the stranger sitting next to a stranger on a plane is not yet. I’m very much aware in that moment, it’s still a choice to reveal or not. If it makes sense organically I obviously choose to clarify who I am but I’m often struck by the fact that I have to.

It’s been my experience that revealing your sexuality is a bit like peeling back an onion skin; there are layers of intimacy to get through. Also, not everyone likes onions! Hell, for a while even I didn’t. Perhaps a more apt comparison is the way we group our friends together on Facebook. Each of us has a circle of friends and family we invite in to the inner circle of our private lives and the level of intimacy decreases as we move outward through those concentric circles and on to ‘acquaintance’. It can be a conundrum. How much do you share? Not just about sexuality, but all of it really. Political opinions, position on religion or your review of that recent film. It’s a delicate minefield if you don’t know your audience.

Here in America, where I’m largely anonymous, I’m often in a position where I have to ‘come out’ in regards to my pop career. Recently I’ve been attending acting classes where the first day is always some form of ‘getting to know you’ game – which can be awkward for me simply because of my career. Most of the kids in class were too young to remember it – or if they do they look at me with a sort of dewy-eyed nostalgia and refer to my pop career as though it died. Bless. Yes I see the humour in it. But I also see how our revealing our back-story, whatever it is, is still a choice.

Some of my new friends in America have come out to me as being quite conservative. Some are Christian. I myself am not. Recently I had to do my very best not to get angry when a well-meaning classmate cried for me because she didn’t ‘want me to go to hell’ when I told her I was in fact married to a man. I didn’t judge her. I got it. I mean, honestly I was probably the first gay person in her circle of friends and I had an opportunity to get angry or educate her. I could have remained anonymous about many aspects of my life – but I chose to go into that class and reveal my whole self – bad 90’s haircuts, Civil Partnerships and all.

Yet living your life with that bold confidence is not something all of us can instantly embrace. It takes time. It took me a long time.

Although in 2014 most of my gay friends are out and proud I do still have some friends who, for whatever reason, have not yet or do not feel comfortable enough to be out in their work place.

One friend who works in the corporate world is surrounded by colleagues who never ask about his private life. To them he’s either a single man in his late forties who never mentions a wife or girlfriend, or he’s gay. But it is never mentioned. The reality is he’s deeply in love and in a committed long-term relationship with his male partner of a decade. Yet in the culture of his industry, this is still something that is just not spoken about.

I feel sad his industry wants him to keep up a façade. Yet I also see from his point of view there is a wall of old thinking he is up against and this makes it hard if not impossible for him to be completely himself at work.

I had a Twitter follower share with me their awful experience of being harassed online for being gay. In a naïve chain of events, this handsome lad had posted a shirtless picture of himself that attracted the attention of some severe homophobic abuse that necessitated police involvement. Because of the severity of the incident the experience resulted in him having to file a police report and in turn, confront immediate family and co-workers about his sexuality. It wasn’t all sunshine and rainbows. It was awkward and sobering and I presume because he was suddenly and without warning thrown in to a situation where he had to reveal himself to even the most casual acquaintance.

Up to that point he was someone who didn’t think he held any sense of shame about who he was, but the scenario and circumstances of his coming out made him have to put it all into context in a lightning speed. Suddenly he went from being ‘out’ to just a close circle of friends to letting all of his co-workers and some relatives know who he was. The sheer act of filing a police report meant committing in writing on a legal document that he was gay. No big deal but then a massive deal at the same time. This seemingly innocuous act had a profound gravity.

For every generation it becomes easier to come out, but nothing can really take away from the fact that it’s a deeply personal journey and one that doesn’t exists in a linear format. In some ways, coming out is the easy part. It’s the day after and through the rest of your life that you realise there’s still an ongoing process – even if it’s just navigating around other people’s reactions.

My coming out was a torturous affair. I was married to a woman when I was 23 and I’m proud to say to this day she is still one of my best friends. I was madly in love with her at the time but I was deeply confused. People would assume that I was gay and I would reply with genuine offence pointing to my wedding ring, stating that I was indeed not! Truthfully I had no idea. My own self-hatred was so deeply ingrained in me that I managed to shelve my sexuality so expertly that it was a shameful secret even to me. It wasn’t until I became a musician and started travelling the world that I met other gay men who reminded me there was a place for me in this world. That’s when I had to go home to my wife and admit that something was up.

It was a very sad time for me. I had always been deeply monogamous but I couldn’t deny that in my twenties I had married too young, I hadn’t finished growing up and ultimately I was potentially going to ruin both of our lives if I didn’t own up to my true self and make some choices.

All of this coincided with the apex of my fame in Savage Garden and solo career.

There I was, a millionaire, with number one singles and the spotlight of fame, and in my private life I was still struggling to come to terms with who I was.
I left my wife, I ‘came out’ to my family and friends but I was not happy about it nor had I truly accepted it. But then I was in the public eye, where journalists were asking me to comment on my sexuality!

I guess there was an assumption I was hiding something when the truth was, I was still struggling. Many times during those ‘wilderness years’ I asked my wife to take me back and I contemplated having relationships with women because it seemed easier. Being an adult, wanting to have children and finding myself essentially a teenager trying to go on a first date was not very enticing. Not many rainbows or glitter cannons of joy for me back then.

My experience of being gay, newly single and in the public eye quickly turned to depression – a dark cruel prison space I occupied for much of the mid ’90s. I would venture out to gay bars or try to date, but I was a babe in the woods. I was like some overly romantic character from a Jane Austin novel trying to make my way through the gay scene. I know it’s controversial but can I just admit this now? I really don’t like going to clubs! I’ve never loved dance music. I realise this is only one fragment of the gay community but for me back then it was all I saw and the only way to meet someone.

I was not traditionally handsome and I did not have a great body so you can imagine how most of the time I felt like an outcast trying to fit into the one part of gay subculture I was exposed to but didn’t belong to. I’d come home from a night out with a bruised heart, then rock up to a press junket or a magazine interview and the journalist would ask: “So is there anybody special in your life?” Ha!

Thank goodness I had the enclave of foggy San Francisco with its wonderful queer culture and bizarre inclusiveness to understand there are billions of different types of gay men. I was the kind who liked Star Wars, nerdy things and TV dinners.

I’m proud that I never lied about who I was – but I resented very much the expectation that I should not only know who I was, but that I should also make a public declaration about it. The truth is I was so depressed about it I often felt suicidal.

I’m lucky that, through a strong network of friends, family and professional help, I was able to work through my feelings and emotions and come out on my own terms the day I announced I married my husband Richard.

But it could have been a very different scenario.

I think it’s public knowledge I was very nearly outed by comedian Simon Amstell during an interview for now defunct TV show Popworld and I have to say I’m so grateful that I wasn’t forced to come out that way.

That awkward portion of the interview was left on the cutting room floor and looking back I’m so glad because truthfully I don’t think I would have survived the aftermath at the time. In retrospect I don’t blame the host – he didn’t know the back-story to my life or the headspace I was in. But it was upsetting to say the least.

It’s terrifying when the decision to come out is taken from you. Imagine how a young person, going through the depression, anxiety and fear as I was back then, feels when they’re dragged out into the open to declare something about themselves they’re not even comfortable with yet. I don’t think I do want to imagine. I’m just glad I was given the grace period I needed.

Coming out is like any other journey in life – it’s a process.

I held back some pretty deeply-seeded thoughts of shame about my sexuality. It had nothing to do with fame, or my career – it took real love, and a stable relationship for me to heal those parts of myself that I was ashamed of. When I met my husband Richard, I felt strong enough to face up to any bully. I was so proud of our love I wanted to shout it from the rooftops. So I did. The fact that I was able to proudly come out, on my own terms and in my own time is why I feel so content and devoid of shame today. I was allowed to process all of it and stand up to the world and embrace who I was with dignity and a real understanding of my soul.

Just realising you like boys is one thing. Understanding the greater social context and preparing yourself for the journey beyond that revelation is, in my experience, the real coming out and it’s one we need to be sensitive about.

If you take my job out of the equation – what difference is there in my situation and, say, my friend who works in banking? For whatever reason, we must allow each other the time, grace and space to come to terms with who we are in our own time.

Yes we should support coming out. It’s wonderful, inspiring and aspirational. But it’s not always easy. Just Google my It Gets Better video to see how much I’ve changed since the days when I was spat on as a child or beaten up because I was gay. So much has changed and all of it within me.

I’m glad it’s 2014. There are ever-evolving steps in the right direction of equality and I’m glad we are more elastic in our understanding of human sexuality. No matter how many countries allow equal marriage, or how many television shows represent gay characters – independent of how our society moves forward in its view of human sexuality there is no shortcut for the individual on the road to acceptance.

Be proud. Be Out. But be patient. Everyone is on their own journey.