Established
Nov. 18, 1978

Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians And Gays - Phoenix Chapter.  Proudly serving the entire Valley of the Sun...and beyond!


 

 
No more secrets:  An 88-year-old woman 'comes out' to the world...and lives to tell about it!
 
Reminder:  National 'Coming Out' Day is Oct. 11...start making your plans!
 
Note:  The following story is told in three parts (using only two web links):  Part 1 is Loraine's personal essay written for Newsweek magazine's "My Turn" column (appearing in the current issue); Part 2 is the follow-up story which appeared in yesterday's Orange County Register; Part 3 is the "Reader's Comments" section which appears directly below the Orange County Register article (i.e., on the same webpage) -- if you skip those, you're missing a very heartfelt part of the story.  Happy reading!

 
The Love That Will Finally Speak Its Name
 
It took the death of my dear life partner for me to find the courage to come out of the closet.
 
By Loraine Barr
Newsweek
 
Loraine BarrSept. 3, 2007 issue - I was born at a time when to have romantic feelings for another woman was known as "the love that dare not speak its name." I first read Radclyffe Hall's "The Well of Loneliness" around 1938, in my impressionable teens. The book was a heartfelt cry for understanding and acceptance of the "invert." Now we say "gay" and "lesbian," and nobody faints, although we still lack the same rights as other citizens. In how many ways have attitudes changed? And how have they not?

When I went to college in the 1940s, the sex books were kept under lock and key in the UCLA library. I was too embarrassed to ask for permission to borrow those books.

Seeking enlightenment, I looked at young women walking around the campus engrossed in one another, and I thought, "Well, at least they have each other."

I did not realize that even I was judging them, while perhaps envying them. I was dating men regularly and enjoyed being thought popular. Nevertheless, when I came home after each date, said "Goodnight" and closed the door, I usually breathed a sigh of relief.

 

 
At 88, Laguna Woods woman comes out

After spending 44 years with her life partner, a Laguna Woods woman finds the courage to go public with their relationship.

The Orange County Register

Loraine BarrLAGUNA WOODS - Loraine Barr placed the typed, four-page essay in an envelope, sealed it, and then, for three days, wondered if she had the nerve to send it.

"Am I really ready for this?" she thought.

For years, Barr had enjoyed the "My Turn" reader essays in Newsweek magazine.

Now, she figured, was her turn.

Still, she wondered: What if they publish it?  (Indeed!)

(Be sure to read the Reader's Comments following the article!)