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Coming Out to His Wife Was Painful, but it Started Him on a Path of Authenticity

Posted 7 years ago Tagged family GaysWithKids MixedOrientationMarriage Moving On Salt Lake single dad

By: GaysWithKids | New York City

After Kyle Ashworth came out to his wife, with whom he has four children, “she listened, she mourned and she loved,” he said.
Kyle has four kids from a previous straight relationship. After ten … Read the rest here

Latter Gay Stories
Latter Gay Stories

Latter Gay Stories

24

Real Stories. Real Talk. Real People
IN or OUT of Mormonism.

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Latter Gay Stories
1 day ago
Latter Gay Stories

Just a friendly reminder to the family group chat: ... See MoreSee Less

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2 days ago
Latter Gay Stories

JUST BRIEFED: “Sir, they’ve begun to DON their GAY APPAREL!” TOTAL DISASTER! I have the BEST Christmas, nobody does Christmas like me, everybody says so! Should be RED & GREEN ONLY, like in the OLD DAYS when America was GREAT! NO gay apparel. SAD! LOW ENERGY CHRISTMAS! We are going to MAKE CHRISTMAS GREAT AGAIN and it will be STRAIGHT, TREMENDOUS, the MOST HETEROSEXUAL CHRISTMAS you’ve ever seen, BELIEVE ME! 🇺🇸🎄 NO MORE GAY APPAREL, TOTAL BAN!! Thank you for your attention to this matter.

Probably.
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3 days ago
Latter Gay Stories

Today, on what would have been his 49th birthday, we pause to celebrate the memory and life of Matthew Wayne Shepard.

Twenty-seven years ago, the world lost Matthew, a gentle 21-year-old university student whose life was cut short in an act of unimaginable hatred on a cold Wyoming night. In the darkness of that tragedy, Matthew’s spirit ignited a flame of hope, compassion, and unbreakable resolve that still burns brighter with every passing year.

Those who knew him remember a young man with an infectious smile, a quick wit, and a profound empathy—an old soul. He believed fiercely in equality and human rights long before it was common or safe to do so.

On October 6, 1998, simply for being gay, Matthew was lured from a campus bar, driven to a remote prairie outside Laramie, tied to a split-rail fence, tortured, pistol-whipped, and left alone in the freezing night. He clung to life for six more days. When a cyclist found him, Matthew was barely recognizable, yet even then his face—covered in blood except where streaks had been washed clean by his own tears—seemed to carry a quiet dignity that pierced the soul of a nation.

His death could have been just another statistic. Instead, because of Matthew’s inherent goodness and the fierce love of his parents, Dennis and Judy Shepard, it became a turning point. Vigils sprang up across America and around the world. Strangers wept in the streets. Churches, synagogues, mosques, and town halls opened their doors for candlelight gatherings. People who had never marched for anything suddenly found themselves holding signs that read “Hate is not a Laramie value” and “Love conquers hate.”

Because of Matthew, lawmakers who once turned away could no longer ignore the cost of silence. Eleven years after his death, his name was written into history when President Barack Obama signed the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act—the first federal law to explicitly protect LGBTQ+ Americans.

Today, we do not mourn Matthew only as a victim. We celebrate him as a teacher whose brief life taught millions how to be braver, kinder, and more human.
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