also, if he's just announced to the world hes gay, and its a big deal for him, his brain and emotions are probably frazzled and hes venting against those he loves most.
Good call, Kelda. I think you're onto something, there.
It's just never occurred to me to think that people are "weird" or "different" or whatever if they happen to be attracted to members of their own sex or members of both sexes. I guess I've just always figured you can't help who you're attracted to. It'd be like, I dunno, trying to will your irises to be a different color. Just the same, we can't help the color of the skin and the other physical attributes we're born with. It's always made me sick to my stomach when I've seen other people making fun of anyone for looking different. I can relate to it to a small extent personally in that I was always much taller than everyone else growing up. They didn't start to catch up and surpass me until high school. I was 5'7" when I was 9 years old. I just ended up staying there. So I'd get "What's the weather like up there?" and stupid shit like that a lot. And when I was in the first and second grades, they called me "The Fang" (lovely, eh?) because I'd lost my four front baby teeth and the adult ones hadn't come in yet, but those canines were more than happy to come in early and prominently.
Maybe it's a combination of things - not being wired from the beginning to fear anything or anyone that isn't just like me, growing up too fast and too early because my home life sort of necessitated it, and being the object of ridicule early in life myself - that makes me just plain not get discrimination. It's completely foreign to me. And so it never ceases to amaze and shock me whenever I see it. Which made my childhood all the more interesting in that my mother and brothers, I'm very sorry to say, were (and still are) insufferable bigots.