Unblock My Love




Punched Up show

Summary: <p>“I wish I had a cool ‘coming out story,’” comedian Leah Mansfield sheepishly confided.</p> <p>“I don’t,” she laughed.</p> <p>During a commercial break of Buffy The Vampire Slayer, Leah casually turned to her family and</p> <p>told them the news.</p> <p>“Ya know that girl that’s coming to visit me this weekend? Well… She’s more than a friend. I’m</p> <p>gay.”</p> <p>After a brief pause, her mom broke the silence with, “Yeah, we know.”</p> <p>And that was that.</p> <p>Comedian Leah Mansfield’s family has always been progressive. She was raised in a litter of six</p> <p>sisters, and one brother by two self-proclaimed hippies who work as environmental physicists in</p> <p>northern Seattle.</p> <p>Leah was a long distance runner and an above average student, but always felt a little different.</p> <p>Like when her sisters would be gossiping about kissing boys and rounding the bases, Leah</p> <p>remembers thinking, “Maybe I’ll wait wait til I’m married to have sex.”</p> <p>This is a normal feeling in the gay community. In fact, forty eight percent of teenagers have no</p> <p>idea they are gay until they are in their in their mid twenties. They all grew up feeling how Leah</p> <p>felt. Just a little, “different.”</p> <p>Leah wasn’t sure what to do, or who to talk to. She felt like she was suffocating in the</p> <p>secrecracy of her inner, uncertain feelings. So, she did what most young, anxious teenagers do.</p> <p>She rebelled.</p> <p>“I became a born-again Christian. I joined Campus Crusades for Christ,” she said. “I felt</p> <p>something was wrong with me, and I thought maybe religion could fix it.”</p> <p>One summer, at Jesus camp. She met a girl, and all those feelings about being “different”</p> <p>suddenly went away, and things clicked. Leah and her new friend kept their relationship a secret</p> <p>for several months, meeting in the woods to sneak kisses and hold hands. A real life romance</p> <p>novel.</p> <p>One day they decided to open up and share their relationship with their inner circle of friends.</p> <p>But the new relationship status didn’t get them any “Likes.” Their friends saw this as a rebellion</p> <p>against god and lectured them on how wrong their actions and feelings were. The inner circle</p> <p>forbid the two girls to see each other, and everything came to a crashing halt. So, the they split</p> <p>up. Peer pressure is a helluva drug.</p> <p>A year went by with no contact till Leah heard through the grapevine that her summer fling had</p> <p>attempted suicide four times since their split. She reached out, but only received more radio</p> <p>silence till one afternoon weeks later, a letter showed up.</p> <p>“Please don’t contact me. I can’t be friends with you. I can’t see you. I can’t support your</p> <p>lifestyle. I can never see you, ever again.”</p> <p>They never spoke again.</p> <p>I’d like to tell you that what happened with Leah and her girlfriend from Christ Camp was an</p> <p>isolated incident. But, It’s not. Studies show that suicide is the leading cause of death among</p> <p>Gay and Lesbian youth. Nearly thirty percent of the gay youth attempt suicide near the age of</p> <p>fifteen.</p> <p>When religion didn’t fix her, Leah went searching for answers in a place you’d probably least</p> <p>expect. She joined the United States military. And it changed her love life.</p> <p>Leah had always liked the idea of joining the Air Force, and when she applied, she was</p> <p>accepted.</p> <p>Once she was there, Leah found comfort in a small group of ladies who were all gay. More</p> <p>importantly, they were openly gay. It was the first time that she had hung out with a social group</p> <p>of people who were gay, and didn’t care. This was also the first time Leah’s life that anyone had</p> <p>made it feel okay.</p> <p>Even though none of them talked about their lifestyle choice at work, this was still a huge leap in</p> <p>life for Leah. She felt like she fit in.</p> <p>After Leah spent a few years in the military, she did a ton of soul searching. She found herself</p> <p>battling for many years with the grandiose idea of religious guilt and what everyone perceives as</p> <p>“right” and “wrong.” Leah remembers thinking that even her worth in the world was somehow</p> <p>affected by the fact that she was gay. That because she was ‘different’, God wouldn’t love her</p> <p>anymore.</p> <p>I asked Leah if she was still religious after all her soul searching, and her response ended up</p> <p>sounding like something her hippie physicists parents would say.</p> <p>“If God is truly everywhere, it implies and infiniteness. Right? So if God is that big of a deal.</p> <p>There is no way I could ever comprehend in this particular dimension, with my brain, and in this</p> <p>life. Like, I dunno if there is even a God or not… And I don’t think it’s my calling to figure it out,</p> <p>either. I tried for about ten years, and I got to a point where I thought; Maybe I’m just supposed</p> <p>to make people laugh.”</p>