More

For Gay Youths, Middle School Can Be Toughest Time

Middle School

JOCELYN NOVECK   10/12/10 06:56 PM ET   AP

NEW YORK — By the time she was in eighth grade, Rory Mann was so aware of the differences between her and other students that she couldn't bear to enter the cafeteria. Instead, she ate lunch alone on the cold, hard bathroom floor, propped against a wall.

Sometimes Mann, who had known she was gay for about a year but dared not tell anyone, would cut herself on the arms with a razor blade. Her long sleeves hid the evidence of her misery from classmates and family.

"Everyone's trying to figure out who they are in middle school," says Mann, now 18 and a high school senior in Newport, R.I., where she is active in a gay students group.

"They turn into vicious people. They are really insecure, and they exploit someone else's differences so people won't see who THEY are."

With recent stories of anti-gay bullying and tragic suicides of gay youth at the forefront of the national conversation, experts say they are increasingly seeing evidence that middle school is the toughest time for gay youth – a time of intense self-discovery, but also one when bullying and intolerance is at its peak.

Evidence collected over the past few years indicates it's at this age – 11 to 13 or 14 – when many youngsters realize they are gay and consider coming out. Some take the plunge, and some don't. Yet it's a difficult time for such identity struggles, because it's an age when being different feels the most painful.

"We know that kids are much more likely to be cruel-hearted then," says Michele Borba, an educational psychologist and frequent commentator on parenting issues. "They'll pick on anyone who is different. Peer pressure is huge. Kids desperately want to fit in and be included."

Indeed, the rates of violence against gay youth in middle school are almost twice as bad as in high school, says Eliza Byard, executive director of the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network. She says 20 percent of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender high school students questioned in a 2007 school climate survey reported physical assault, while 39 percent of LGBT middle schoolers reported the same.

And yet the answer is not to stay closeted, says Byard and others.

Her group's 2009 study found that coming out, while obviously making students a target for bullies, is also a hugely positive thing for gay students of any age – correlating with higher self-esteem, lower depression and a greater sense of belonging at school.

The problem, many say, is that middle schools are often woefully unprepared to combat the kind of harassment or bullying aimed at gay students, whether these students are out or not.

"Some teachers have mistakenly thought that if they address these issues in middle school that they're addressing sex, which would be inappropriate," says Carolyn Laub, executive director of the Gay-Straight Alliance Network, a San Francisco-based group that helps students form gay rights groups at their schools.

"People think, 'You can't talk about these issues in middle school.' But that is so far from the truth."

Schools often don't understand the early signs of that sort of harassment, Laub adds.

"A lot if it targets students who are non-gender conforming, for example boys who wear clothes considered stereotypically feminine," she says. "They don't realize it's often not about sexual behavior at that age."

Isaiah Baiseri, a high school senior from Glendora, Calif., says he started to realize he was gay when he was 11, in the sixth grade.

"I already had a girlfriend, a 'kid' girlfriend, but I felt uncomfortable at the thought of holding hands with her," he says. "I was trying to do the straight thing. It just wasn't working out."

It took a gay-themed teen novel, "Geography Club," to bring things home to Baiseri. Even then, it took four more years before he came out. His middle school years were particularly miserable.

"It was a really unhappy time. Middle school in general is unhappy," he says. Peer pressure was intense. In an environment where he always heard the dreaded expression, "That's SO gay," Baiseri felt he needed to keep his sexual orientation quiet to avoid being stereotyped.

The worst part came at the start of ninth grade, when a group of girls he thought were his friends turned out to be mocking him on MySpace.

He was crushed, and says that at the worst moments he considered suicide, though never to the point where he made specific plans. Then he threw himself into his studies. He finally came out the following year, and now heads a gay-straight alliance group at his school.

Experts agree that kids are coming out sooner nationwide.

While national figures are lacking, the Family Acceptance Project, a San Francisco State University-based research group, found in a study of California families conducted between 2000 and 2005 that the coming-out age is now on average 13.4 years, as opposed to 14-16 in the late 1980s to mid-1990s and the 20s in 1970.

Project director Caitlin Ryan says youngsters several decades ago may have sensed they were different but weren't quite able to label it.

Now, she says, they are much savvier, thanks to the vast amount of information available on the Web, as well as TV shows like "Glee," which features an openly gay character at high school and appeals to kids as young as 8 or 9.

"Forty years ago there was no openly gay Oscar host like Ellen DeGeneres, or the Web, or 'Glee,'" says Ryan. "Forty years ago a kid might have made his discovery in the stacks of a library – and if you could even find a book, it would have a tragic ending."

But the more positive images of today, she notes, give a "false sense that acceptance is everywhere. Most people don't realize that while society has more positive images, that doesn't translate into a more supportive school or a more supportive home or someone for a young person to talk to."

Emily Coffin, now a high school junior in Santa Clarita, Calif., knows how important that support can be. She struggled to define her sexuality in middle school, where even her friends were mean, she says.

"They'd make offensive jokes," says Coffin, 15. Or, while she was still figuring out her identity, they'd say things like, "C'mon, you can tell me, you totally are gay."

For her, the real change came when she got involved with a gay-straight alliance at her school, of which she is now co-president.

"It gave me an outlet, a purpose," Coffin says now. "It changed my life."

___

http://www.gsanetwork.org

http://www.glsen.org

FOLLOW HUFFPOST EDUCATION

NEW YORK — By the time she was in eighth grade, Rory Mann was so aware of the differences between her and other students that she couldn't bear to enter the cafeteria. Instead, she ate lunch alo...
NEW YORK — By the time she was in eighth grade, Rory Mann was so aware of the differences between her and other students that she couldn't bear to enter the cafeteria. Instead, she ate lunch alo...
Filed by Erica Liepmann  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 26
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tunghoy
My other car is a TARDIS
11:36 AM on 10/17/2010
Another news flash: "Bears crap in the woods," says Catholic pope.
09:58 AM on 10/17/2010
Homeschooling can be a tough option, but it's one that I would recommend to any parent whose child is truly outside the norm. Given that Middle School can be traumatic for any student, even the beautiful and wealthy, imagine what it is like for those who have no means of conforming. Gay and lesbian students are in a particularly dangerous position, but kids with autism spectrum disorders are right behind them. School systems often make the decision to keep a student at home difficult, citing social skills as all important to a child's development, but for some kids, the only form that social interaction takes is victimization -- and what does that teach a young person? Parents have to stand by their kids during this crucial time of life. Don't hesitate to protect your children. Most students will eventually mature to a point that it is again safe for outliers to re-enter the system, and in the meantime, you and your child can sleep at night.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
inmyhumbleopinion
Vote third party.
11:10 AM on 10/14/2010
Let's just say it: middle school sucks for almost everyone who doesn't conform: the gay kid, the super-smart kid, the new kid, or (heaven help us) the kid who has a learning disability. I'm dealing with a situation right now with my 8th grade daughter who is constantly being harassed by two kids. No particular reason, just because they know it bugs her. My daughter prefers to handle this on her own, which I applaud her for, but I'm keeping a close eye on it in the event it escalates to the point of me having to intervene.

Fortunately, she has interests and friends outside of school which gives her a level of confidence she might not have had otherwise. I think this is crucial for all kids that age, so that if their school "friends" turn on them, they have alternate support.
09:22 PM on 10/13/2010
I agree that bullying is not exclusively a gay issue. However, many people think that attacking gays is okay, while attacking other, more "normal" people is not acceptable. Kids on their own do not develop the attitude that a gay person isn't a real person - they learn that from others. Far too many of them push bullying of gay kids much further than they would bullying a non-gay kid. That's why so many gay kids commit suicide - or are killed outright by bullies. They have learned to justify such action in their own minds because they think it's okay - it's just a gay kid, not a regular kid.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bob Kellerman
Let's have more sanity toward each other
08:46 PM on 10/13/2010
For anyone not quite understanding why the bullying affects kids so badly....

A Houston City Councilman talks about the dead boys and how he almost went there, too
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/stefan-sirucek/texas-city-councilman-tel_b_761659.html
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hagagaga
My comments are funnier than yours.
03:13 PM on 10/13/2010
Anyone who didn't know this has never set foot in a middle school.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
rlugbill
02:59 PM on 10/13/2010
There is a lot of peer pressure to conform. It is akin to a totalitarian society with 12 year-olds in charge, telling others how to behave.

This is part of the reason my daughter (12) is homeschooled. We want her to be herself, not to have to conform to some other children's ideas of who she should be.

Schools could be doing a lot more to address this situation. The school culture needs to be changed so that people are respected, not disrespected.

However, I don't think the proper way to address this is to make it a gay rights issue. Then, there will be the predictable right wing backlash and parents will be afraid this is the gay community trying to convert their children.

There are many reasons why children are bullied and harrassed in school, and being gay is just one of them. Muslim children (and other religious minorities) are bullied and harrassed. Fat children. Poor children who can't afford designer clothes. Ugly children. Smart children (nerds). Pretty much anyone who is different is bullied in school.

I think that if you frame it in those terms, all parents will support efforts to reduce bullying and to make the school a more inclusive and tolerant environment. If we can frame the issue as one of tolerance and respect and not one of gay rights, I think it will be more successful and it will protect all children, not just gay and lesbian ones.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KJLSanDiego
04:46 PM on 10/14/2010
In the People issue on bullying, one girl said she was terrorizee because her schoolmates found out she was wealthy!
Kids will find any way you're different to ridicule you for!
For me, it was being a "wera" at a mostly Latin o/a school.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JScott
John Galt's last name is McGuffin-Smithee
11:29 AM on 10/13/2010
Got news for ya it's worse at Jr. Hi whether your gay or not. If you are one that is gonna get bullied and one that bullies this is where it happens the worst.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cestpasvrai
Il n'y a pas de lézard.
09:19 AM on 10/13/2010
I'm 25 now, and I remember Middle School rather vividly. I was teased because I had zits and didn't develop breasts until high school. I do NOT remember any gay students being bullied, but I remember I was verbally abused and to be completely honest, it still affects me to this day (I hate looking at pictures of myself and I cannot take a compliment, ever). That being said, if I were gay, I don't even want to imagine how much worse the bullying could have been... I hated middle school.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
I3edlam
Pick your foma.
04:20 AM on 10/14/2010
I'm glad someone is voicing their experience here. Thank you.

It was the same for me as well. I lost all my friends because I was overweight and wore glasses. Before middle school I always made A's and B's. From sixth to eighth grade I would occasionally make D's because I couldn't focus. I was routinely hit when no authority figure was looking. I was pushed to the brink of suicide. It all seemed so unnecessary.

I slimmed down and used contacts in High School and it wasn't nearly as bad. The fact that middle school is akin to a concentration camp for select individuals in not something we can tolerate. I wouldn't wish the treatment I received on anyone, and to imagine that worse things are happening to gays is abhorrent.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MexiChick67
Que? Que? Queee?
02:47 AM on 10/13/2010
The sad truth is that some people, esp. parents, don't take bullying seriously. Perhaps bullies have parents or other family members that are abusive at home. Hitting, using curse words, etc. are condoned way of interacting, so kids don't see it as wrong if the family accepts this type of behavior. These kids will go out and victimize other children because they've been victimized at home. Add to this the religious overtones that gays are evil and must be destroyed and you have a recipe for disaster. Parents need to check themselves and their parenting. Furthermore, some religious conservatives see 'anti-bullying' programs as a 'gay / liberal' agenda to try and convert their children (I kid you not).
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JScott
John Galt's last name is McGuffin-Smithee
11:30 AM on 10/13/2010
The family part I get, I think the ones that bullied me were from families like that.
Some ended up on drugs, or were incarcerated if they lived that long.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KJLSanDiego
04:49 PM on 10/14/2010
If I had a kid who was bullied, I'm going to war against the bully's parents!
If I found out my kid is terrorizing someone, I am going to bring heck down on them!
That type of behavior should never be tolerated, and should be stroungly punished!
01:07 AM on 10/13/2010
It's interesting how much things have changed in what I think of as a relatively short time. I knew I was gay - homosexual, actually - when I was around 11, in 6th grade. I started sneaking around in the local library trying to get information. By the time I was in middle school I was able to use the adult library and I was horrified to find that not only was my lifestyle illegal, it was considered to be a mental illness! So by the time I got to high school I was EXTREMELY closeted. The very idea of "coming out" was out of the question. It wasn't until many years later that I learned that there actually were some people who were "out" in high school.
I just wish the whole "Christian" ethic would leave people alone to be who they are instead of trying to force people to be what "they" think is right!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jdaddy1951
09:20 PM on 10/12/2010
School bullies should get one warning. Then its expulsion. If it continues after that, jail. Bullies are unacceptable and un-American.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MountPanic
08:11 PM on 10/12/2010
Middle school is the roughest time for ANY kid who's marginally "different," or just feels that way.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Daoine
Ever hopeful...
09:08 PM on 10/12/2010
But being different is the very definition of middle school. Who those kids wake up as today may not be who they go to bed as that same night! Changes happen so fast!! I love working in the middle school environment. We have an active, and aggressive, anti-bullying campaign using research based methods and we get results. I wish every school did the same.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JScott
John Galt's last name is McGuffin-Smithee
11:31 AM on 10/13/2010
totally true.
07:39 PM on 10/12/2010
My heart goes out to bullied kids but why are gay kids the poster child of being bullied. Most time people are bullied for being FAT. No one will ever cry for the lonely fat girl in the corner because she deserves it or because can do something about it. Because her/his condition is changeable no one steps up to help. I wish we would treat all people equally not just those who have vocal advocates. Who will advocate for the fat girl/boy? No one. Sad. Well, maybe Adam Sandler in the Wedding Singer. Ha Ha.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Daoine
Ever hopeful...
09:09 PM on 10/12/2010
That was just the focus of this particular article. Bullying is a real hot button issue right now and I'm thankful that attention is being paid.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bob Kellerman
Let's have more sanity toward each other
04:04 AM on 10/13/2010
Respectfully, fat kids are caused by their and/or parents' mistake, usually (kids are not born with 'fat metabolism') . Part of the teasing is to lose weight, a possible correction.

Gay kids are not a mistake, can't change it. Maybe it feels worse to be told your ENTIRE PERSONA is freaky and unacceptable, not just your body shape.
09:41 PM on 10/13/2010
So bullying is OK ...just under certain circumstances. Thanks for clearing that up. Nerdy/skinny kids with braces and pimples, fatties, etc... need to have surgery or do something...right.

You just proved my point. This is about the hot button issue at the moment which is Gay rights not about bullies.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
I3edlam
Pick your foma.
04:31 AM on 10/14/2010
You might want to listen to yourself before you rationalize social sadism on any level. You just said that "teasing" helps them lose weight. Actually it's telling them how worthless they are, and how they'll always be that way. They are trying to internalize that thought in their mind. Little Sociopaths are not trying to help them any more than they're trying to help gay kids.

This isn't a question of either/or. Fat kids should be condemned. Gay kids shouldn't be condemned. It's completely worth condemning every instance of dehumanization. Period.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
eyecon
Retired CEO & Quality-Mgmt Consultant
06:44 PM on 10/12/2010
It is outrageous that these kids must suffer, primarily due to the ignorance and bigotry of the right wing Christianist crackpots. The irony is that they have the same proportion of gay kids as anyone else.