Age
20
Gender
Female
Ethnicity
Black/African
Hobbies and interests
Writing
Poetry
Video Editing and Production
Videography
Graphic Design
Law
Social Work
Reading
Adult Fiction
Science Fiction
Adventure
Drama
Fantasy
Historical
Horror
Law
Politics
Psychology
I read books daily
star goodgame
1,445
Bold Points1x
Nominee3x
Finaliststar goodgame
1,445
Bold Points1x
Nominee3x
FinalistBio
Hello! I am a second semester freshman at Georgia State University. I am majoring in Political Science with a concentration in Pre-Law and I have a minor in English. My goal is to become a lawyer so I can do pro bono work to help those who cannot afford the representation they need. I also plan to open my own law firm after obtaining my masters. In my spare time, I am a creative story and spoken word writer. In high school, I spent time volunteering at the local food pantry, middle school, and animal shelter. I was a member of the National Beta Club and a leader in my high school’s Student Council for all 4 years and the National Honors Society of HighSchool Scholars for 3.
Education
Georgia State University
Bachelor's degree programMajors:
- Political Science and Government
- Law
Minors:
- English Language and Literature/Letters, Other
Mceachern High School
High SchoolMiscellaneous
Desired degree level:
Bachelor's degree program
Graduate schools of interest:
Transfer schools of interest:
Majors of interest:
- English Language and Literature/Letters, Other
- Political Science and Government
- Law
Career
Dream career field:
Law Practice
Dream career goals:
own my own law firm
grader
goodwill2022 – 2022sales associate
goodwill2020 – 2020
Public services
Volunteering
beta club — volunteer2018 – 2022Volunteering
student council — leader2018 – 2022
Future Interests
Advocacy
Politics
Volunteering
Philanthropy
Entrepreneurship
Harry Potter and the Sorting Hat Scholarship
I love the Harry Potter franchise with every single atom of my being. I can still feel the magic on those pages every time I read the books. I remember reading about the amazing adventures the characters would go on and going to sleep at night, imagining myself with them, flying around on broomsticks, and conjuring potions. I wanted nothing more than to be a part of that fantasy. I could not go to their world, so I brought them to mine. The official Wizarding World website sorted me into Slytherin. I have my wand, and I own all the merch a teenage girl could ask for. The story of The Boy Who Lived gave me hope that I could live too.
I am a Slytherin and could not be more honored. Slytherin is not a very favored or praised house like the other three; Gryffindor, Ravenclaw, and Hufflepuff. Slytherin is characterized as cunning, ambitious, and resourceful with a great bit of pride in our souls. We are, as the Sorting Hat says, “cunning folk [who will] use any means to achieve their ends.” Slytherin is the leader who has clawed our way to the top of the hill and then reached down a hand to help our friends. This fictional group has given me the sense of identity and belonging I needed during my vulnerable formative years as a child. I have never felt more seen and understood than when I read about my house. There were people out there who I related to, and it gave me a safe place.
Although I love being a Slytherin with every part of my being, it is not the only thing that fuels my obsession with the franchise. I love the characters. They are individuals with lives, passions, and goals. Each one of them was not meant to be cookie-cutter or basic. They had purposes. Throughout the seven books, the characters grow more as people and the reader grows with them. My favorite character is Draco Malfoy. Besides my huge crush on him, he is an example of the fantastic character development we get to witness, to which every second I can relate. As a child, he did everything in his power to please his parents, everything. As he aged, the emotional toll from constantly trying to be the golden child started to weigh on him until he eventually broke. I understood his pain and could feel it too, a special child fighting to live up to standard until you eventually fall. He went through a classic case of “gifted kid burnout” but was not granted a chance to prove himself, a redemption arc. Draco is my “comfort character” because we are the same. His story is mine.
This franchise has made me laugh, cry, and through books across my bedroom. Growing up on this story has taught me that magic is real, it is all around us. Witches and wizards are flying on brooms overhead, shops are selling owls, and children are chasing goblins. We see it every day, but we just must truly look. I could never be convinced to let go because to let go is to stop believing and to stop believing is what kills the magic. It has been 4 years, and I am still waiting for my Hogwarts letter.
Dr. Alexanderia K. Lane Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school, my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she too they/them finally ending with her/them. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being, but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was terrible and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t me. I was putting on a charade in front of my blood. So, I came out. I planned to come out after I moved out for college, but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian, but I know how to handle my mom, so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago, and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love and the world must remember that. With the political science degree, I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Rev. and Mrs. E B Dunbar Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have internalized homophobia toward myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was terrible and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me.
Throughout this journey, writing was my outlet. I wrote short stories with queer main characters, I wrote poetry on my sexuality, and I used a pencil to transfer my soul onto paper. What I couldn’t say, I wrote. My tears were my ink and my strength was my quill. I write because I have to, it is a part of my story and who I am. I write so when my mouth is muzzled my heart can speak. Writing opens a tunnel of communication between your soul and your imagination and I intend on opening that tunnel for others.
Elevate Women in Technology Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me. Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood.
So, I came out. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house. I told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Kim Moon Bae Underrepresented Students Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school, my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she too they/them finally ending with her/them. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being, but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was terrible and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t me. I was putting on a charade in front of my blood. So, I came out. I planned to come out after I moved out for college, but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian, but I know how to handle my mom, so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago, and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love and the world must remember that. With the political science degree, I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Cyrilla Olapeju Sanni Scholarship Fund
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school, my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she too they/them finally ending with her/them. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being, but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was terrible and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t me. I was putting on a charade in front of my blood. So, I came out. I planned to come out after I moved out for college, but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian, but I know how to handle my mom, so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago, and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love and the world must remember that. With the political science degree, I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Robert F. Lawson Fund for Careers that Care
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school, my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she too they/them finally ending with her/them. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being, but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was terrible and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t me. I was putting on a charade in front of my blood. So, I came out. I planned to come out after I moved out for college, but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian, but I know how to handle my mom, so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago, and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love and the world must remember that. With the political science degree, I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Bright Lights Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school, my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she too they/them finally ending with her/them. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being, but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was terrible and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t me. I was putting on a charade in front of my blood. So, I came out. I planned to come out after I moved out for college, but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian, but I know how to handle my mom, so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago, and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love and the world must remember that. With the political science degree, I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Sola Family Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school, my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she too they/them finally ending with her/them. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being, but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was terrible and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t me. I was putting on a charade in front of my blood. So, I came out. I planned to come out after I moved out for college, but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian, but I know how to handle my mom, so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago, and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love and the world must remember that. With the political science degree, I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Pro-Life Advocates Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have internalized homophobia towards myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Throughout this journey, writing was my outlet. I wrote short stories with queer main characters, I wrote poetry on my sexuality, I used a pencil to transfer my soul onto paper. What I couldn’t say, I wrote. My tears were my ink and my strength was my quill. I write because I have to, it is apart of my story and who I am. I write so when my mouth is muzzled my heart can speak. Writing opens a tunnel of communication between your soul and your imagination and I intend on opening that tunnel for others.
Michael Rudometkin Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school, my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she too they/them finally ending with her/them. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being, but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was terrible and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t me. I was putting on a charade in front of my blood. So, I came out. I planned to come out after I moved out for college, but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian, but I know how to handle my mom, so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago, and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love and the world must remember that. With the political science degree, I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Linda Fontenot-Williams Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school, my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she too they/them finally ending with her/them. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being, but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was terrible and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t me. I was putting on a charade in front of my blood. So, I came out. I planned to come out after I moved out for college, but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian, but I know how to handle my mom, so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago, and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love and the world must remember that. With the political science degree, I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
E.R.I.C.A. Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have internalized homophobia towards myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Throughout this journey, writing was my outlet. I wrote short stories with queer main characters, I wrote poetry on my sexuality, I used a pencil to transfer my soul onto paper. What I couldn’t say, I wrote. My tears were my ink and my strength was my quill. I write because I have to, it is apart of my story and who I am. I write so when my mouth is muzzled my heart can speak. Writing opens a tunnel of communication between your soul and your imagination and I intend on opening that tunnel for others.
Joshua’s Home Remodeling Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school, my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she too they/them finally ending with her/them. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being, but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was terrible and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t me. I was putting on a charade in front of my blood. So, I came out. I planned to come out after I moved out for college, but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian, but I know how to handle my mom, so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago, and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love and the world must remember that. With the political science degree, I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
WCEJ Thornton Foundation Low-Income Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school, my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she too they/them finally ending with her/them. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being, but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was terrible and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t me. I was putting on a charade in front of my blood. So, I came out. I planned to come out after I moved out for college, but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian, but I know how to handle my mom, so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago, and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love and the world must remember that. With the political science degree, I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Curtis Holloway Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school, my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she too they/them finally ending with her/them. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being, but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was terrible and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t me. I was putting on a charade in front of my blood. So, I came out. I planned to come out after I moved out for college, but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian, but I know how to handle my mom, so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago, and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love and the world must remember that. With the political science degree, I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Bryent Smothermon PTSD Awareness Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school, my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she too they/them finally ending with her/them. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being, but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was terrible and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t me. I was putting on a charade in front of my blood. So, I came out. I planned to come out after I moved out for college, but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian, but I know how to handle my mom, so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago, and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love and the world must remember that. With the political science degree, I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
ProjectGiveBack Scholarship for Black Women
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school, my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she too they/them finally ending with her/them. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being, but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was terrible and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t me. I was putting on a charade in front of my blood. So, I came out. I planned to come out after I moved out for college, but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian, but I know how to handle my mom, so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago, and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love and the world must remember that. With the political science degree, I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Strong Leaders of Tomorrow Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school, my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she too they/them finally ending with her/them. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being, but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was terrible and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t me. I was putting on a charade in front of my blood. So, I came out. I planned to come out after I moved out for college, but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian, but I know how to handle my mom, so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago, and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love and the world must remember that. With the political science degree, I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
McGovern Legacy Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was terrible and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t me. I was putting on a charade in front of my blood. So, I came out. I planned to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love and the world must remember that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Disney Super Fan Scholarship
I love the Harry Potter franchise with every single atom of my being. I can still feel the magic on those pages every time I read the books. I remember reading about the amazing adventures the characters would go on and going to sleep at night, imagining myself with them, flying around on broomsticks, and conjuring potions. There was nothing I wanted more than to be a part of that fantasy. I could not go to their world, so I brought them to mine. The official Wizarding World website sorted me into Slytherin. I have my wand, and I own all the merch a teenage girl could ask for. The story of The Boy Who Lived gave me hope that I could live too.
I am a Slytherin and could not be more honored. Slytherin is not a very favored or praised house like the other three; Gryffindor, Ravenclaw, and Hufflepuff. Slytherin is characterized as cunning, ambitious, and resourceful with a great bit of pride in our souls. We are, as the Sorting Hat says, “cunning folk [who will] use any means to achieve their ends.” Slytherin are the leaders who have clawed our way to the top of the hill and then reached down a hand to help our friends. This fictional group has given me the sense of identity and belonging I needed during my vulnerable formative years as a child. I have never felt more seen and understood than when I read about my house. There were people out there who I related to, and it gave me a safe place.
Although I love being a Slytherin with every part of my being, it is not the only thing that fuels my obsession with the franchise. I love the characters. They are individuals with lives, passions, and goals. Each one of them was not meant to be cookie-cutter or basic. They had purposes. Throughout the seven books, the characters grow more as people and the reader grows with them. My favorite character is Draco Malfoy. Besides my huge crush on him, he is an example of the fantastic character development we get to witness, to which every second I can relate to. As a child, he did everything in his power to please his parents, everything. As he aged, the emotional toll from constantly trying to be the golden child started to weigh on him until he eventually broke. I understood his pain and could feel it too, a special child fighting to live up to standard until you eventually fall. He went through a classic case of “gifted kid burnout” but was not granted a chance to prove himself, a redemption arc. Draco is my “comfort character” because we are one and the same. His story is mine.
This franchise has made me laugh, cry, and through books across my bedroom. Growing up on this story has taught me that magic is real, it is all around us. Witches and wizards are flying on brooms overhead, shops are selling owls, and children are chasing goblins. We see it every day, but we just must truly look. I could never be convinced to let go because to let go is to stop believing and to stop believing is what kills the magic. It has been 4 years, and I am still waiting for my Hogwarts letter.
Dr. Samuel Attoh Legacy Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
DRIVE an IMPACT Today Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Academic Liberty & Free Speech Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
VNutrition & Wellness’ Annual LGBTQ+ Vitality Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Scholarship Institute’s Annual Women’s Leadership Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Miguel Mendez Social Justice Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
PRIDE in Education Award
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Beyond The C.L.O.U.D Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Gender Expansive & Transgender Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Barbara J. DeVaney Memorial Scholarship Fund
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Henry Bynum, Jr. Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Walking In Authority International Ministry Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Linda Hicks Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Richard P. Mullen Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Elevate Mental Health Awareness Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
CEW IV Foundation Scholarship Program
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
I Can Do Anything Scholarship
In the future, I see myself with a law firm that I built from the ground up that gladly does pro bono work representing those who cannot afford adequate representation and where I have hired people from all kinds of backgrounds such as LGBTQ+, Muslim, and POC, and with student interns from foster care who haven't been given the chance that they deserve.
Johnna's Legacy Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Trever David Clark Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
La Santana Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Humanize LLC Gives In Honor of Shirley Kelley Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Harry & Mary Sheaffer Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Rivera-Gulley First-Gen Scholarship Award
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Hilliard L. "Tack" Gibbs Jr. Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Mental Health Importance Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Our Destiny Our Future Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Barbara Cain Literary Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have internalized homophobia toward myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught.
Senior year, I began to realize I was not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Throughout this journey, writing was my outlet. I wrote short stories with queer main characters, I wrote poetry on my sexuality, and I used a pencil to transfer my soul onto paper. What I couldn’t say, I wrote. My tears were my ink and my strength was my quill. I write because I have to, it is a part of my story and who I am. I write so when my mouth is muzzled my heart can speak. Writing opens a tunnel of communication between your soul and your imagination and I intend on opening that tunnel for others.
Henry Respert Alzheimer's and Dementia Awareness Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a black Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others. I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Charles Pulling Sr. Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a black Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others. I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Eco-Warrior Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a black Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others. I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
ALS Family Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a black Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others. I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Will Johnson Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a black Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others. I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Jorian Kuran Harris (Shugg) Helping Heart Foundation Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a black Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others. I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
DV Awareness Scholarship in Memory of Teresa Cox, Rhonda Cox and Jimmie Neal
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a black Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others. I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
McClendon Leadership Award
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a black Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others. I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Charles B. Brazelton Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a black Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others. I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Caleb G. Banegas Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a black Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others. I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Rose Ifebigh Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a black Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others. I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Major La-Goge W. Graham Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Connie Konatsotis Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Justin Moeller Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Headbang For Science
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I was not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Ella Hall-Dillon Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me. Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood.
So, I came out. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house. I told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me.
Throughout this journey, writing was my outlet. I wrote short stories with queer main characters, I wrote poetry on my sexuality, and I used a pencil to transfer my soul onto paper. What I couldn’t say, I wrote. My tears were my ink and my strength was my quill. I write because I have to, it is a part of my story and who I am. I write so when my mouth is muzzled my heart can speak. Writing opens a tunnel of communication between your soul and your imagination and I intend on opening that tunnel for others.
Elijah's Helping Hand Scholarship Award
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I was not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
FLIK Hospitality Group’s Entrepreneurial Council Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I was not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Wellness Warriors Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I was not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Career Search Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I was not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
William Griggs Memorial Scholarship for Science and Math
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I was not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
STAR Scholarship - Students Taking Alternative Routes
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I was not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Jean Antoine Joas Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I was not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Koehler Family Trades and Engineering Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I was not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Novitas Diverse Voices Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I was not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
SSG Adrian Valdez Jr. Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I was not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Sean Allen Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have internalized homophobia toward myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught.
Senior year, I began to realize I was not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Throughout this journey, writing was my outlet. I wrote short stories with queer main characters, I wrote poetry on my sexuality, and I used a pencil to transfer my soul onto paper. What I couldn’t say, I wrote. My tears were my ink and my strength was my quill. I write because I have to, it is a part of my story and who I am. I write so when my mouth is muzzled my heart can speak. Writing opens a tunnel of communication between your soul and your imagination and I intend on opening that tunnel for others.
Cariloop’s Caregiver Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have internalized homophobia toward myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught.
Senior year, I began to realize I was not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Throughout this journey, writing was my outlet. I wrote short stories with queer main characters, I wrote poetry on my sexuality, and I used a pencil to transfer my soul onto paper. What I couldn’t say, I wrote. My tears were my ink and my strength was my quill. I write because I have to, it is a part of my story and who I am. I write so when my mouth is muzzled my heart can speak. Writing opens a tunnel of communication between your soul and your imagination and I intend on opening that tunnel for others.
Wild Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have internalized homophobia toward myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught.
Senior year, I began to realize I was not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Throughout this journey, writing was my outlet. I wrote short stories with queer main characters, I wrote poetry on my sexuality, and I used a pencil to transfer my soul onto paper. What I couldn’t say, I wrote. My tears were my ink and my strength was my quill. I write because I have to, it is a part of my story and who I am. I write so when my mouth is muzzled my heart can speak. Writing opens a tunnel of communication between your soul and your imagination and I intend on opening that tunnel for others.
Dan Leahy Scholarship Fund
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I was not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Eitel Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I was not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Trudgers Fund
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I was not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Your Health Journey Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I was not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Mind, Body, & Soul Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I was not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Healthy Eating Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I was not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Learner Math Lover Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me. Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood.
So, I came out. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house. I told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
To do all of I need to first be able to afford schooling. I need scholarships to be able to afford the classes and resources needed to get an amazing education. My mother can not afford to send me to school on just her income and she is alone. I would have to take out loans to avoid being a burden on her finances while she has her and my younger mentally disabled brother to care for. Scholarships will save me and my family from sufferings and allow me to go on the path to relieve the sufferings of others.
Learner Calculus Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Maggie's Way- International Woman’s Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Josephine E. Sloane Scholarship for Legal Studies
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Sean Carroll's Mindscape Big Picture Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Margot Pickering Aspiring Attorney Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Eduardo Uvaldo Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Veterans Next Generation Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Stephan L. Daniels Lift As We Climb Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
She Rose Initiative's "More Than a Conqueror" Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Jerrye Chesnes Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Mikey Taylor Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Camryn Dwyer Foster Youth Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Elizabeth Schalk Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Christina Taylese Singh Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Ruthie Brown Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Yvela Michele Memorial Scholarship for Resilient Single Parents
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Ruebenna Greenfield Flack Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Above the Peak - Ama Dablam Kesel Family Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I was not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Lieba’s Legacy Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I was not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Learner Education Women in Mathematics Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Ukrainian Women in STEM
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Bryent Smothermon PTSD Awareness Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I was not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Hannah’s Community Foster Care Forward Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I was not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside of this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Pool Family LGBT+ Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing so masculine? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school, my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I was not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them, finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother. Apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that your preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
M.R. Brooks Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing so masculine? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school, my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I was not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them, finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother. Apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that your preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Joshua A. Vaughn Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a Christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on the screen. Whenever anything queer-related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me to hear them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing so masculine? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer to any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I was not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I was not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad and that you do, in fact, like girls? Every day felt like being trapped inside this shell that wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was lying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently, my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Dylan's Journey Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Doña Lupita Immigrant Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Youth Equine Service Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Rebecca Hunter Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Students Impacted by Incarceration Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me. Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood.
So, I came out. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house. I told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Szilak Family Honorary Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Financial Literacy Importance Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Learner.com Algebra Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have internalized homophobia towards myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Throughout this journey, writing was my outlet. I wrote short stories with queer main characters, I wrote poetry on my sexuality, I used a pencil to transfer my soul onto paper. What I couldn’t say, I wrote. My tears were my ink and my strength was my quill. I write because I have to, it is apart of my story and who I am. I write so when my mouth is muzzled my heart can speak. Writing opens a tunnel of communication between your soul and your imagination and I intend on opening that tunnel for others.
Book Lovers Scholarship
I love the Harry Potter franchise with every single atom of my being. I can still feel the magic on those pages every time I read the books. I remember reading the amazing adventures the characters would go on and going to sleep at night, imagining myself with them, flying around on broomsticks, and conjuring potions. There was nothing I wanted more than to be a part of that fantasy. I could not go to their world, so I brought them to mine. The official Wizarding World website sorted me into Slytherin. I have my wand, and I own all the merch a teenage girl could ask for. The story of The Boy Who Lived gave me hope that I could live too.
I am a Slytherin and could not be more honored. Slytherin is not a very favored or praised house like the other three; Gryffindor, Ravenclaw, and Hufflepuff. Slytherin is characterized as cunning, ambitious, and resourceful with a great bit of pride in our souls. We are, as the Sorting Hat says, “cunning folk [who will] use any means to achieve their ends.” Slytherin are the leaders who have clawed our way to the top of the hill and then reached down a hand to help our friends. This fictional group has given me the sense of identity and belonging I needed during my vulnerable formative years as a child. I have never felt more seen and understood than when I read about my house. There were people out there who I related to, and it gave me a safe place.
This franchise has made me laugh, cry, and through books across my bedroom. Growing up on this story has taught me that magic is real, it is all around us. Witches and wizards are flying on brooms overhead, shops are selling owls, and children are chasing goblins. We see it every day, but we just must truly look. I could never be convinced to let go, because to let go is to stop believing, and to stop believing is what kills the magic. It has been 4 years, and I am still waiting for my Hogwarts letter.
Francis E. Moore Prime Time Ministries Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Xavier M. Monroe Heart of Gold Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Andrew Perez Mental Illness/Suicidal Awareness Education Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Theresa Lord Future Leader Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Paige's Promise Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
@normandiealise #GenWealth Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Gladys Ruth Legacy “Service“ Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Anastasiya Y. Hardie Women in Engineering Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Jacques Borges Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Organic Formula Shop Single Parent Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Chris Jackson Computer Science Education Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? I didn’t have the answer for either of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they.
I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.”
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Kozakov Foundation Fellowship for Creatives
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me. Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood.
So, I came out. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house. I told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
TJ Crowson Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
GD Sandeford Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Maverick Grill and Saloon Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Sunshine Legall Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Martha Mitchell Truth Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Olivia Woods Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have internalized homophobia towards myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Throughout this journey, writing was my outlet. I wrote short stories with queer main characters, I wrote poetry on my sexuality, I used a pencil to transfer my soul onto paper. What I couldn’t say, I wrote. My tears were my ink and my strength was my quill. I write because I have to, it is apart of my story and who I am. I write so when my mouth is muzzled my heart can speak. Writing opens a tunnel of communication between your soul and your imagination and I intend on opening that tunnel for others.
Mohamed Magdi Taha Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Glenda W. Brennan "Good Works" Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
MedLuxe Representation Matters Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Albright, Carter, Campbell Ohana Scholarship for Academic Excellence
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Jerome D. Carr Memorial Scholarship for Overcoming Adversity
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Dema Dimbaya Humanitarianism and Disaster Relief Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Ryan T. Herich Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Esteemed Project Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Alma J. Grubbs Education Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have internalized homophobia towards myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Throughout this journey, writing was my outlet. I wrote short stories with queer main characters, I wrote poetry on my sexuality, I used a pencil to transfer my soul onto paper. What I couldn’t say, I wrote. My tears were my ink and my strength was my quill. I write because I have to, it is apart of my story and who I am. I write so when my mouth is muzzled my heart can speak. Writing opens a tunnel of communication between your soul and your imagination and I intend on opening that tunnel for others.
Jeannine Schroeder Women in Public Service Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Walking In Authority International Ministry Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
PAC: Diversity Matters Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Curtis Holloway Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Smart Service Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Growing with Gabby Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
RAD Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Tim Watabe Doing Hard Things Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Share Your Poetry Scholarship
Evol
Every Sunday I had to get up & go to church
Who wanna wake up on a Sunday morning to go into a building filled wit screaming people
Especially when you don’t share their beliefs
See I was always the odd one out
Vegetarian, activist, lowkey witch, I actually enjoy One Direction
Middle child tingzz
It’s weird though because I have to sit here and pretend to share these peoples beliefs
I have to pretend to love their God
I have to pretend to accept this Bible
IM DONE PRETENDING
I AM the wolf in sheep’s clothing
Ready to tear apart this facade from the inside out
I am the beast my family has wrapped in chains to avoid becoming gossip
I AM THE WOLF
All the suffering this mistranslated and edited book has brought me
All the pain it has justified
These toxic words planted like seeds into the thin rows I have hoed into my skin
But the only crops that will sprout is the stalks of insecurities and depression
Jesus is not the only one who has bled for these pages
Forced to my knees to pray away the demons but the only demons that are there are the ones I created
Their names are Anxiety, Depression, and Unknown
Unknown is my favorite
See she’s always there for me but not in a good way
She’s always talking and won’t shut up
There’s so much space she takes up but that leaves no room for me
Her name is Unknown because I’ve never met her in person
See instead of seeing a psychiatrist i gotta talk to God about it. I didn’t know he had his doctorate
I don’t understand
Ephesians 6:5 “Slaves, obey your earthly masters with respect and fear, and with sincerity of heart, just as you would obey Christ.”
Over 400 years of torment justified with one line
Leviticus 18:22 “You shall not lie with a male as with a woman; it is an abomination.”
The abuse and persecution of LGBTQ+ people justified
This Bible has caused the bloodshed of millions yet we cheer at the preaching of its scripture
This some backwards love
Hol up
Somebody explain sumn to me real quick
Why are we listening to the teachings of a book written by old men who thought marrying a 14 year old girl was normal?
Hol up
Why are we bowing down to a man in the sky none of us has ever heard from or seen
Hol up
Am i the fuck that look like?
No for real for real seriously am i?
Cuz if I am a queen, what the FUCK do I look like getting on my knees for somebody?
See here’s how this is gonna go
Imma write my OWN bible
Imma follow my own teachings
See I wasn’t put here to go to church every Sunday and scream hallelujah when I didn’t even understand the scripture
I wasn’t put here to be on my knees either
Ion got time for no kinds of backwards love
I’m here to rule and that’s exactly what imma do
@GrowingWithGabby National Scholarship Month TikTok Scholarship
@Carle100 National Scholarship Month Scholarship
@normandiealise National Scholarship Month TikTok Scholarship
@frankadvice National Scholarship Month TikTok Scholarship
CATALYSTS Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Trees for Tuition Scholarship Fund
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Community Reinvestment Grant: Pride Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Holt Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
NE1 NE-Dream Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have internalized homophobia towards myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Throughout this journey, writing was my outlet. I wrote short stories with queer main characters, I wrote poetry on my sexuality, I used a pencil to transfer my soul onto paper. What I couldn’t say, I wrote. My tears were my ink and my strength was my quill. I write because I have to, it is apart of my story and who I am. I write so when my mouth is muzzled my heart can speak. Writing opens a tunnel of communication between your soul and your imagination and I intend on opening that tunnel for others.
Grandmaster Nam K Hyong Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me. Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood.
So, I came out. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house. I told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Greg Lockwood Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me. Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood.
So, I came out. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house. I told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Alexis Potts Passion Project Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me. Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood.
So, I came out. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house. I told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me.
Throughout this journey, writing was my outlet. I wrote short stories with queer main characters, I wrote poetry on my sexuality, I used a pencil to transfer my soul onto paper. What I couldn’t say, I wrote. My tears were my ink and my strength was my quill. I write because I have to, it is apart of my story and who I am. I write so when my mouth is muzzled my heart can speak. Writing opens a tunnel of communication between your soul and your imagination and I intend on opening that tunnel for others.
Ethel Hayes Destigmatization of Mental Health Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me. Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood.
So, I came out. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house. I told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul
Freddie L Brown Sr. Scholarship
Evol
Every Sunday I had to get up & go to church
Who wanna wake up on a Sunday morning to go into a building filled wit screaming people
Especially when you don’t share their beliefs
See I was always the odd one out
Vegetarian, activist, lowkey witch, I actually enjoy One Direction
Middle child tingzz
It’s weird though because I have to sit here and pretend to share these peoples beliefs
I have to pretend to love their God
I have to pretend to accept this Bible
IM DONE PRETENDING
I AM the wolf in sheep’s clothing
Ready to tear apart this facade from the inside out
I am the beast my family has wrapped in chains to avoid becoming gossip
I AM THE WOLF
All the suffering this mistranslated and edited book has brought me
All the pain it has justified
These toxic words planted like seeds into the thin rows I have hoed into my skin
But the only crops that will sprout is the stalks of insecurities and depression
Jesus is not the only one who has bled for these pages
Forced to my knees to pray away the demons but the only demons that are there are the ones I created
Their names are Anxiety, Depression, and Unknown
Unknown is my favorite
See she’s always there for me but not in a good way
She’s always talking and won’t shut up
There’s so much space she takes up but that leaves no room for me
Her name is Unknown because I’ve never met her in person
See instead of seeing a psychiatrist i gotta talk to God about it. I didn’t know he had his doctorate
I don’t understand
Ephesians 6:5 “Slaves, obey your earthly masters with respect and fear, and with sincerity of heart, just as you would obey Christ.”
Over 400 years of torment justified with one line
Leviticus 18:22 “You shall not lie with a male as with a woman; it is an abomination.”
The abuse and persecution of LGBTQ+ people justified
This Bible has caused the bloodshed of millions yet we cheer at the preaching of its scripture
This some backwards love
Hol up
Somebody explain sumn to me real quick
Why are we listening to the teachings of a book written by old men who thought marrying a 14 year old girl was normal?
Hol up
Why are we bowing down to a man in the sky none of us has ever heard from or seen
Hol up
Am i the fuck that look like?
No for real for real seriously am i?
Cuz if I am a queen, what the FUCK do I look like getting on my knees for somebody?
See here’s how this is gonna go
Imma write my OWN bible
Imma follow my own teachings
See I wasn’t put here to go to church every Sunday and scream hallelujah when I didn’t even understand the scripture
I wasn’t put here to be on my knees either
Ion got time for no kinds of backwards love
I’m here to rule and that’s exactly what imma do
Dr. Samuel Attoh Legacy Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me. Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood.
So, I came out. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house. I told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Dashanna K. McNeil Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me. Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood.
So, I came out. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house. I told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Kyle Lam Hacker Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me. Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood.
So, I came out. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house. I told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me.
Throughout this journey, writing was my outlet. I wrote short stories with queer main characters, I wrote poetry on my sexuality, I used a pencil to transfer my soul onto paper. What I couldn’t say, I wrote. My tears were my ink and my strength was my quill. I write because I have to, it is apart of my story and who I am. I write so when my mouth is muzzled my heart can speak. Writing opens a tunnel of communication between your soul and your imagination and I intend on opening that tunnel for others.
Marie J. Smith Esq. Social Sciences Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me. Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood.
So, I came out. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house. I told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Bold Optimist Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner. Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me. Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood.
So, I came out. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house. I told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me.
Throughout this journey, writing was my outlet. I wrote short stories with queer main characters, I wrote poetry on my sexuality, I used a pencil to transfer my soul onto paper. What I couldn’t say, I wrote. My tears were my ink and my strength was my quill. I write because I have to, it is apart of my story and who I am. I write so when my mouth is muzzled my heart can speak. Writing opens a tunnel of communication between your soul and your imagination and I intend on opening that tunnel for others.
Bold Art Matters Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me. Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood.
So, I came out. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house. I told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me.
Throughout this journey, writing was my outlet. I wrote short stories with queer main characters, I wrote poetry on my sexuality, I used a pencil to transfer my soul onto paper. What I couldn’t say, I wrote. My tears were my ink and my strength was my quill. I write because I have to, it is apart of my story and who I am. I write so when my mouth is muzzled my heart can speak. Writing opens a tunnel of communication between your soul and your imagination and I intend on opening that tunnel for others.
Bold Learning and Changing Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me. Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood.
So, I came out. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house. I told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Bold Community Activist Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me. Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood.
So, I came out. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house. I told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Bold Mentor Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me. Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood.
So, I came out. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house. I told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Bold Climate Changemakers Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me. Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood.
So, I came out. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house. I told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Christian ‘Myles’ Pratt Foundation Fine Arts Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have internalized homophobia towards myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me.
Throughout this journey, writing was my outlet. I wrote short stories with queer main characters, I wrote poetry on my sexuality, I used a pencil to transfer my soul onto paper. What I couldn’t say, I wrote. My tears were my ink and my strength was my quill. I write because I have to, it is apart of my story and who I am. I write so when my mouth is muzzled my heart can speak. Writing opens a tunnel of communication between your soul and your imagination and I intend on opening that tunnel for others.
No You Did Not Win An Emi, But You Did Win This Scholarship
My name is Star. I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. I told my mom, the woman who named me, first. We were laying in bed at my grandma’s house and I said to her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys, right?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. My star-shine will help the world remember that. I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show them that you’re preference and pronouns do not dim their light. We are all stars.
Stand and Yell Community Impact Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Debra Victoria Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew.
I am grateful to have such an accepting mother despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
WCEJ Thornton Foundation Low-Income Scholarship
I had been in the closet for six years. This year, I finally came out.
I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Surya Education Assistance Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Lee Avenatti Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have internalized homophobia towards myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me.
Throughout this journey, writing was my outlet. I wrote short stories with queer main characters, I wrote poetry on my sexuality, I used a pencil to transfer my soul onto paper. What I couldn’t say, I wrote. My tears were my ink and my strength was my quill. I write because I have to, it is apart of my story and who I am. I write so when my mouth is muzzled my heart can speak. Writing opens a tunnel of communication between your soul and your imagination and I intend on opening that tunnel for others.
Shawn’s Mental Health Resources Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have internalized homophobia towards myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me.
Throughout this journey, writing was my outlet. I wrote short stories with queer main characters, I wrote poetry on my sexuality, I used a pencil to transfer my soul onto paper. What I couldn’t say, I wrote. My tears were my ink and my strength was my quill. I write because I have to, it is apart of my story and who I am. I write so when my mouth is muzzled my heart can speak. Writing opens a tunnel of communication between your soul and your imagination and I intend on opening that tunnel for others.
Lisa Seidman Excellence in Writing Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have internalized homophobia towards myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me.
Throughout this journey, writing was my outlet. I wrote short stories with queer main characters, I wrote poetry on my sexuality, I used a pencil to transfer my soul onto paper. What I couldn’t say, I wrote. My tears were my ink and my strength was my quill. I write because I have to, it is apart of my story and who I am. I write so when my mouth is muzzled my heart can speak. Writing opens a tunnel of communication between your soul and your imagination and I intend on opening that tunnel for others.
Shoot Less, Throw More- Girls Wrestling Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Cyrilla Olapeju Sanni Scholarship Fund
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Cat Zingano Overcoming Loss Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Linda Hicks Memorial Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Small Seed Big Flower Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Loretta Webb Green Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Women in the Wings Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Dr. Meme Heineman Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Bookman 5 Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Amelia Boynton and S.W. Boynton Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Elevate Mental Health Awareness Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Jameela Jamil x I Weigh Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Carlos F. Garcia Muentes Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Glider AI-Omni Inclusive Allies of LGBTQ+ (GOAL+) Scholarship
I have been in the closet for six years. I was raised to think that liking the same sex or having a different gender expression was demonic, a sin deserving of eternal torture. If that is the case, I am a sinner.
Growing up in a christian household, I would always hear disgust when anything LGBTQ+ related would appear on screen. Whenever anything queer related arose I felt like I was fighting for my life to try and educate my parents. It hurt me hearing them hurt others because I saw myself in those people.
I grew to have so much internalized homophobia because of my environment, lack of education on gender preferences, and hating myself. Why did I like girls? Why did I like dressing as a boy? Why do I become fueled with excitement seeing queer representation on TV? I didn’t have the answer for any of these questions, so I cried, all night until my eyes were sealed shut by tears, begging God to fix me or kill me.
When I started high school my world had grown. I had queer friends, I learned that being heterosexual wasn’t the default, and I unlearned all the ignorance that I was taught. Junior year, I realized that I’m not at all straight. I didn’t know what color my flag was yet, but I knew it wasn’t black and white.
Senior year, I began to realize I’m not resonating with she/her. Dressing feminine is great, I love my body, but I felt something was missing. From that point on, I started exploring different pronouns, starting with they/she to they/them finally ending with she/they. My friends were so supportive during my journey of finding myself and even started using my chosen name, Bean, interchangeably with my birth name.
Despite this love and support from my friends, I was still in the closet with my family. I wanted to tell them with every ounce of my being but I didn’t know how. How do you tell your Christian parents who raised you that being gay was bad that you do, in fact, like girls? Everyday felt like being trapped inside of this shell who wasn’t really me. I was putting on a charade in front of my own blood. So, I came out. My plan was to come out after I moved out for college but I couldn’t wait. It happened when I was laying in bed with my mom at my grandma’s house and I just told her “Momma, you know I like girls and boys?” Her reaction was what you would expect from a country Christian but I know how to handle my mom so it quickly turned loving and accepting. “You’re the same person you were two minutes ago and I still love you.” Those words will forever mean so much to me. Later I came out to my cousins and big brother, apparently my big brother already knew. My father hasn’t been told by me yet but I’m sure my mother spilled everything.
I am grateful to have such an accepting family despite my upbringing. My mother is learning to be accepting and kind through raising me. In learning to love myself, I learned that it’s okay to love others. Love is love is love and it is important the world remembers that. With the political science degree I will graduate with, I plan on going on to law school so I can do pro bono work for LGBTQ+ disenfranchised youth and show the world that you’re preference and pronouns do not change your soul.
Black Students in STEM Scholarship Fund
During my sophomore year of high school, I attended a small hotel party my best friend’s sixteenth birthday. When we returned to the hotel from our literal run to Zaxby’s, I made the grave mistake of being the first to go to the bathroom. I could hear the girls outside the bathroom scheming like heathens, so I knew as soon as I opened that door it would be war. As soon as I opened the door, I was ambushed, attacked by weapons of fluff, pillows were flying everywhere. Once they were satisfied with their attack, we prepared for bed. It was around 2am when one of the guests woke up to use the bathroom but noticed a bed bug upon her pillow. She decided to wake the rest of us up and inform us. All the girls sprung out of bed and checked ourselves to ensure that none of the disgusting creatures were lingering onto us. We had no idea what to do, so naturally my best friend called her mom. We had to relocate to another room and hope there were no bugs in our belongings. The next morning, we were bored. Instead of staying inside and playing truth or dare like normal teenagers, we decided to get dressed, and run in the pouring rain, across fields, all the way to Goodwill. There was nothing from Goodwill we needed but it gave us something to do. All of us wandered and browsed then ran right back through the rain to the hotel. Our clothes were soaked, we were cold, and I lost an earring, but it was worth it. It is a miracle none of us got sick.
Larry D Parker Sr.’s Legacy Scholarship
I love the Harry Potter franchise with every single atom of my being. I can still feel the magic on those pages every time I read the books. I remember reading the amazing adventures the characters would go on and going to sleep at night, imagining myself with them, flying around on broomsticks, and conjuring potions. There was nothing I wanted more than to be a part of that fantasy. I could not go to their world, so I brought them to mine. The official Wizarding World website sorted me into Slytherin. I have my wand, and I own all the merch a teenage girl could ask for. The story of The Boy Who Lived gave me hope that I could live too.
I am a Slytherin and could not be more honored. Slytherin is not a very favored or praised house like the other three; Gryffindor, Ravenclaw, and Hufflepuff. Slytherin is characterized as cunning, ambitious, and resourceful with a great bit of pride in our souls. We are, as the Sorting Hat says, “cunning folk [who will] use any means to achieve their ends.” Slytherin are the leaders who have clawed our way to the top of the hill and then reached down a hand to help our friends. This fictional group has given me the sense of identity and belonging I needed during my vulnerable formative years as a child. I have never felt more seen and understood than when I read about my house. There were people out there who I related to, and it gave me a safe place.
Although I love being a Slytherin with every part of my being, it is not the only thing that fuels my obsession with the franchise. I love the characters. They are individuals with lives, passions, and goals. Each one of them were not meant to be cookie-cutter or basic. They had purposes. Throughout the seven books, the characters grow more as people and the reader grows with them. My favorite character is Draco Malfoy. Besides my huge crush on him, he is an example of the amazing character development we get to witness, to which every second I can relate to. As a child, he did everything in his power to please his parents, everything. As he aged, the emotional toll from constantly trying to be the golden child started to weigh on him until he eventually broke. I understood his pain and could feel it too, a special child fighting to live up to standard until eventually you just fall. He went through a classic case of “gifted kid burn out” but was not granted a chance to prove himself, a redemption arc. Draco is my “comfort character” because we are one and the same. His story is mine.
This franchise has made me laugh, cry, and through books across my bedroom. Growing up on this story has taught me that magic is real, it is all around us. Witches and wizards are flying on brooms overhead, shops are selling owls, and children are chasing goblins. We see it every day, but we just must truly look. I could never be convinced to let go, because to let go is to stop believing, and to stop believing is what kills the magic. It has been 4 years, and I am still waiting for my Hogwarts letter.
Sloane Stephens Doc & Glo Scholarship
I love the Harry Potter franchise with every single atom of my being. I can still feel the magic on those pages every time I read the books. I remember reading the amazing adventures the characters would go on and going to sleep at night, imagining myself with them, flying around on broomsticks, and conjuring potions. There was nothing I wanted more than to be a part of that fantasy. I could not go to their world, so I brought them to mine. The official Wizarding World website sorted me into Slytherin. I have my wand, and I own all the merch a teenage girl could ask for. The story of The Boy Who Lived gave me hope that I could live too.
I am a Slytherin and could not be more honored. Slytherin is not a very favored or praised house like the other three; Gryffindor, Ravenclaw, and Hufflepuff. Slytherin is characterized as cunning, ambitious, and resourceful with a great bit of pride in our souls. We are, as the Sorting Hat says, “cunning folk [who will] use any means to achieve their ends.” Slytherin are the leaders who have clawed our way to the top of the hill and then reached down a hand to help our friends. This fictional group has given me the sense of identity and belonging I needed during my vulnerable formative years as a child. I have never felt more seen and understood than when I read about my house. There were people out there who I related to, and it gave me a safe place.
Although I love being a Slytherin with every part of my being, it is not the only thing that fuels my obsession with the franchise. I love the characters. They are individuals with lives, passions, and goals. Each one of them were not meant to be cookie-cutter or basic. They had purposes. Throughout the seven books, the characters grow more as people and the reader grows with them. My favorite character is Draco Malfoy. Besides my huge crush on him, he is an example of the amazing character development we get to witness, to which every second I can relate to. As a child, he did everything in his power to please his parents, everything. As he aged, the emotional toll from constantly trying to be the golden child started to weigh on him until he eventually broke. I understood his pain and could feel it too, a special child fighting to live up to standard until eventually you just fall. He went through a classic case of “gifted kid burn out” but was not granted a chance to prove himself, a redemption arc. Draco is my “comfort character” because we are one and the same. His story is mine.
This franchise has made me laugh, cry, and through books across my bedroom. Growing up on this story has taught me that magic is real, it is all around us. Witches and wizards are flying on brooms overhead, shops are selling owls, and children are chasing goblins. We see it every day, but we just must truly look. I could never be convinced to let go, because to let go is to stop believing, and to stop believing is what kills the magic. It has been 4 years, and I am still waiting for my Hogwarts letter.
Elevate Mental Health Awareness Scholarship
I love the Harry Potter franchise with every single atom of my being. I can still feel the magic on those pages every time I read the books. I remember reading the amazing adventures the characters would go on and going to sleep at night, imagining myself with them, flying around on broomsticks, and conjuring potions. There was nothing I wanted more than to be a part of that fantasy. I could not go to their world, so I brought them to mine. The official Wizarding World website sorted me into Slytherin. I have my wand, and I own all the merch a teenage girl could ask for. The story of The Boy Who Lived gave me hope that I could live too.
I am a Slytherin and could not be more honored. Slytherin is not a very favored or praised house like the other three; Gryffindor, Ravenclaw, and Hufflepuff. Slytherin is characterized as cunning, ambitious, and resourceful with a great bit of pride in our souls. We are, as the Sorting Hat says, “cunning folk [who will] use any means to achieve their ends.” Slytherin are the leaders who have clawed our way to the top of the hill and then reached down a hand to help our friends. This fictional group has given me the sense of identity and belonging I needed during my vulnerable formative years as a child. I have never felt more seen and understood than when I read about my house. There were people out there who I related to, and it gave me a safe place.
Although I love being a Slytherin with every part of my being, it is not the only thing that fuels my obsession with the franchise. I love the characters. They are individuals with lives, passions, and goals. Each one of them were not meant to be cookie-cutter or basic. They had purposes. Throughout the seven books, the characters grow more as people and the reader grows with them. My favorite character is Draco Malfoy. Besides my huge crush on him, he is an example of the amazing character development we get to witness, to which every second I can relate to. As a child, he did everything in his power to please his parents, everything. As he aged, the emotional toll from constantly trying to be the golden child started to weigh on him until he eventually broke. I understood his pain and could feel it too, a special child fighting to live up to standard until eventually you just fall. He went through a classic case of “gifted kid burn out” but was not granted a chance to prove himself, a redemption arc. Draco is my “comfort character” because we are one and the same. His story is mine.
This franchise has made me laugh, cry, and through books across my bedroom. Growing up on this story has taught me that magic is real, it is all around us. Witches and wizards are flying on brooms overhead, shops are selling owls, and children are chasing goblins. We see it every day, but we just must truly look. I could never be convinced to let go, because to let go is to stop believing, and to stop believing is what kills the magic. It has been 4 years, and I am still waiting for my Hogwarts letter.
Taylor Ibarrondo Memorial Scholarship
I love the Harry Potter franchise with every single atom of my being. I can still feel the magic on those pages every time I read the books. I remember reading the amazing adventures the characters would go on and going to sleep at night, imagining myself with them, flying around on broomsticks, and conjuring potions. There was nothing I wanted more than to be a part of that fantasy. I could not go to their world, so I brought them to mine. The official Wizarding World website sorted me into Slytherin. I have my wand, and I own all the merch a teenage girl could ask for. The story of The Boy Who Lived gave me hope that I could live too.
I am a Slytherin and could not be more honored. Slytherin is not a very favored or praised house like the other three; Gryffindor, Ravenclaw, and Hufflepuff. Slytherin is characterized as cunning, ambitious, and resourceful with a great bit of pride in our souls. We are, as the Sorting Hat says, “cunning folk [who will] use any means to achieve their ends.” Slytherin are the leaders who have clawed our way to the top of the hill and then reached down a hand to help our friends. This fictional group has given me the sense of identity and belonging I needed during my vulnerable formative years as a child. I have never felt more seen and understood than when I read about my house. There were people out there who I related to, and it gave me a safe place.
Although I love being a Slytherin with every part of my being, it is not the only thing that fuels my obsession with the franchise. I love the characters. They are individuals with lives, passions, and goals. Each one of them were not meant to be cookie-cutter or basic. They had purposes. Throughout the seven books, the characters grow more as people and the reader grows with them. My favorite character is Draco Malfoy. Besides my huge crush on him, he is an example of the amazing character development we get to witness, to which every second I can relate to. As a child, he did everything in his power to please his parents, everything. As he aged, the emotional toll from constantly trying to be the golden child started to weigh on him until he eventually broke. I understood his pain and could feel it too, a special child fighting to live up to standard until eventually you just fall. He went through a classic case of “gifted kid burn out” but was not granted a chance to prove himself, a redemption arc. Draco is my “comfort character” because we are one and the same. His story is mine.
This franchise has made me laugh, cry, and through books across my bedroom. Growing up on this story has taught me that magic is real, it is all around us. Witches and wizards are flying on brooms overhead, shops are selling owls, and children are chasing goblins. We see it every day, but we just must truly look. I could never be convinced to let go, because to let go is to stop believing, and to stop believing is what kills the magic. It has been 4 years, and I am still waiting for my Hogwarts letter.
Lillian's & Ruby's Way Scholarship
I love the Harry Potter franchise with every single atom of my being. I can still feel the magic on those pages every time I read the books. I remember reading the amazing adventures the characters would go on and going to sleep at night, imagining myself with them, flying around on broomsticks, and conjuring potions. I became a writer too, writing short stories with main characters that looked like me. There was nothing I wanted more than to be a part of that fantasy. I could not go to their world, so I brought them to mine. The official Wizarding World website sorted me into Slytherin. I have my wand, and I own all the merch a teenage girl could ask for. The story of The Boy Who Lived gave me hope that I could live too.
I am a Slytherin and could not be more honored. Slytherin is not a very favored or praised house like the other three; Gryffindor, Ravenclaw, and Hufflepuff. Slytherin is characterized as cunning, ambitious, and resourceful with a great bit of pride in our souls. We are, as the Sorting Hat says, “cunning folk [who will] use any means to achieve their ends.” Slytherin are the leaders who have clawed our way to the top of the hill and then reached down a hand to help our friends. This fictional group has given me the sense of identity and belonging I needed during my vulnerable formative years as a child. I have never felt more seen and understood than when I read about my house. There were people out there who I related to, and it gave me a safe place.
Although I love being a Slytherin with every part of my being, it is not the only thing that fuels my obsession with the franchise. I love the characters. They are individuals with lives, passions, and goals. Each one of them were not meant to be cookie-cutter or basic. They had purposes. Throughout the seven books, the characters grow more as people and the reader grows with them. My favorite character is Draco Malfoy. Besides my huge crush on him, he is an example of the amazing character development we get to witness, to which every second I can relate to. As a child, he did everything in his power to please his parents, everything. As he aged, the emotional toll from constantly trying to be the golden child started to weigh on him until he eventually broke. I understood his pain and could feel it too, a special child fighting to live up to standard until eventually you just fall. He went through a classic case of “gifted kid burn out” but was not granted a chance to prove himself, a redemption arc. Draco is my “comfort character” because we are one and the same. His story is mine.
This franchise has made me laugh, cry, and through books across my bedroom. Growing up on this story has taught me that magic is real, it is all around us. Witches and wizards are flying on brooms overhead, shops are selling owls, and children are chasing goblins. We see it every day, but we just must truly look. I could never be convinced to let go, because to let go is to stop believing, and to stop believing is what kills the magic. It has been 4 years, and I am still waiting for my Hogwarts letter.
Andrew Perez Mental Illness/Suicidal Awareness Education Scholarship
I love the Harry Potter franchise with every single atom of my being. I can still feel the magic on those pages every time I read the books. I remember reading the amazing adventures the characters would go on and going to sleep at night, imagining myself with them, flying around on broomsticks, and conjuring potions. There was nothing I wanted more than to be a part of that fantasy. I could not go to their world, so I brought them to mine. The official Wizarding World website sorted me into Slytherin. I have my wand, and I own all the merch a teenage girl could ask for. The story of The Boy Who Lived gave me hope that I could live too.
I am a Slytherin and could not be more honored. Slytherin is not a very favored or praised house like the other three; Gryffindor, Ravenclaw, and Hufflepuff. Slytherin is characterized as cunning, ambitious, and resourceful with a great bit of pride in our souls. We are, as the Sorting Hat says, “cunning folk [who will] use any means to achieve their ends.” Slytherin are the leaders who have clawed our way to the top of the hill and then reached down a hand to help our friends. This fictional group has given me the sense of identity and belonging I needed during my vulnerable formative years as a child. I have never felt more seen and understood than when I read about my house. There were people out there who I related to, and it gave me a safe place.
Although I love being a Slytherin with every part of my being, it is not the only thing that fuels my obsession with the franchise. I love the characters. They are individuals with lives, passions, and goals. Each one of them were not meant to be cookie-cutter or basic. They had purposes. Throughout the seven books, the characters grow more as people and the reader grows with them. My favorite character is Draco Malfoy. Besides my huge crush on him, he is an example of the amazing character development we get to witness, to which every second I can relate to. As a child, he did everything in his power to please his parents, everything. As he aged, the emotional toll from constantly trying to be the golden child started to weigh on him until he eventually broke. I understood his pain and could feel it too, a special child fighting to live up to standard until eventually you just fall. He went through a classic case of “gifted kid burn out” but was not granted a chance to prove himself, a redemption arc. Draco is my “comfort character” because we are one and the same. His story is mine.
This franchise has made me laugh, cry, and through books across my bedroom. Growing up on this story has taught me that magic is real, it is all around us. Witches and wizards are flying on brooms overhead, shops are selling owls, and children are chasing goblins. We see it every day, but we just must truly look. I could never be convinced to let go, because to let go is to stop believing, and to stop believing is what kills the magic. It has been 4 years, and I am still waiting for my Hogwarts letter.