Jim Parsons Reflects on Feeling “Robbed” of His Gay Youth

Jim Parsons has spoken candidly about the complicated grief that can accompany coming into your identity later than you wish you had.

The actor said he sometimes feels “a little robbed” of his youth because he spent so many years uncomfortable with being gay.

Parsons shared the reflection during a backstage conversation with Jon Dean while appearing in the Broadway production of Titaníque.

The 53-year-old described himself as a “late bloomer” and explained that ageing can feel especially complicated when parts of your younger life were shaped by fear or self-denial (Attitude).

His story carries an important distinction because Parsons was not entirely closeted throughout his adult life.

He told Dean that he first came out to friends when he was around 20 or 21 years old.

He also began his relationship with art director and producer Todd Spiewak in 2002.

However, Parsons did not publicly acknowledge his sexuality until 2012, when a New York Times profile noted that he was gay and had been with his partner for ten years.

The announcement was understated rather than presented as a dramatic celebrity revelation.

Parsons has previously explained that he was already living openly among friends, family and colleagues before the profile appeared.

His latest comments suggest that being known as gay and fully accepting what being gay means to you are not necessarily the same experience.

“Part of that for me was not allowing myself to be my gay self for a long time or feeling that it was wrong,” Parsons said.

That discomfort continues to influence how he thinks about growing older.

Parsons said he still wants the chance to experience certain things, even if he cannot always define exactly what those missing experiences might be.

The feeling will be familiar to many LGBTQ+ people who reached adulthood without seeing lives like their own treated as ordinary, desirable or possible.

Coming out can open the door to a more authentic life, but it cannot return the adolescence, first romances or carefree experimentation that fear may have interrupted.

That does not mean the life that follows is less meaningful.

Parsons and Spiewak married in New York in 2017 after approximately 15 years together.

Their relationship has remained one of the most stable parts of Parsons’ life throughout his rise from working actor to international television star.

He became globally known as Sheldon Cooper on The Big Bang Theory, a performance that earned him four Primetime Emmy Awards and a Golden Globe.

His career has also included prominent queer projects such as The Normal Heart, The Boys in the Band and Spoiler Alert.

Parsons said that only during the past few years has he allowed himself to understand how profoundly being gay has shaped his personality and his entire life.

He once wanted his sexuality to be treated as merely incidental.

He now speaks about it with a very different kind of affection.

“I love that I’m gay,” Parsons said.

“I don’t want to be straight.”

He also spoke warmly about the importance of his gay friendships and the community he has found.

His reflections contain both gratitude and loss without requiring one feeling to cancel out the other.

A person can be happily married, professionally fulfilled and proud of who they are while still mourning the younger self who did not yet feel safe enough to experience that pride.

For Parsons, ageing appears to have brought greater freedom alongside a clearer understanding of what fear once took away.

That honesty may be one reason his words resonate beyond the particulars of celebrity or public coming-out stories.

They speak to the quieter process of becoming comfortable enough to claim every part of yourself, even when that process takes decades.

📷 @therealjimparsons

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Dead at 71, Lindsey Graham’s Votes Tell the Story That Matters

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U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham has died at the age of 71 following what his office described as a brief and sudden illness.

His death has prompted tributes focusing on his long career in Congress, his influence on American foreign policy and his transformation from one of Donald Trump’s fiercest Republican critics into one of the president’s most dependable allies.

For LGBTQ+ Americans, however, Graham leaves behind another significant part of his political record.

He spent decades opposing some of the community’s most important civil-rights advances (Advocate).

That record matters far more than the persistent speculation about his private life.

Rumors that Graham was secretly gay followed him throughout much of his political career.

They were often expressed through homophobic jokes, coded insults and insinuations that his unmarried status must reveal something about his sexuality.

Graham repeatedly said he was not gay.

Allegations involving male escorts were never supported by documentary evidence or independently confirmed by a credible investigation.

His sexuality was therefore never publicly established, and being unmarried was never evidence of it.

More importantly, nobody needed to know the details of Graham’s private life to evaluate his impact on LGBTQ+ people.

His votes were public.

As a member of the House of Representatives in 1996, Graham voted for the Defense of Marriage Act.

The legislation defined marriage for federal purposes as the union of one man and one woman and permitted states to refuse recognition of same-sex marriages performed elsewhere.

Graham later supported an effort to amend the United States Constitution to define marriage exclusively as between a man and a woman.

In 2010, he voted against repealing “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” the military policy that required lesbian, gay and bisexual service members to conceal their identities.

In 2013, he voted against the Employment Non-Discrimination Act, which would have prohibited workplace discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity.

When the Supreme Court established nationwide marriage equality in 2015, Graham said he would respect the ruling while continuing to oppose the right it recognized.

He also said that officials such as Kentucky clerk Kim Davis were required to follow the law rather than refuse marriage licences to same-sex couples.

In 2022, Graham voted against the Respect for Marriage Act, which repealed the Defense of Marriage Act and required federal and interstate recognition of legally performed same-sex and interracial marriages.

His record was consistent, but it did not determine the future.

Same-sex couples married and built families with legal recognition.

LGBTQ+ Americans began serving openly in the armed forces.

Federal employment protections expanded through later legal decisions.

The changes Graham resisted became part of American life despite his opposition.

There is no need to celebrate his death or invent a hidden identity to acknowledge that truth.

Graham was a consequential political figure whose support for Ukraine and NATO earned admiration from leaders around the world.

He was also a politician whose votes repeatedly placed him against the equality sought by LGBTQ+ Americans.

Both facts belong in an honest assessment of his life.

His private life belonged to him.

His public decisions affected millions of other people.

That documented record, rather than rumor, is the legacy worth remembering.

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LDS Church’s Social Media Spotlights Queer Mormon Fashion Brand

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What began as a routine profile of a young fashion designer quickly became one of the internet’s most unexpected LGBTQ+ stories of the week.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints recently shared a feature on fashion designer Pono Skousen across its official Instagram and Facebook accounts.

The post celebrated his creativity, faith and work as a designer (Queerty).

Many viewers soon noticed something the church’s social media team may not have anticipated.

Skousen is also the co-founder of Church of Martin, a fashion label created for gay Mormons and former members of the church.

The brand has gained attention for reimagining Mormon culture through humorous and unapologetically queer clothing.

Its collections include designs featuring same-sex couples alongside playful references to familiar church phrases and traditions.

Online reactions quickly ranged from surprise to amusement.

Some church members criticized the decision to feature Skousen after discovering his work outside the interview.

Others welcomed the visibility and praised the church for highlighting a gay member, whether intentional or not.

Skousen later explained that there was no deliberate contradiction.

According to him, the interview had actually been filmed more than a year earlier.

At the time of filming, Church of Martin had not yet been created.

The brand launched months later while the interview remained unpublished.

Rather than presenting himself as an activist, Skousen says his goal is to help LGBTQ+ people with Mormon backgrounds reconcile different parts of their identity.

He hopes people can look at their history with honesty, humor and compassion instead of shame.

The episode also illustrates how quickly online conversations can change when context evolves between filming and publication.

Whether viewed as an amusing mix-up or a meaningful moment of visibility, the story has introduced many more people to Church of Martin and the community it was created to serve.

📷 IG @church.ofmartin

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Gay Republican Says Fellow Conservatives Turned His Sexuality Into a Campaign Issue

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Wyoming congressional candidate Reid Rasner says he never expected his own sexuality to become a political weapon.

The openly gay Republican has filed lawsuits alleging that political opponents spread false and defamatory claims about him during his campaigns.

According to the lawsuits, he was falsely described as a pedophile and subjected to other personal attacks (LGBTQ Nation).

Rasner also says internal campaign polling highlighted the fact that he had “married his gay husband in New York” and suggested that the information hurt his standing with Republican primary voters.

The allegations have attracted attention because Rasner has spent much of his political career supporting conservative positions on LGBTQ+ issues.

He has publicly opposed gender-affirming care for transgender minors and has aligned himself with several Republican culture-war initiatives.

Those positions, however, did not prevent him from becoming the target of anti-gay rhetoric from within his own political party, according to his account.

Rasner argues that the attacks crossed the line from political disagreement into defamatory personal smears.

The lawsuits remain civil claims, and the allegations have not been proven in court.

The episode has sparked discussion across LGBTQ+ media because it reflects a familiar political dynamic often summarized by the phrase “leopards ate my face.”

The expression describes situations in which people are harmed by movements or policies they previously supported or believed would affect only others.

Supporters of Rasner argue that nobody deserves to be targeted because of their sexual orientation regardless of political affiliation.

Critics, meanwhile, see the controversy as highlighting the risks of participating in political movements that have frequently opposed LGBTQ+ rights.

Whatever perspective readers bring to the story, it demonstrates that prejudice can sometimes reach beyond the groups it was originally directed toward.

As the legal proceedings continue, Rasner’s allegations have become another example of the complicated relationship between identity and modern American politics.

Alberto Lejárraga Says Football Must Become a Place Where Everyone Can Be Themselves

Spanish goalkeeper Alberto Lejárraga believes the next step for football is not simply encouraging more players to come out.

He says the sport itself must become a place where everyone feels safe enough to be themselves.

Lejárraga shared that message during Madrid Pride while appearing on Spain’s public broadcaster RTVE.

His television appearance came just days after speaking with Outsports about life, marriage and visibility in men’s football.

The goalkeeper made history last year when he married his husband, singer Rubén Fernández, while continuing his professional playing career.

He is widely regarded as the only publicly out active player in Spain’s men’s professional football system.

The couple first attracted international attention in 2023 when Lejárraga shared a photograph of them kissing after his club secured promotion.

The image quickly spread around the world and became a symbol of LGBTQ+ visibility in a sport where openly queer male players remain extremely rare.

Looking back, Lejárraga says he now feels “completely free.”

He credits both his husband and growing public acceptance for giving him the confidence to live openly.

During his Pride interview, however, he stressed that visibility alone is not enough.

He argued that discussions should move beyond hoping another player comes out.

Instead, clubs, coaches, federations, teammates and supporters all have a responsibility to create environments where nobody feels they must hide who they are.

Lejárraga also acknowledged that homophobic language remains common within football.

He said recent political debates have made some LGBTQ+ people feel less secure despite the progress that has been made.

Even so, he remains optimistic about the future.

He points to allies within Spanish football who have publicly spoken against homophobia and believes those voices are helping change the culture.

For Lejárraga, success is no longer measured only by results on the pitch.

It is also measured by whether future generations of footballers can play the game they love without ever feeling they have to hide who they are.

📷 @albertoleja

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