***
Standing in the Harvard locker room at 6 a.m., I wasn’t quite sure what to expect. Throughout all the thinking and the planning, I had not actually pictured the way that my teammates might react in the moment. For a second, everyone was quiet. I looked down at the little sheet of notes I had prepared so that I could remember what I wanted to say.
And then the room just exploded. I’ve never had such a cheer or a round of applause in my life.
It was an incredible affirmation. After years of confusion and silence; after years of uncertainty and shame; after a long journey through challenges I did not know I could face — after 22 years of life, this was how the Harvard men’s lacrosse team felt about me being gay. My vision blurred with tears.
I gathered myself to say a few more things. I told my teammates that I loved them. I told them a little bit about my journey. I told them that I loved coming to practice every day, and that I felt so fortunate to be part of our team. I told them that they couldn’t imagine how much their support meant to me. And then we brought it in, had a few hugs, and went outside to play some lacrosse. It was an extraordinary, ordinary, beautiful day.
In the weeks and months after I came out to my teammates, I felt a sense of pride and confidence that grew and grew. It was surreal to date men openly and to speak freely about my identity. It was surreal that everybody knew! This was a new kind of liberty, a freedom I had never dared imagine.
It feels hard to believe that it has been less than a year since I came out because the way things are now feels so much better, so much more natural. As Malcolm X wrote of his own personal transformation: “I still marvel at how swiftly my previous life’s thinking pattern slid away from me, like snow off a roof.” I feel very fortunate that the days of worrying, the days of confusion, and the days of feeling like a fraud are long behind me.
I also know that for many young people in lacrosse, those days are still a reality. I don’t have everything figured out myself, but if you are reading this, if you too feel the things that I have felt, if you too are struggling — know that you are not alone. Know that you can be yourself. Know that I wrote this essay for you.
I wrote it to tell you that you can do this! I wrote it to say that you can be openly gay, bisexual, non-binary, transgender or queer — you can be whoever it is that you are — and you can play the sport of lacrosse. Coming out takes time, and everyone’s circumstances are different. But you don’t have to hide to be part of this wonderful game.
I wrote this essay for the lacrosse community as a whole too. Our sport has a problem with homophobia and I think it’s time that we address it. If you are a person in lacrosse who uses homophobic language, you should consider the fact that those words can hurt in deep and complicated ways. You should consider the reality that hate speech of any kind is simply wrong. You should consider the idea that a healthy culture cannot rest upon contempt for others.
And you should also consider the possibility that the way you talk about being gay could be hurting the people you love. There are more gay people in lacrosse than you realize. With casual jokes and insensitive comments, you might be twisting a knife in the back of your best friend.
Many of my teammates reached out to congratulate me and offer their support after I came out, and that meant a lot. A few also approached me to apologize.
I remember one of my friends telling me it made him sick to his stomach to think about the way he had talked before he knew I was gay. I appreciated that. But how could I hold it against him? I had said homophobic things as well, and I am an actual gay person. I told him it was water under the bridge. The past does matter, but I’m much more interested in how we can improve the present and the future.
And I’ve got a lot of hope for lacrosse in the future. I hope we can make this a sport where Black Lives Matter. I hope we can honor and respect Native Americans, who invented this game. I hope we can end our culture of homophobia. Quite simply, I hope we can include everyone in the joy and camaraderie of lacrosse that I have felt so keenly playing this game with my friends. I’ve met so many great people in this sport. I see reason for both optimism and hard work.
On the wing against Holy Cross this year, I wore a little black band on my wrist with the word “Pride” inscribed in rainbow. We lost the face-off, got scored on, and lost the game, in the end, by a goal. It was my only shift of the season and my last of college lacrosse. Not everything goes according to plan.
But our team was headed in the right direction. We still had that electric bond. We ended the season with a win at home on a beautiful day, and we thoroughly enjoyed our time together before the coronavirus shut things down. I was so lucky to play lacrosse at Harvard. I look back now on the classes, practices, and time with my friends as a kind of sunny dream.
I picked up my stick the other day to take a few shots on the net near my new house. It felt so good to feel the old rush and to hear the sweet sounds — ball hitting twine, with just a hint of post. It felt so good to play lacrosse again. I dreamed, when I was a kid, that the stick in my hands might one day take me to college. I did not imagine how it would help me be true to my self.