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Tuesday, September 30, 2008
~ 9/30/2008 09:51:00 PM ~
Role Models
The role models argument (if it is going to be used) is ludicrous. What kind of role model is a person going to be if he is teaching his students to keep lying to themselves about who and what they are?

Perhaps one of the key reasons we have a problem with gay teachers as role models is because our law continues to criminalize gay people.

The point about role models is so silly I will not dignify it with further attention.

Parents
Parents need to ask themselves - would you reject a teacher who is dedicated, good at what he does and behaves with integrity just because he has come out as gay?

Would you rather have teachers who teach your students to lie to themselves and to you?

Do you realise how many teachers are gay? And that perhaps they are good teachers because they are gay?

I am fully aware of the discussions about the sexual safety of children against gay predators. The reality is the sexual safety of children is an issue regardless of the orientation of our children. What we should be doing is to have mechanisms and ground rules in schools that bear in mind the possibility of predatorial teachers and to teach our kids to protect themselves. I recall a parent once telling me he taught his daughter that if anyone touches her around the area covered by her swimsuit she should tell him/her to stop and inform her parents - now there is a case of an enlightened parent!

One more question: Do you really think that having your students taught by closseted/hidden gay teachers more safe than openly gay teachers? Think again! The first group will never have any form of accountability the second will behave professionally with your children because they know that they are in the open. So think again.

Schools
Perhaps some schools like the one in question may want to consider asking parents who want their children in their school to sign a form stating that they will be ok with gay teachers.

A Singaporean Teacher Comes Out

This is a letter written by a dedicated Singaporean gay teacher. The MOE requested him to take it down from his blog. Will he be able to keep his job and grow in the profession he has dedicated his life to and cherishes?

I know gay teachers who are good at their work but who always struggle between being true to themselves and the fear of being found out by the MOE. Stresses like this take a psychological toll on our talented gay sons and daughters. Write a note to the Minister for Education (tharman_shanmugaratnam@moe.gov.sg)to express your support for the integrity of OF and other gay teachers.

An Open Letter

I have been teaching Science in a Singaporean school for the last eight years.

Being a teacher has been the most rewarding part of my professional life thus far. My students continue to amaze me daily with their wit, maturity, independent thinking and leadership. It is very fulfilling that I am a part of an institution that moulds the future generation of Singapore’s leaders.

Leaders are people who can rise above the tide of popular opinion, people who are guided by the conviction of rightness and justice and in being so guided, lead others towards that right path.

Recent events leading to my action

Recent events have made me decide to write this open letter. In April this year, Minister Mentor Mr Lee Kuan Yew called homosexuality a “genetic variation”, questioning the validity of criminalising gay sex. In July, MP Baey Yam Keng expressed support for the repeal of Section 377A of the penal code (which criminalises gay sex acts). In August, Malaysian columnist and ordained pastor Oyoung Wenfeng released his inspiring new Mandarin book “Tong Gen Sheng”, encouraging gay men and women to come out of the closet.

A few evenings later, I attended a forum organised by People Like Us on gay teachers and students. A few brave twenty-something guys asked, “Why has there been so little guidance available to me as a gay teenager?” It was a question that I had asked myself often, growing up.

When I became a teacher in 1999, I looked back on the good guidance my own teachers gave me as a template, and tried to be a better teacher to my students. Besides teaching them Science, I spent considerable effort in imparting good social values: give up your seats to the needy, save the handicapped parking lot for those in wheelchairs and their caretakers, respect people regardless of profession or social status.

How hate is perpetuated

Yet, in the eight years I have taught, I have done little for that small group of students who are gay. When the religious group Focus on the Family masqueraded as sex guidance counselors and gave a talk full of misinformation about homosexuality to our students, I was furious but kept my mouth shut.

When my niece returned from school saying, “Gays are disgusting!” I knew she learnt that hatred from a classmate, who had in turn absorbed that hatred from a parent. I knew that this hatred has been perpetrated for generations. But hatred grew out of fear, and hatred, as a line in a movie goes, “leads to the Dark Side.” This is the same environment of hatred I grew up in, as a gay teenager and student.

Until Section 377A* is repealed, there will be precious little the Ministry of Education can do to help these students. As a teacher, I am bound by my professional duty to follow the directives of my superiors.

While these events helped crystallize my decision to come out of the closet, my motivation remains deeply personal.

My family and I

As far back as primary six, I have been aware of my attraction towards classmates of the same sex. For those who argued about nurturing factors of the family, my brother and sister grew up under the same parents and remained heterosexuals despite growing up with me in close proximity.

As a teenager, I was very quick to sense society’s aversion towards the ‘sissies’ in my classes. I worked hard to distance myself from them. While I was successful in modifying my outward behavior, my sexual orientation remained unchanged. My denial gnawed at me, and the suppression of my true self resulted in self-destructive behavior during my overseas university years.

Fortunately, my American fraternity mates were supportive. I began to see a counselor who helped me accept myself for who and what I am.

Returning to Singapore, I came out to my family. My father, mother, brother and sister, out of love for their son and brother, walked the long road to acceptance. It was not easy for them, but they loved me before I came out, and they love me after. When I finally settled down with my longtime companion (we have been together for more than nine years), my entire family made sure my nieces and nephews included us in their lives. I loved my family too much to keep them in the dark, to deny them the chance to really know me. And they loved me too much to let some old prejudice tear our family apart.

I kept my sexual orientation a secret at work, and only a handful of my colleagues knew about me.

I don’t want to be a bonsai tree

Not counting my childhood, I have spent more than twenty years in the professional closet. I am nearing my fourth decade on Earth. While I have had some successes in life, I am not content to be just average. As I have often told my students, “Why be average when you can be your best?”

Do you know what a bonsai tree is? A bonsai tree is an imitation of a real tree. It is kept in a small pot with limited nutrients, trimmed constantly to fit someone else’s whim. It looks like a real tree, except it can’t do many things a real tree can. It cannot provide shelter, it cannot find food on its own; its life and death are totally reliant on its owner. It is the plant version of the 3-inch Chinese bound foot for women: useless and painful.

Being in the closet, pretending to be straight, trimming our true selves to suit the whims and expectations of others, is just like being a human bonsai tree. By staying in the closet, we cannot even hope to be average, much less above and beyond average.

I felt that in order to reach my fullest potential as a useful human being, I must first fully accept myself, and face the world honestly. I have lived long enough to know that what I am is not a disease, an aberration or a mental illness.

Hate is not a religious value

Many people have cited many ‘reasons’ for hating homosexuals, just as many people tried to justify their views that the Earth was flat, that the darker skinned should always be inferior, and that women should subjugate their lives to men. The teachings of the world’s great religious traditions offer many words of wisdom, but the interpretations of their human followers are not infallible. As Jesus said in his Sermon on the Mount (yes, a personal Bible was given to me by a great lady and I honored her by reading the book), we must love our neighbors as ourselves. It is a simple teaching, but one that’s rarely followed by those who seek to oppress people different from themselves. The path to enlightenment always faces stubborn resistance. As Mahatma Gandhi said, “First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you...”

There are some people who are using homosexuality to advance their personal ambitions vis a vis religion. They claim that the homosexual ‘agenda’ is to make the whole world gay and threaten the stability of the family. Yet, let us examine the evidence: Denmark, Norway and Sweden, the first countries to legalise gay marriage, are more stable than ever – their population has not been converted by gays and their heterosexual divorce rates have even decreased since gays have been afforded legal rights. (William N. Eskridge, Jr and Darren R. Spedale, Oxford University Press, 2006).

The only agenda gay people have is to be able to live with the same rights and dignity as our heterosexual brothers and sisters. Our very vocal opponents are the ones actively preying on innocent people, recruiting them to their cause by spreading fear and misinformation. I hope thinking people will quickly see that it is this small group of vocal objectionists who have a more dangerous agenda, that their fight with gay people has nothing to do with what’s right or wrong, but is merely a litmus test of their political influence. For peace and prosperity to continue, Singapore must always uphold secularism, where each different segment of the population respects the beliefs and rights of the others.

Can a country with no natural resources afford to drive away its own citizens?

There is a very pragmatic reason that you should support the rights and dignity of gay Singaporeans: in this globally-competitive era, Singapore needs her gay sons and daughters, just as we need our Singaporean Muslims, Buddhists, Christians, Hindus, immigrants, men and women, old folks and young. Most importantly, we need those gay sons and daughters because those gay sons and daughters are Singaporean Muslims, Buddhists, Christians, Hindus, immigrants, men and women, old folks and young. Can a country without natural resources continue to flourish when it starts to drive away its own children?

As I said before, leaders are people who are guided by the conviction of rightness and justice and in being so guided, lead others towards that right path.

I am still a teacher. My main purpose and joy is to teach our youngest citizens, the same ones who will be the leaders of our nation tomorrow. But, I feel I am shortchanging both society and myself by staying in the closet. I must be true to myself. If my colleagues and students, both gay and straight, see that being true to one’s own self has great value, perhaps we can produce a new generation who is truly courageous. A new generation of young people who are proud to be themselves, no matter what difference they have from their classmates. Then I will have succeeded in providing them a better education than I had the opportunity to receive during my years in school.

So here’s what I am, and I am a friend in need at the moment

So here it is: I, OF(full name), have always been and always will be a gay man. When you ask about my spouse, I will say he is a man. I am as proud being gay as you are proud being straight. I am not, as some people like to label gays, a pedophile, a child molester, a pervert or sexual deviant. I did not choose to be gay, just like heterosexuals did not choose to be straight. I am not going to hell (not for being gay anyway).

I am not going back in the closet. When you ask me who I am, I will answer: I am a son, a brother, a long-time companion, an uncle, a teacher, a classmate, a colleague, a part of your community, a HDB dweller, a Singaporean. And I am also gay.

I would like to enjoy the respect that all other Singaporeans enjoy. I will not let the closet bind my feet, because I am made to sprint. I am not interested in being a bonsai tree, my DNA is programmed to climb higher. My heart aspires to reach my fullest potential as a human being.

I hope, dear friends and colleagues, that you look back and remember what I am, and see that I am not someone you fear. I am essentially the same person – flawed, imperfect, but brought up properly by two loving parents to lead a productive, beneficial and meaningful life. My friends and family love me for who I am, and I hope you can too. I come out to you with as much hope and trepidation as when I first come out to my mother and father. Your support and understanding are very important to me at this moment.

Thank you, may you prosper in health and soul.

Taken from singaporeangay.blogspot.com
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Searched up this off google and adapted from a blog.. don't ask. This letter was an open letter about a homosexual male teacher, just like any normal men out there, writing about him and his gay lifestyle. I think it's really sad how people discriminate against them, going "gays are faggots" immediately when hearing about it, it's a common misconception that gay people behave like sissies because those are two different things. Look it up in dictionary.com, even it says so, the two different words mean two different things and no hint of it is similar. The closet and bonsai tree analogy was really relative, it could effectively symbolise the hardships of a homosexual person and I think gay people don't have to say they're gay. Unlike normal straight guys, people who ask them their sexual orientation immediately they answer "I'm straight.". But not everyone has to do so, homos don't have to go "I'm gay" when asked for their sexual orientation, it's their choice if they wanna keep it to themselves, not everyone's Clay Aiken.

So the bible and other religions mostly consider a homosexual lifestyle as a sin, resulting in punishment after death such as being sent to Hell or torture etc. but I believe that not being able to do what you want to or be with the person you want to is worse than hell by a hundred times, I would rather die immediately and go to Hell more than anything.

So, schoolteachers are not allowed to be homosexual because they may lead students to the same thing? Isn't this discrimination? How is this different from racism? So we respect each other's religions and not their sexual orientation? Don't think so. And if the schoolteacher was a good teacher. A role model, a good teacher with integrity and highly educated. Able to create better futures for his or her students but is not allowed to be a teacher.. because he/she is homosexual?

Really think people out there should open their heads and not be so narrow-minded. Personally I feel hate is perpetuated from images and misconceptions of students discussing about them in school. As a student myself I hear things like this in school, generally biased and often wrong.

In any case, hope this doesn't offend anyone or bring any unpleasant remarks. Just needed to vent —— anyhow. I'm not going to Hell for being gay(or bisexual anyways).

------------------------------------

Woke up at 6.10 today, ready 'bout .35 as usual. Made my way to the train station.. arrived at Nick's house around 7.05 I think, left at 7.10, we were 3 minutes earlier than yesterday, joy.. -__- Made it on time, well there was a Lightning Risk Alert so we wouldn't be late anyway.

Reading period.. MsToh came right on time for the first time.. she gave us a 3a1behavedwell sticker, but I think we deserve so much more? She just expects way too much. Forgot what were the periods afterwards or what happened during them.. Recess, Malays were allowed to go home earlier 'cause they had to return home to help prepare for the big day tomorrow. 'case you didn't know it's Hari Raya tomorrow.

Recess'ed as usual.. didn't eat 'cause the giants were in the queue and buying was not possible..? .____. went to gym to slack.. watched Justin play volleyball with his peers and the a2 people were squashing each other under the mats..? I wouldn't wanna be the one sandwiched between..

Forgot what happened.. oh I think there was Math before recess.. one period. Learned a little bit.. gonna stay back for remedial on Thursday.

Stayed back to watch them play volleyball again.. came prepared with my PSP! So I wasn't bored, listening to song and playing games :D Was so tired.. wanted to sleep but there wasn't anywhere to.. the hall was filled with tables and chairs for the examination but they played volleyball there anyways, moved some of the tables further away so there would be space to, had a chat with Justin about friends and stuff. Lol, realized Kid's a really fun guy to be with, he's a humourous person that's fun to talk to and play with, joker :D Sooo tired.. oh yeah.. we did an English mock paper again during English after recess.. I slept for 30 minutes woke up and saw Jeremy doing his word count for summary o___o.. and I was.. at passage A? but when I finished my word count for summary he was still counting his words..? Lol I did that fast? But the passage was relatively easy. BUT the questions was nonetheless tricky, and there're many rephrase questions.. don't think I did too well.

So bored.. went to WestMall to eat and buy chineseElectronicDictionary(CED).. ate BurgerKing.. so niceeeeeeeeeee それはよく味がした~ chat with Jeremy&Nick for a pretty long time.. about what..? Don't remember.. .____. but I know we chat about some stuff.. can't remember T____T.. &nyways, went to Popular afterwards.. the CED no stock so.. I left my number and may be going to buy tomorrow with Nick.. and there's a small chance I'm gonna go KBox with my brother :D..

Train-ed home.. originally wanted to study but nah.. didn't bathe immediately.. turned on computer.. then fell asleep on the chair ZZ .___. somehow I made my way to the bed..? But I don't remember moving.. there was no one at home either so.. I dunno how I got there..

Anyways.. was supposed to play dotA but Nick's loserbrother took complete domination over the computer and he had to let him use it.. so we didn't play.. cooked noodles.. ate.. I WANT REAL FOOD LIKE STEAKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKK ANDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD ICECREAMMMMMMMM(??). So bored.. seriously.. so bored I went to look up weird stuff.. gonna go sleep with my dog now.. byeeeee.

It's 26 degrees currently.. gonna drop to 24 in two hours time, the following few days are gonna be thunderstorms and rainy days.. weather ranging from highest 31 to lowest 23.. why am I posting this.... D: so boredddd. Oh yeah.. while stripping in the morning today I found out there's a pimple on my butt =____= super irritating.. why can't it be on the face, why there.__.

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; Hillgrove Secondary
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