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Instructions for Coming Out Gay in a Pentecostal Southern Family

A Southern Family Guide 🌈

By Tim CarmichaelPublished about a month ago Updated about a month ago 1 min read
Image created by author using FreePik

Begin at Sunday dinner, post-service, when Granny speaks in tongues,

in a key that would make angels cover their ears and spiders applaud.

🌈

Wait until cousin Dale has finished running laps

around the living room, muttering Revelation like it’s an Olympic sport.

🌈

In a low tone say your announcement between bites of casserole.

Something modest works best.

"Pass the green beans. Also, I’m gay."

🌈

Or announce it during dessert.

"This pecan pie hits harder than my ex-boyfriend."

Timing does not matter. Everyone is vibrating

from prophecy, prayer, and slightly burnt cornbread,

and probably thinking about the apocalypse anyway.

🌈

Stand ready for Aunt Martha. She faints at air,

good news, bad news, and shadows that look vaguely suspicious.

Keep ammonia capsules nearby. She treats them like tiny holy trophies.

🌈

When Uncle Junior comes at you, speedwalking, arms raised,

he may be casting out demons.

He may be overcome by God’s love.

You have a fifty-fifty chance. Let him decide.

Do not run. You are not a demon.

🌈

Granny will ask if you have prayed.

Say yes. Just not for what she thinks.

She will demand certainty.

Tell her you are as certain

as she was when Y2K threatened to destroy all microwave ovens.

🌈

Your daddy will grip his sweet tea like it’s a weapon,

but by Wednesday he will text,

asking if your “friend” wants to fish with him.

This counts as progress.

🌈

Expect shouting. Someone will inevitably yell “TESTIFY!”

as though the casserole itself were miraculous.

If someone faints who isn’t Aunt Martha,

note it quietly. This is rarer than a cat that pays rent.

🌈

Survive. You will.

Laugh when laughter comes, loud enough to scare the fainting people.

Love these ridiculous creatures anyway,

even when they insist you need deliverance

from whatever makes you complete.

🌈

Bring your boyfriend next Christmas.

Watch everyone pretend scandal never happened.

Accept Granny’s gift, bedazzled Jesus' sweatshirts for you both.

She means it with the purest intentions.

Wear them. Dance in them.

Consider adding a dramatic twirl for extra points.

For FunFree Versehow to

About the Creator

Tim Carmichael

Tim is an Appalachian poet and cookbook author. He writes about rural life, family, and the places he grew up around. His poetry and essays have appeared in Beautiful and Brutal Things, his latest book.

https://a.co/d/537XqhW

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Comments (8)

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  • Reb Kreyling29 days ago

    This was great. Very clever and fun. And an enjoyable read.

  • Vicki Lawana Trusselli about a month ago

    Love this story. Yes, that is the way a Pentecostal family lives. It is odd to me but my brother was almost there.

  • Tiffany Gordonabout a month ago

    So clever & fun! Go Tim! 😁🫶🏾💕

  • Julie Lacksonenabout a month ago

    Such fun! And so tongue-in-cheek. 💜

  • Marie Wilsonabout a month ago

    I'd have given top marks for the title alone but then what followed went beyond all marks & titles. I know enough about this culture to appreciate the humour & the reality on which it's based - but no one says it quite like you!

  • Sam Spinelliabout a month ago

    This is rad— excellent poetry and so wholesome. I feel the uncertainty of admitting something “scandalous” to a family that seems to be, on the surface, culturally opposed. But I think it’s necessary to be true and honest to yourself, so the message here is important. And I appreciate the sense of relief that you’ve written into the ending Great work :)

  • K.B. Silver about a month ago

    This is full of comedy and heart. It feels hopeful above all else. a beautiful view of family life that can have room for every sort of character if given the chance.👏👏✨

  • Harper Lewisabout a month ago

    I’m dead because you slay. This might be the best thing ever. I’m Episcopalian, but I know from southern pentacostal, and this is so much funnier than most will realize. Absolutely smashing. "This pecan pie hits harder than my ex-boyfriend."

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