Letters to My Brother by James Clementi

When 18-year-old Tyler Clementi jumped to his death from the George Washington Bridge in September 2010, he became an overnight symbol of the fight against cyber-bullying and homophobia. Here, his older brother reclaims his memory from the headlines and pays tribute to his abbreviated life.

I’m not sure when I first realized my younger brother was gay. I think I knew he was for as long as I knew I was. I had no idea how to bring it up; it was just something we left dangling in the air, unsaid. I was open about my sexuality with friends, but around my family there was this barrier that felt unbreakable. It slowly dawned on me that I wasn’t the only one, that I had a brother who was also gay — my baby brother, whom I had always felt protective and paternal toward. I knew I was in a position to be a confidant, a role model. But I wasn’t ready to do any of that. It would have made it much less lonely for me to grow up with an older brother who had gone through and understood everything I was dealing with — and I wanted to be that for Tyler. I didn’t start to come out to the people in my life until I was in my early twenties, so I always thought Tyler would follow the same timeline and we wouldn’t need to address the rainbow-colored elephant for a few more years. I was terrified to talk to him, accustomed to secrecy and scared I would make everything worse somehow…

  1. anamountain reblogged this from gayinnj
  2. lookatmeshrek-imtrotting reblogged this from thewardrobeintocamelot
  3. 79chevyimpala reblogged this from wewereledtoleadlovers
  4. screamingmysilence reblogged this from gayinnj
  5. wewereledtoleadlovers reblogged this from thewardrobeintocamelot
  6. littletheatremonstar reblogged this from gayinnj
  7. gayinnj posted this
  8. thewardrobeintocamelot reblogged this from gayinnj