And why the Good times? Well of course, College Football is back.

The Pac will once again be the premier conference, and my alma mater will be conference champs! :) Good times!

Arizona Proposition 102, known by its supporters as the Marriage Protection Amendment, is a proposed amendment to the Arizona Constitution that defines marriage as between one man and one woman. It will appear on the November 4, 2008 ballot in Arizona.
State law already prohibits same-sex marriage, and Arizona courts have upheld that ban. However, ban supporters contend it also needs to be in the Constitution in order to prevent future court rulings in favor of same-sex marriage.
California proposition 8 will appear on the November 4, 2008 ballot in California. It is variously known as the Protect Marriage Act, the Same-Sex Marriage Ban or the Limit on Marriage Amendment. If it passes, it will add a new constitutional amendment to the California Constitution that will have exactly the following text: "Only marriage between a man and a woman is valid or recognized in California.
”AM I THE ONLY GAY MAN on the planet who doesn’t believe the Internet will provide a solution to all the problems in the LGBT community?”
“Gay bookstores are not just retailers. They are the secular temples for a community that is understandably averse to organized religion. They are places where knowledge and spiritual experience are exchanged in an environment that isn’t driven primarily by the pursuit of sex. “
”Don’t get me wrong. I have no problem with the technology. (I have over 400 Facebook friends, only 20 of whom I have actually dined with.) But I have a problem with the incredibly limited way in which most people use the resources they find online. While notorious hookup sites for gay men are often associated with drug-fueled, unsafe sex, the sad reality is that most of their members aren’t interested in meeting anyone at all. (Yes, I was once a member of one. My tenure was brief and unsuccessful.) Sure, users of these sites devote hours to taking strategically lit self-portraits, which range from suggestive to the explicit. But the majority of member profiles contain denunciations of flakes and time-wasters, suggesting the presence of a large group of men who are all talk and no play. Need proof? Take a look at the amount of time most of these men spend online. They never log off long enough to have sex with anyone. The real thrill for these men is engaging in a form of detached exhibitionism while carrying on prolonged Internet chats with people they’ll never meet, men they turn into a fantasy based solely on the superficial attributes each person has listed (and often lied about) in his profile.”
“Gay people are first adopters, a demographic that is usually the first to consume and spread new technologies. As such, we’ve tended to overvalue the positive aspects of online communities. These are wonderful things when they inspire people to go out into the real world and do actual things--such as come out of the closet or campaign for a favorite candidate. But for the most part, the Internet is taking users down a rabbit hole where their behaviors are defined by a noxious blend of arrogance and self-deception bred by isolation.”
"Remember on Friday at the bar we were talking about the underwear run that I had just ran in LA and you asked, Is there anything else you want to tell us? Well as a matter fact there is. I am gay. In addition, I got an apartment in West Hollywood and I have been living there since early July.”
that I have never been happier or more proud of myself as I have been over the last few weeks.
I have recently accepted myself, as it is not a choice, and I have not been living a secret or hidden gay life all of these years. I have been gay but I only started to live and be real this past spring.
this past weekend was extremely difficult for me as I finally saw for the first time that because my attraction is different than most and certainly all of you guys, I may not have all of the same opportunities as you. Hence you might have noticed that I withdrew a little bit periodically throughout the weekend.
being gay is just a part of me just as being right handed is.
I’m still the same person that I’ve always been and now you know the complete and honest me.
I believe I have the right to the same love, affection, companionship, and relationships that you guys have. So in accepting who G-d created me to be, I am going to finally obey his wish and try and achieve what each of us as have the right to.
So here you have another case where we, forget we, I have seen/believed/imagined what I wanted to see/believe/imagine where others have seen/believed/imagined something totally different.
"The reason that I wanted to stop by tonight was because there was something that I wanted to talk to you about. I am gay."
I didn't like the person that I had become and I know my relationships with my closest friends and family have suffered for it. I want to change that and I hope with my honesty, and in sharing this part of my life with you and the others, our relationships will become deeper and more meaningful.
That when I tell the rest of our core group of friends, (in September when I return to Phoenix) other fraternity brothers from college, a giggle or laugh may take place. I told him that there may be some initial humor or chuckle by the surprise and I for one could certainly laugh at myself and understand it. But after that, my being gay is not going to be a laughing matter nor will I accept the use of jokes or derogatory statements about my sexuality in the future. I told him that our friends will either grow, learn, and accept or unfortunately they will no longer be friends of mine.
Arizona Proposition 102, known by its supporters as the Marriage Protection Amendment, is a proposed amendment to the Arizona Constitution that defines marriage as between one man and one woman. It will appear on the November 4, 2008 ballot in Arizona. State law already prohibits same-sex marriage, and Arizona courts have upheld that ban. However, ban supporters contend it also needs to be in the Constitution in order to prevent future court rulings in favor of same-sex marriage.
California proposition 8 will appear on the November 4, 2008 ballot in California. It is variously known as the Protect Marriage Act, the Same-Sex Marriage Ban or the Limit on Marriage Amendment. If it passes, it will add a new constitutional amendment to the California Constitution that will have exactly the following text: "Only marriage between a man and a woman is valid or recognized in California."
Florida proposition 2, also known as the Florida Marriage Amendment and the Marriage Protection Amendment, is a proposed constitutional amendment to ban same-sex marriage in Florida. The proposed amendment to the Florida Constitution will appear on the November 4, 2008 ballot. In order to pass, the amendment will require a 60% majority of those voting in the election. The amendment as written includes a clause prohibiting judges from overturning the law. The ballot title for the initiative says, “In as much as a marriage is the legal union of only one man and woman as husband and wife, no other legal union that is treated as marriage or the substantial equivalent thereof shall be valid or recognized."
Oregon ballot Measure 303 is also known as Referral of House Bill 2007 and the Oregon Family Fairness Act. It is a veto referendum. If the measure appears on the ballot, Oregon voters will vote on HB 2007, a bill passed in May 2007 and signed by Oregon's governor that confers benefits similar to marriage on civil unions (sometimes called domestic partnerships) between members of the same sex. Before HB 2007 was signed into law and took effect on January 1, 2008, marriage benefits in Oregon applied exclusively to marriages between a man and a woman.
“I’m not sure if you remember but 2-1/2 years ago when I came out to visit you guys in DC you asked me a question while we were out at a bar in Adams Morgan. And then on Friday, Runner asked if there was something else I needed to tell you guys when we were talking about the race that I had just run in LA. Well there is something that I need to tell you and that is that I am gay.” To my great surprise, DC said he never suspected it and couldn’t remember what he had asked me 2-1/2 years ago. We then spoke for about 15 minutes about how I knew, my process of acceptance, coming out to my family earlier in the week, how difficult of a weekend this had been for me, and how for the first time in my life I had felt different, distant, and in a minority. DC asked about marriage and California. (on Friday I had told him and his wife that I got an apartment in LA and had been living there for the last 4 weeks and had been quite happy about the move) I told him about California’s prop 8 and then came clean that I was actually living in WEHO. He said, “Oh, if I knew that earlier then I would have definitely suspected it.” To which I jokingly replied, “That’s why I didn’t tell you guys.” Overall they were happy for me, and more importantly happy that I was happy. We embraced, and DC’s wife said, “this doesn’t mean we are going to name our son when he is born Adam.” We all chuckled, went to our respective vehicles, and left Beaver Creek.
For Information and to Support No on Arizona’s Prop 102 please visit: http://www.votenoprop102.com/Default.aspx
For Information and to Support No on California’s Prop 8 please visit: http://noonprop8.com/home
For Information and to Support No on Florida’s Prop 2 please visit: http://www.votenoflorida.org/
For Information and to Support Basic Rights Oregon please visit: http://www.basicrights.org/?page_id=19
“No I am not moving back to Phoenix now. So far I have really enjoyed my time in West Hollywood. Although it has only been four weeks, I have never loved myself as much as I do now, I have never been more happy than I am now, I have never been more proud of myself than I am now, and I have never been as confident in who I am as I am now. I have done a lot of reflecting over these last few months, really over a year now, and I’ve realized that I haven’t liked the person that I’ve become and more importantly liked the fact that I haven’t shared my life with those most important to me. I acknowledge that I’ve built a tremendous wall up around me over the years, and we’ve joked about that in the past, in that I never have anything to say. I hope that changes today. The reason that I am all of those things that I mentioned earlier; never been more happy, never been more proud, never been as confident, and never loved myself as I do now is because after all of these years I’ve finally come to grips with and accepted myself for who G-d created me to be. Mom, dad, I’m Gay!”
I am what I am and I am okay with that. I am the same person today as I was one month ago, 1 year ago, and 10 years ago. You just now know the real and honest me.
This is not something I have chosen for myself, but rather something for who I am. Just like I have blue eyes or am right handed. Believe me, this is something that has taken me a very long time to accept and I can honestly say that I have tried to suppress it and fight it for many, many years. I am attracted to guys and I have finally accepted it. I look at it as a gift from G-d, and I’m sharing that gift with you today.
You may feel a sense of loss, similar to mourning the loss of a family member. In a way it’s like a type of death, that of a set of images and expectations that you had for me are now gone. This feeling is natural and it is okay to grieve the loss of those images.
Healing will proceed at different paces for different people. You will go through a period of grief which should last for sometime before hopefully arriving at a point of acceptance. This is normal, and I hope you understand that it took me a very long time to accept who I am, so I really do anticipate and expect that it will take you some time to process all of this before coming to your own terms of acceptance.
You may feel a sense of self blame. In many cases that is normal. I can assure you though that you did nothing wrong. You did not raise me wrong. To the contrary, you raised me right. You did nothing but provide me with all of the opportunities in the world to live my life. And I’m extremely grateful for that. I’ve had a wonderful life. It just hasn’t been totally complete and honest. The phrase that I’ve penned is that for the longest time I’ve let life lead me, but now I’m going to lead my life.
Whatever form the pain takes, do not suppress or deny it. I did for way too long. It’s not worth it. Your pain is real, it’s normal, and you are entitled to it. Please ask for help. Either from me, the support organizations that I’ve provided you with, or from friends.
At this time, the coming out process shifts. You will now have your own. Upon accepting who I am, you will have to decide to whom and when to tell. At your time and at your pace.