1. Young adults' reactions to gay and lesbian peers who became suicidal following "coming out" to their parents.
- Author
-
Cato JE and Canetto SS
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Gender Identity, Humans, Life Change Events, Male, Personality Inventory, Rejection, Psychology, Stereotyping, Attitude, Homosexuality, Female psychology, Homosexuality, Male psychology, Parent-Child Relations, Peer Group, Self Disclosure, Suicide, Attempted psychology
- Abstract
Rates of nonfatal suicidal behavior among gay and lesbian youth surpass those recorded among their heterosexual peers. A frequently cited precipitant of gay and lesbian nonfatal suicidal behavior is the turmoil associated with coming out to one's family. This study investigated young adults' attitudes toward peers who engaged in suicidal behavior after coming out and being rejected by their parents, and compared them with attitudes toward persons who had become suicidal in response to other stressors (a physical illness, a relationship loss, or an academic failure). Our goal was to explore whether young persons hold beliefs that may encourage lesbian and gay suicidal behavior. We found that gays and lesbians who engaged in suicidal behavior following coming out were not viewed in particularly forgiving or empathic ways, as was the case for persons who became suicidal following an incurable illness. All suicidal persons were perceived as relatively feminine. At the same time, suicidal males were rated as more masculine if they engaged in suicidal behavior because of an academic failure or a physical illness, while suicidal females were viewed as more masculine only if their suicidal behavior followed an academic failure. Finally, we found that both respondent sex and respondent gender-identity influenced evaluations of suicidal persons. Building on these findings, future research should explore attitudes toward the permissibility of a suicidal decision by lesbian and gay persons.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF