Home » Technology » -title: Coming Out Over WhatsApp: A Queer Arab’s Journey

-title: Coming Out Over WhatsApp: A Queer Arab’s Journey

by Rachel Kim – Technology Editor

Voice Notes From the Closet: Coming Out Over WhatsApp

The chipped ‌Formica of the diner table felt cold under my hands.My mother and I had requested this meeting, a deliberate attempt to “lay our cards on the​ table,” to finaly speak​ with complete ​honesty.‌ The air hung thick with unspoken anxieties.

“Chris,” she grunted,her tone sharpening. “Are you sure about what you said to me, about wanting to ⁢pursue ⁣this more?”

I swallowed, my throat suddenly dry. “It’s more than just wanting it.”

“Don’t talk down to me like I don’t know anything,” she retorted, leaning back in her chair, her eyes narrowing.”We did our‍ best, your father and I.”

“I will continue to thank⁢ you and appreciate‌ everything you’ve done for all⁣ of us,” I interjected, striving for a steady, ⁢firm voice. “But I also need to know ​that you’d support me, too. That ⁣you ⁣would visit me and my boyfriend the same way you visit any ‌of my sisters and ⁣their husbands. That you wouldn’t treat us any differently. That you ‌would love me for who I am, not for who you thought I ‍should be. That the​ education and the roof over my head that you kindly⁤ provided for 20-something years wasn’t contingent on me marrying a woman and having babies.”

A sigh escaped her lips. “What’s wrong with ⁤wanting more grandchildren?” We sat in silence, the⁤ weight of ‌our words pressing down on us.

Than, she looked up, her gaze searching mine. “I just have one question for you,habibi.”

A whirlwind of fears flooded my⁢ mind. Is there any way you can go back? Are you sure you’re not bisexual? Can you keep it a secret?

But the question that came was simpler, and far more profound. “Are you happy?”

My heart plummeted. ⁣For a moment, ‍I couldn’t respond. She reached across the table, her hand covering mine.Tears welled in both our eyes, flowing ⁢in a synchronized ‍rhythm, a dance born of years⁢ of love and misunderstanding.

It ‌wasn’t ⁣everything I’d hoped for, but it was a start. I knew, in that moment, she‌ genuinely wanted my⁤ happiness.

The next question followed quickly: “When can I meet ⁣your boyfriend?”

The shift was seismic.no more ‍hiding, no more coded language, no more‌ hushed tones and secret conversations.It was all out ‌in the open. I reveled in the freedom, ​the honesty, the confidence of ⁣being an out, proud, queer, Arab man.

Soon, my mother would be‍ embracing him, peppering him with⁤ questions that occasionally stumbled in translation from Arabic. ⁣She’d ask, with characteristic directness, “Why are you so white?” and insist on meeting his family. Eventually, she would dance with unrestrained joy at our‍ wedding – better than anyone else on the dance floor – and make breakfast for us in our Boston apartment, pointedly ignoring our anxious ⁢dog.

The communication evolved beyond occasional visits. She began sending ‍me WhatsApp voice notes again, not⁤ just pictures of lemon trees from Lebanon. She’d inquire about‌ my husband and our new house. she demanded weekly pictures and video calls, now ​possible thanks to improved internet access in ‌Lebanon. and, inevitably,​ she’d ask again: “Are you happy?”

Each time, I assured her, unequivocally, that I was. That this love, this life, this authentic version of myself – ⁣no longer a distant fantasy – and the freedom to simply ‌ be ‍ was what every ⁢queer Arab person deserved to experience.


(Note: The provided text already ⁤contained verifiable facts and ⁢was largely a personal narrative. This rewrite focuses on maintaining accuracy and clarity ‍while preserving the emotional core of the original piece.The⁣ concluding paragraph about Raseef22 was omitted as it is indeed not relevant to‍ the core narrative.)

You may also like

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.