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Registered students who would like to talk with a counsellor about this issue can contact Counselling Services

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Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Intersex and Queer (LGBTIQ)

The usual issues that all college students have to deal with can be more difficult if you are trying to develop a positive gender identity, sexual orientation or coping with discrimination because you are part of a minority group in our society. The specific issues that you might encounter if you identify as LGBTIQ may include, depression/anxiety, guilt, substance abuse, relationship/intimacy issues, heterosexism, homophobia, and transphobia. There may be a huge strain on you if you feel that you cannot be yourself and have to always decide what you can or cannot reveal about yourself.

Coming Out

For lesbian, gay, bisexual, intersex and transgender people, coming out is a process of understanding, accepting, and valuing your sexual orientation/identity. Coming out includes both exploring your identity and sharing that identity with others. It also involves coping with societal responses and attitudes toward LGBITQ people as you move toward self acceptance. For many students, coming out at college is seen as an opportunity to be open about their sexuality and fully be who they are.

Hints on Coming Out

Some definitions

Bisexual: A person who is attracted to both genders. Sometimes it is referred to as omnisexual or pansexual

Coming out: Refers to the process of discovering and identifying oneself as gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgendered

Cross Dressing/Transvestite: Wearing the clothes of the "opposite" sex for comfort, preference, or sexual encounters

Dyke: This used to be a derogatory slang word for a lesbian but lesbians are taking ownership of the word and using it as a proud and positive word with which to identify themselves

Gay: This usually refers to homosexual men but is often used as an umbrella term to describe the whole LGBT community

Heterosexual: A person who is sexually attracted to a person of the "opposite" sex

Heterosexism: Refers to discrimination or prejudice against lesbians or gay men by heterosexual people

Homophobia: Is an irrational fear of or discrimination against homosexuals

Intersexed: This refers to a person born with ambiguous genitals. Most intersexed people do not possess both sets of genitals but a mixture of both. Formerly they were called hermaphrodites

Lesbian: A woman who is attracted to other woman

LGBTIQ: The initial letters of - Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Intersex and Queer

Rainbow Flag: This is a flag designed by Gilbert Baker and adopted by the LGBTIQ movement as a symbol of gay identity

Queer: This was once a derogatory slang word used to identify gay people. The LGBT community has since reclaimed the word as a positive word and use it to describe themselves

Sexual Orientation: This refers to whether one is attracted to people of the same sex, the opposite sex or to both

Straight: A person who is sexually attracted to the opposite sex

Transgender: This term is used in two ways:

  1. It describes people whose psychological self or gender identity differs from the social expectation for the physical sex they were born into.
  2. It is an umbrella term to describe those who view gender and biological sex not as polar opposites but as a continuum. They include cross-dressers, masculine woman, feminine men, those who undergo hormone treatment and those who have sex reassignment surgery. It is not a sexual orientation

Transphobia: This refers to discrimination against transsexuality and transsexual or transgendered people

If you are a registered student with Mohawk College and would like to talk with a counsellor about this issue, please contact Counselling Services at your campus: