Tell Your Story with Jonathan Capehart
61 min
•Jan 7, 20263 months agoSummary
Jonathan Capehart, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and PBS NewsHour analyst, discusses his memoir "Yet Here I Am," sharing deeply personal stories about growing up as a Black gay man, his mother Margaret's sacrifices as a single parent, summers in segregated North Carolina, and his journey to self-acceptance and building a chosen family in New York.
Insights
- Parental intentionality about education and neighborhood selection significantly impacts a child's confidence navigating predominantly white spaces and institutional barriers
- Coming out and self-acceptance require internal security that develops through consistent messaging about self-worth from trusted family members, not external validation
- Chosen family becomes essential when biological family cannot fully accept or support one's authentic identity, particularly for LGBTQ+ individuals in traditional communities
- Boundary-setting with family members, while potentially sacrificial, is necessary for mental health and creates space for more affirming relationships
- Intergenerational trauma and protective parenting strategies (sheltering from racism while preparing for it) shape how individuals navigate systemic inequities
Trends
Memoir as cultural commentary on race, sexuality, and identity gaining prominence in mainstream media and book publishingIncreasing visibility of LGBTQ+ narratives within Black family and community contexts challenging traditional silenceMental health and therapy becoming normalized as part of personal development and boundary-setting workChosen family structures becoming recognized as equally valid to biological family, particularly among marginalized communitiesFirst-generation professional success stories emphasizing educational attainment as economic mobility tool in Black families
Topics
Coming out and LGBTQ+ identity in Black familiesSingle motherhood and economic resilienceSegregation and Jim Crow South experiencesEducational equity and institutional racismChosen family and community buildingMemoir writing and personal storytellingBoundary-setting and mental healthIntergenerational trauma and parentingJournalism and media careersFaith and Jehovah's Witness communityColorism and respectability politicsFirst-generation college attendanceWorkplace discrimination and expectationsMartha's Vineyard as Black cultural spaceMasculinity and vulnerability in Black men
Companies
Washington Post
Jonathan Capehart was previously an associate editor and opinion writer at the Washington Post
PBS
Capehart is an analyst on the PBS NewsHour, a major news analysis platform
Carleton College
Capehart's alma mater where he came out and found community as a gay student
People
Jonathan Capehart
Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, PBS NewsHour analyst, and author of memoir 'Yet Here I Am'
Michelle Obama
Co-host of the IMO podcast interviewing Jonathan Capehart about his memoir and life experiences
Craig Robinson
Co-host of the IMO podcast and Michelle Obama's brother, discussing Capehart's experiences
Margaret Capehart
Jonathan's mother, single parent who prioritized education and moved to predominantly white towns
Sister Isla Mae Kindred
Jonathan's maternal grandmother, devout Jehovah's Witness who raised him during North Carolina summers
Uncle McKinley
Jonathan's uncle who affirmed his sexuality and relationship when his grandmother rejected his partner
Matthew Brooks
Carleton College student who came out openly and led LGBTQ+ group, influencing Capehart's own coming out
Quotes
"It was like her, it was a slow motion protest at 15 miles an hour. Right. The black daughter of Severn is back in town."
Jonathan Capehart•Early in episode
"You are going to college. You should be in college prep courses."
Margaret Capehart (paraphrased)•Discussion of mother's educational priorities
"I just did. I just did. And also I'm of the mind that you're going to kick me out of the family because this is who I am. Okay, well, bye."
Jonathan Capehart•On coming out to family
"When you know who you are, you are just firm in your belief, like, this is who I am, then everything else should flow from that."
Jonathan Capehart•Advice to listener Dominic
"You have to be just fine with the known sacrifices that come with setting those boundaries."
Jonathan Capehart•On boundary-setting with family
Full Transcript
the formal name was Main Street, the colloquial name was White Street. And so around my mother would make that right and I never understood why. I said, Mom, you just go down there and go. But driving down South in your brown 450 SL Mercedes. Which I was like, stop there. Stop there, mama K-part. Which you'll bins. I know with her bins. She was like, and we going down White Street in our bins. And as I write in the book, it was like her. It was a slow motion protest at 15 miles an hour. Right. This episode is brought to you by Thera Flu. How are you? I am really well. I got a good night's sleep last night. And I have the beds at the Airbnb to thank for it, too, because. Oh, that's right. Yeah. So the beds are comfy. Oh, man. comfy where you're staying. And not everybody has the same mattresses, right? But this one is on a platform. So it's not like a box spring in a mattress. This is just the mattress on a platform. But it feels like I'm on a regular bed. Oh, well, there you go. Yeah. That's a good tip off. Enough about my nights. Uh-huh. Yeah. Yes. We have a guest here. We do. But one of the things we said, we wanted to do today, because we, you know, we want to officially welcome back. Natalie, our producer, who's been a maternity leave. And she is a new mommy of a beautiful baby girl. Remind me of your daughters, and a Leona. And she's back. Welcome back. And, uh, you know, we also have to say. And we also want to say thank you to Julia, who substituted in your stead and did an excellent job. So Julia, thank you so much. Welcome back. And Natalie and thank you to Julia. We got him. I know. Do we get both of you now all the time? Okay. So we have a friend of yours. And I met him many years ago during the first administration in the White House. But I told him I, it was so many people I met. And I probably, it was, I was still coaching. So I probably had lost the game and didn't want to, I don't know how you can not know Jonathan K part. I mean, Jonathan K part is like he's, he's a fixture in so many homes. Yeah. I know of him, of course, but she didn't remember, but I didn't even remember meeting him. And, um, you know, Jonathan is a Pulitzer prize winning journalist. He's also the co host of the morning edition of the weekend. He's an analyst on the PBS news hour. His man's got a lot of jobs. I know. K part was previously associate editor at the Washington Post where he was also an opinion writer. His memoir yet, here I am was published earlier this year and was an instant New York Times bestseller. Yes, it was. It is a really nice read. It's a beautiful book. And I'm looking forward to talking to him about it. So. But that further ado, Jonathan K part. Here he is. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you for having me. Thanks for being here, man. Thanks for seeing you. Nice to see you again. Jonathan Jonathan, welcome to IMO. Thank you very much. This is this. We can cocked it this, this, this visit because of your bestselling book. We talked about it a bit. I was like, why don't we talk about it on IMO? And I was thrilled, thrilled that you wanted to have me on and talk about the book. And I'm looking forward to these deep. Do you understand how weird this is? I'm the journalist. Yeah. I don't want to ask the questions and try to find ways to get you to not get off your talking points. And now I'm getting it from you guys. This is great. This is going to be funny. I don't know. You say that now. It's what I love about the book. It's a beautiful book. It's, you know, it's a wonderful journey through your life. But I love it because in telling your story, we get to see all of Jonathan K. Part. It gives us a real connection to you as a human being, as a man. Your journey is beautiful. And it's beautifully told in this book. So congratulations. Yes. Thank you. Thank you very much. It's a nice read. It really is. I didn't, I didn't become a reader until I was an adult. I knew how to read. I didn't know. I know the way you say that. I was like, well, I only read first. I've told the story many times that the first book that got me to be a reader was Firestarter by Stephen King. And so I tried it. I have this pattern of I have to read two nonfiction books in order to get to read one fiction book. And yours, of course, is a nonfiction book. So it was a nice one. So thanks for doing it. Oh, sure. I feel like I now, I feel like I know. I mean, if you don't, if you don't know me, if I have, I don't know what book you read. So tell us about the process of it and how it sounds like it was wonderful. But I want to hear from you. So what was it like writing it? So during the first Trump administration, I decided to, you know what? Just a little intense. I'm going to get off this merry-go-round and all these stories that I had in my head for my summers as a kid, but you know, spending them in North Carolina with my maternal grandparents. I'm finally going to get them out of my head and on to the screen. And I spent the entire, an entire weekend just writing what I started calling the down South chapter. Wow. Writing about how the prominent thing is my, I went to Catholic school in the North and then would go down South to North Carolina and spend the summers with my Jehovah's Witness grandmother. That was that, that stood out because I don't think I knew of your connection to Jehovah's Witness faith. And I didn't realize that your grandmother was such a devout witness. Are they called witnesses? Yeah. Yeah. So you would start it. You've been going down South since, yeah, since, how long I can even remember the first time I went down. But, you know, I went basically every summer until I was 12. Yeah. And so going down South, being in the heat, the humidity, the mosquitoes, their thunderstorms, the rain hitting the tin roof, all of that just, I mean, those memories, the smells of the summer never left me. And especially going witnessing with my grandmother, was this woman she only had a fourth grade education. She knew how to read, she knew how to write. And she was such a devout Jehovah's Witness that we would go witnessing on these country roads in North Carolina. That's a trip. If I'm just picturing this old lady and this well dressed little man in the back, talk about what, you know, help us paint that picture for us. Grandma or sister, I la May. Sister, I la May. Sister, I la May. And I made for quite a pair. Now, we'll put aside my, my fascist for a moment, my grandmother, she liked to dress. And she would get a simplicity, she would look through that, was it, wasn't there a book or something? Simplicity. Buttermilk. There were, there were tons of catalogs and so patterns and, right, it was, it would flip through. And then she would see, see a pattern. And then we'd go into town, Muffer's Burrow, and go find the pattern and then bring it back home and grandma would make her dresses. Right there on the kitchen table, I could still hear the scissors crunching on the metal tabletop. And then she would sew them, get behind her little singer sewing machine. And then on Sunday, you couldn't tell her nothing. She put just slip that sack dress on over her head, put her faux pearls on, cut that wig on just right. And put her, you know, purse in the Crick-of-R-Arm Queen Elizabeth style. Yes. I couldn't tell sister Isla Mae Kindred, not a thing. And so then there's me, you know, little, so my family calls me Todd. Everybody in my family calls me Todd. So there I am, little Todd or Todd. To what? And I see myself in like khaki pants, a little shirt, button down. Little button down. Blah, white, what, what. I don't remember. I mean, I do remember like a khaki pants and a red, like a red polo of some sort. I like to look good because my grandmother, but also my aunt Annie, not Annie Brandt. She's like, I like it when you dress up. You look nice. And so it was all about looking good for aunt Annie, looking good for grandma. And of course you're going to Kingdom Hall on Sunday. You got to look your Sunday best. So it's stuck. So you're pulling up to somebody's house. No, I'm just going to say we didn't go down south as often as you did when every summer. We went like a couple of times, three times maybe in our childhood. Oh, yeah. So you all, you and grandma all dressed up, you go down a country road to witness and you're going to all kinds of folks house white folks, black folks. No, no, no. Oh, I wasn't sure because one of her. Friend. Yes, Miss Betsy. Miss Betsy, tell us about Miss Betsy because that story was very sweet. So I don't remember how grandma met Miss Betsy, but Miss Betsy was a true character, true, true character, Jova's witness, but her husband didn't know. Her best friend was my grandmother. Her husband, according to Miss Betsy, was just this out and out racist. So could never know that once she was at Jova's witness and two, she was co-verting with black people. And so whenever we would have to go not to Kingdom Hall on Sunday during the daylight, she could make her way. But if they went witnessing or in the evening or Bible study, Miss Betsy would call. And with the phone would ring and we would go, I'd go get the phone. Hello. And then there would be silence on the other end. And that was like, oh, this is Miss Betsy. It's time to move. It's time to move. So I will wait to listen. And then she would whisper into the phone like, I'm on good road, root for by the big tree across from the house on the band. I'll be in the garden in the ditch. You just, you hug your horn when you get there. Okay, hang up the phone, that run in. Okay, I know where Miss Betsy is. I tell grandma and grandma. Driving real slow. Hour later, now I'm just picturing Miss Betsy in the ditch. In the ditch. Wonder and weary. No, she knew. She knew. So we pull up in this one instance that comes to mind. And it's pitch black. The brights are on and grandma beeps the horn. And we just sit and we wait because, you know, whatever we were followed, whatever her husband's following us. And then out of nowhere, Miss Betsy would pop up out of the darkness. And she's this white woman in her own sacked dress, purse crook in the crook of her arm, Bible in the head. Just the white version. Right, version of grandma. And she would come running, you know, old lady while we running to the back. Miss Betsy would dive into the back seat and get on the floor. And then we would drive away in case her husband was following us, which he never did. And then she would get up, we were laughing and she was just wet. She was always just laughing. Well, after laying in the ditch and then running in a sacked dress, I mean, I'm like, I bet I bet she was wet. She would kiss us and give us hugs and kisses cheeks all wet. I hate that to this day, but it was so sweet. There was really, really. I mean, it's a, it's a sweet story moving, touching on so many levels, but it's, it's spoke to the challenges of a deeply still segregated south. And you, you witnessed, you grew up in that. I mean, like Craig said, our experiences in the south were intermittent, but you going down there every, every summer, summer and living it and talk about what it felt like to be a black boy in the segregated south. I mean, I didn't know what it felt like until decades later and particularly when writing this book, understanding, well, wait, what were those summers like? Oh, Severn North Carolina is a Jim Crow relic of a southern town. My mother, I write about how my mother, when driving down south, when you're coming down the road, the first right will take you down Main Street. The second right for the down will take you down the street where she was born and raised. My mom always took that first right down Main Street. Main Street, wide, paved boulevard, double yellow line. The street was lined with these big houses and the formal name was Main Street. The colloquial name was White Street. And so my mother would make that right and I never understood why. I said, mom, you just go down there and go. You know, driving down south in your brown 450 SL Mercedes. Which I was like stop there. Stop there. Mom K part. Which your bins. I know what her bed is. She was like, and we going down White Street in our bins. In our bins. And as I write in the book, it was like her, it was a slow motion protest at 15 miles an hour. Right. The black daughter of Severn is back in town. She's announced that I'm here. I don't have to hunt my horn. Let the car do the talking. And I'm home. I'm here with my northern address and my education and I'm bringing my kid. Yeah. And so but then you get around the bend in those early years in Severn. That street wasn't paved. It was a dirt road and it had no name. And one summer we came back and it was paved, but it was paved in sort of like tar and those pebble rocks. So when the sun was beaten down on the summer, it would bubble up in tar. So my feet would be covered in tar because I'm running around. I'm a kid in the summer running around in the street and on the grass and everything. Again, no formal name until they named it South Street. But it was still known to the say colored street. Yeah. Wow. We were the first generation in our family that didn't have to pick cotton. And we were sort of the first generation of sort of quote unquote post civil rights movement. Kids. I was born exactly three years to the day after the enactment of the 64 Civil Rights Act less than two years after the passage of the 65 Boating Rights Act. So at you know, five, six, seven years old, I'm the first child. We're the first children in our family to live in day, Urey freedom in the United States. And I'm doing it there in this, you know, where segregation is still kind of still kind of around us. It is, it is among the many memories in writing the book where I realized just how much those summers shaped my world view, my view of this country, my view of myself, Ms. Betsy. This episode of IMO is brought to you by Fairflu. Fairflu, makers of fast acting cold and flu relief believes everyone deserves the right to rest and recover when they're sick, no matter where they live or how much money they make. When I was coaching, if I got sick, I found it hard to choose between taking time for myself to rest and heal and showing up for my family and my team. 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Try it today in the Indeed app. Your mom, I want to talk about your mom too because just a lot of things you said in describing your time down south. Number one, Southern Girl comes back after with an education, a beautiful car, successful, but your mom was a single parent and she did all that on her own and I just want you to talk a bit about Margaret who by the way I would want to have here because Margaret is actually my favorite K part. You know what? She is going to dine out on that forever. Tell us about your mom's story, her journey and how she pushed through and what she like as a mother to you, all of that good stuff. So few things, foundational facts. Yes. I know you know how to do this. My mother and father married two years before I was born. They moved to Brooklyn, to Park Slope and then moved to Newark. My father died when I was four months old. He had a blood clot that went from his legs to his lungs to his heart. I found out from my godfather years later that the doctors told him he needed to have his legs amputated and so my father apparently said to them, well, I liked dance. So you are not taking my legs. I was born with two legs. I'm going to die with two legs. And my godfather told me that from that moment he decided to live life the way he wanted to live it. And unfortunately that meant he left his pregnant wife before I was born. And so when he passed away in 1967, no one called my mother to tell her that he had passed away. Oh, I left out of key point. When he left, he moved in with another woman. No one called her to tell her that he had passed away. She would call daily the hospital to check in on him because my mother is a nurse. Wasn't she now retired a nurse? They said he passed away. And then she told me a guardian angel called, came to the apartment in Newark and said, you need to get over to K-Parts place now and get his legal papers. Go and get all of them. My mother said, you know, he always traveled around with an entourage. And so she goes over to the house with police officers and she said, you walked in and there were just people sitting around. Any of these jokers were going to call his wife because he didn't divorce her. She got the legal papers and then another person, another guardian angel, as she described them, told her that you know you're entitled to veterans benefits for the rest of your life. And it's those two guardian angels who changed the trajectory of our lives. I would also say that, you know, Willie K-Parts changed the trajectory of our lives by not divorcing my mother because as a result, we were able to avail ourselves of those things. So my mom, she worked her butt off double shifts. She taught me how to iron, how to do laundry, how to, okay, mom even knows this. She's not a great cook. But she did teach me how to boil water to make pasta. She taught me things so that way. As she said, you don't want to have to rely on anybody else. You want, you have to be able to depend on yourself. And you know, there's some upsides to that. There are also some downsides, some downsides to that. But she instilled in me an independence that she knew I would need. She sheltered me as much as she could from the slings and arrows of life, particularly when it comes to matters of race. And we left Newark and moved predominantly white towns. First day of school, she would say, okay, two things. One, anybody calls you the N word? You let me know right away. And two, don't let them put you in vocational education. They're always trying to push us into vocation. You are going to college. You should be in college prep courses. Yes, ma'am. And did she intentionally move into a neighborhood where she felt you would have? How did she think about education? And you know, men, the fact that she lived in a predominantly white community. I think you said she made choices about where she was going to live to ensure that you got. Oh, sure. Now, it wasn't as like today, folks, like, hey, what is the elementary school? What are their scores and their placement within the state? You know, mom is like, we got to get out of Newark. And we got to go someplace where it's not Newark. So the first place was North Plainfield. Lovely, not ideal. We only lasted two years. And then we went further south to Mometh County to this town called Haslet, New Jersey. And we were only there for four years. But to me, that was an incredible lifetime. And you know, another predominantly white town where I just dove. I just dove in. I ran for a student council. I became a student council vice president at Beers Street Elementary School. And then did the same at Raritan High School. Like dove right on. And you felt accepted. Did you have issues of race, teachers lowering your expectations? Did you have any of those kind of challenges? When I got to Raritan High School, you know, I was like looking forward to, you know, going to home room with my fellow nerds. And instead, my home room was the shop. Yeah. You know, sitting around his giant wedge table with the, what is that thing called? The vice. The vice. Yes, that vice thing. Smell the turpentine and wood and oil and metal and stuff. Jonathan's like, where am I? This isn't Kansas anymore. What is this? I pack you. They're going to get dirty. But there they. But Jonathan, I want to go back because there, I think there are a lot of mothers who are like Margaret. Single mothers who are raising black kids. And somehow she gave you the confidence to walk into these spaces and be okay, fit in, not feel intimidated. How did she do that? That's a, that is a great question. I mean, I think it's a combination of her parenting, but then also just sort of the way I was, I took it upon myself to be like, hi, I'm here. Let's be friends also. You're an only child. You want to go make friends. So it was just perfect. My mother, I'll never forget. She, again, her admonition was if anyone drops the end bomb, you let me know. Well, it happened one day in Haslet right outside our apartment. And it was a kid who was not part of our crew, but he dropped it. And I ran in screaming to my mother. It happened. He said it. He said it. Mom. He comes running out halfway. What does he want to see? What would happen? Right. Right. So mom comes out and she breaks it up and says my little friend's home. And then she says, Todd come here. We have to talk. Sit down on the sofa and skip. My next door neighbor was also my very best friend. And she says, now listen, you and Skip right now, you're equals. You're right here. But as you get older and you move through life, Skip is going to climb higher. And he's going to climb higher because he's white. I was screaming at the tops of my lungs. How can you say that? That's not true. You're lying. Why are you doing this? I really like to tore my heart out this conversation. Tears. I screamed myself horse. And I remember just a look on my mother's face in hindsight was one of sorrow. Yeah, sorrow is the way I would put it because just think about it. She has had to have this, she knew this conversation was coming. She probably knowing me, she knew what my reaction would be. And you can steal yourself against that and prepare yourself for that as much as you can. But when you see your child respond in that way, how could that not be heartbreaking? And also heartbreaking because you know at some point that same child is going to come back to you decades later and say, you were right. I was naive. In a lot of ways, I still am that naive little boy, but it was that naive Tay that gave me the blinders to plow ahead to walk into rooms where people would look and like, who's this black kid? Who does he think he is? And also back to my mother, my mother always made a point of ensuring that education was front and center. We would go out to the mall and she would say, don't even think about going into Toys R Us, KB Toys, not going, not buying you, not buying you a damn thing. But we go into Barnes and Noble because mom would always go into the bookstore. You all spend whatever whatever you want on any books. She said, you are going to college and if you are 18 and not in college, you are not living here because I'm not taking care of a grown man. So I was always going to college. It was always just a matter of getting in and where would I go. So speaking of college, I want to delve into the Carlton College because you write about knowing that you were gay since you were 10 years old, but you did not feel comfortable until you got to Carlton. Can you talk about that? Because I'm just fascinated by that because I'm a Midwesterner and I think people in the Midwestern nice, what was it about Carlton that made you feel comfortable enough to sort of be yourself? Well, two reasons. One, Carlton is a very nurturing environment. Two, it boils down to a person and his name is Matthew Brooks and he was a year behind behind me in college and we met my sophomore year, his freshman year and it in Good Hew Hall. And he was gay. He didn't tell you he was gay. You can just look, he's gay. He didn't run away from it. And in fact, he took over, took over. He became, what are the leadership of the gay group on campus, moved it from the basement of the chapel to the second floor of the student union. And just symbolically bringing it out of the shadows, putting it someplace where, you know, yeah, people might see you, but guess what, you're not hiding. This is not something to be ashamed of. And so, you know, coming out at Carlton was easy. I mean, relatively, relatively easy. And what was going on with you internally in this process? I mean, you know, you're, you're having this awakening at Carlton on so many different levels, but you're doing it away from home. And there was the Jonathan at Carlton, but then there was this whole Todd back at home and how did you feel as you were coming into your own? What did that, what did that do to you? Did you, was it frightening? Did you worry about, you know, what this would mean? You never, I never feared that my, my mother would disown me. My family would kick me out and, you know, why is that? Why did you know that for sure? I just did. I just did. And also I'm of the, even then, I'm of the mind that you're going to kick me out of the family because this is who I am. Okay, well, bye. Bye. Exactly. Bye. So when I was at Carlton, sure, you know, you're dealing with these things. You're struggling like, who am I? Is this me? What's going on? How are my friends react? And then, but there's a liberation there. But then you go home and now you're under the roof of your mom and me at the time, my stepfather, but, but you get home and now you have to go back into the closet. And so finally, when I came out to my mother, it was, you know, it was, it was, it was a relief. Mm-hmm. Was she was it a surprise to her? Was it, did she, was it sort of like, mm, I was just waiting for you to tell me? It's a yes and no. Yeah. All moms know. You know, I'm maneuvered, I'm maneuvered the conversation so that she would ask me because so many times I came up to the line of saying, mom, I'm gay and chickened out. So I'm back from, I'm back from Carlton. I graduated in state a year to work as assistant to the president of the college. Back home in my childhood room in Haslet, which suddenly feels a whole lot smaller. Yeah. Now, right? I'm sitting on the futon and my mom, she's, she's mad because I corrected her on some of her language about saying, right? And she said, ever since you came back from college, you've, you've become so, so liberal. Like, ooh, slap me in the face. I was like, oh, there you. And I said, well, what are you talking about? And so we go back and forth and I said, you know, I just, and somehow made the way to, you know, gays and lesbians. They're always talking about, you know, wanting to be accepted and blah, blah, blah. Well, they're doctors and lawyers and journalists and all these things. You are part of the mainstream blah, blah, blah, and my mother standing in my door. She's like this, well, are you gay? And right then, I'm sitting on my futon, feel like this beam of light, like I'm in my own one-man show. Yeah. And it was a moment of truth. And I said, yes, the first thing she said, first she goes, why? And I said, I don't know. And then she says, why? Oh, that's sweet. And then I said, it's not your fault. It's not your fault. It's just me. It's just who I am. And then the next thing she said to me was, don't tell anybody. You don't want to, you don't want to ruin your career. And I looked at her and I said, too late. I'm not going to go out and tell, you know, it's not like someone asks me, I'm not going to lie. Right. You know, and also besides, have you seen, I got a big, there's a gay bar. I don't know if it's still there in Minneapolis called the gay 90s. And it has a big neon sign. It says gay 90s. And then it has like these rainbows that come down in neon lights like this. And I said, I've got this neon sign over my head. Can I need gay 90s? Can I need gay 90s? So I mean, if you got your eyes open, you know, you already know. So but I'm not, I'm not going to lie. And you know, this is a part of the tension between my mother and me. She's from the older generation where you don't talk about these things. You don't put yourself out there like that. You don't make risks like this. And I am from the new generation, the post civil rights generation. I'm still that, I'm free. I'm free. And the world is, the world is changing while it's not changing as much or as fast as I think it is or that I hope that it is. So the truth is still somewhere in the middle. Yep. You know, January always feels like that moment to hit reset to finally stop saying maybe one day and actually start becoming who you're meant to be. And that's why I love Shopify. If you've got a dream, whether it's a side hustle, you've been sitting on or something bigger, Shopify makes that first step simple. So let me ask you, what's the one thing you've always wanted to build but kept putting off? And how different could your year look if you just started now? If 2026 is your year, go to Shopify.com slash IMO and make your move. 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View important disclosures at acorns.com slash IMO. Now Margaret was your protector. I mean, in so many stages of your life, she was being honest with you, protecting you from the truth, preparing you, making sure that you, she was taking care of. And the reason why I want to talk about her second marriage, your stepfather became one of the voices that could have made you think that you weren't worthy. He was someone, you know, we can learn lots of lessons from people. Yes. Good people and bad people. Absolutely. Good lessons and bad lessons. And I learned from him what not to do, how not to be, how not to treat people. And so if he did it or said it, I knew, you know, this is not, this is not right. This isn't kind. This isn't how you should treat someone. At least that's not how I'm going to treat someone. And especially when I had someone like my uncle McKinley branch, who was the complete opposite of him, I had the counterbalance. And he had been in my uncle McKinley, I'd been in my life since birth, right? My favorite aunt, Nungle, Annie McKinley. And from him I learned what it meant to be, you know, a good dad, a good person, a good man. He was so caring and loving of his wife and his son of the family. Yeah. Largely Annie McKinley, they were, they were like William and Kate in our family. They came that way. And you spent time with them too. Yeah. A lot of time. Did you come out to them? Oh. And how? I was going to bring my first long-term partner down South for Thanksgiving. Grandma was still alive. But my, and my grandmother said, yes, come on down. I want to, and she knew she. Yeah. Wonderful. Yeah. Oh, yeah. I want to, I want to meet him. And then I got a phone call from my grandmother about a week before Thanksgiving or two weeks saying, um, I can't have that in my house. Oh. And I said, excuse me. Um, you know, I was talking to someone and so, and, and I can, I just can't have that in my house. And I said, are you talking about Giuseppe and I? Can't come down? And she said, no. And so I was heartbroken. And then grandma, they were close. Yeah. Super close. I didn't talk to her for a good two years after that. Yeah. And it was Uncle McKinley, who said to me, he called up and he said, um, something like I heard what happened. And I want you to know, Annie and I want you to know that we love you. And, um, you know, you are always part of the family. And, you know, and Giuseppe and it was all just, it was loving and affirming. And he didn't have to do that. Yes. But he did. Yeah. And, you know, an African-American man picking up the phone. Oh, yeah. And calling to tell me that, yeah, told me everything that I needed to know. Um, well, one, I already knew this about him. But the fact that he called me, um, just sort of showed that this is a guy who pays attention. Mm-hmm. And knew that I would be hurt by this. Yeah. He knew you and called and wanted to make sure that I knew that, you know, don't, don't get it twisted. Mm-hmm. Like, we are here for you. That's kind of. We love you. That's kind of. And then I go and talk to grandma and I finally talk. Yeah. It's gonna happen. Come to find out. She was fine. It was my aunt Dorothy. That's always a aunt. Dot, dot, dot, dot. Oh, that's a dot. That's a dot. That's a dot, dot, dot. Got in the garage. Got in her ear. You don't want none of that down here. She's like, maybe I don't. Right. But it was good that you found out your grandmother's intent. Oh, yeah. You know, where her heart was. I mean, I'm sure, you know, you can't win them all. And people will be who they are. But I just sensing you, you know, just an internal security that isn't always there in young people as they are dealing with their sexuality. And you've continued to hold on to that. It's a reasonable man approach to things. Yeah. And particularly a young black man. Because I, you know, I'm a little bit older than you. But in black families, being gay is tough. Because we're tough on gay folks. And your level of security in yourself, young people should look at that. And our mom always said, you know, just be yourself. Never be afraid to be yourself. People will like you or they won't like you. Right. But all the people who care about you will, it won't matter. Mm-hmm. They're going to like you no matter what. So as you get older, you, you soon realize what you don't like me. Yeah. Great. One less care. One less person to deal with. Seriously. That's a good time to move into our listener question. Thank you, Jonathan. Thank you for that. Yeah. Yeah, we're not done yet. Oh, okay. Yeah. I'll settle back. Yeah. And Natalie will read it for us. And this is from Dominic from Washington, DC. I'm writing as someone who is hurting and feeling deeply frustrated. As the only openly gay man in my family, I often feel isolated, especially when spending time with my brothers. One is a professional athlete and our social outings usually revolve around straight bars or environments where I feel like I can't fully be myself. Recently, I invited them to join me at a gay bar for the first time after going to multiple straight bars. And they wouldn't even come inside. They stood outside and waited. I ended up crying, feeling rejected and unseen later in the night. Am I wrong to feel frustrated? How do I keep showing up for my family who don't always show up for me? Dominic in Washington, DC. Wow. Dominic, I have so many reactions. Please. So many emotions. One, I wonder how many, where does Dominic fall in among the siblings? Is he older? Is he younger? Is he in the middle? Is he the jam Brady of the family? Two, and this gets back to something that I said earlier about family. And maybe this is because I'm an only child and an only child of a widow who taught me to be self-reliant. And it's being taught self-reliance to the point where it is not hard for me to even say to family members, you're not going to treat me that way. This is who I am. This is what I am. On a whole range of issues. And if you don't like it, well, you will not have the pleasure of my company. And I wonder, Dominic, at a certain point, you are going to have to stand up for yourself, family or no family. Sometimes I think family uses the family tie to keep you in place. And sometimes, you know what, if family's not treating you right in the same way that friends aren't or strangers aren't, a certain point, family needs to learn who you are. And so those brothers of yours, I don't know how close the relationship is. It must be close if they're at least going to come to a gay bar and stand outside. I don't know what that's about. But if they don't want to see you, the full you by coming inside the gay bar, but at a certain point, you're just going to have to, like, where is your chosen family? At a certain point, the real family has to give way to the chosen family. Because as you get older, family ties can be corrosive, toxic, not right. And sometimes it's difficult, but you're going to have to say, you know what, you're not treating me right. I treat you with all the love and respect because you are my brothers. You are my family. But if you are not going to give as much as I give, well, I'm going to have to go and take care of me. What makes me happy? And if that means we don't spend as much time together because I'm with my chosen family where I am seen, where I am respected. In the end, that's what this is about. Family are no family. Are you seen? Are you respected? Do people really care about you? And that's what you should feel, you shouldn't feel guilty in demanding that, certainly of family, definitely of family. Do you think Dominic's potentially afraid of losing that connection? Because again, you were an only child. The connection was different. What do you say to the kids out there who are, you know, do have, they feel like, well, yes, I have a chosen family, but I don't want to lose this relationship to my brothers. And I understand that and recognize that as an only child, I don't know what it's like to have brothers and sisters develop the teasing and the joshing and the talking over each other. Yeah, it gets old sometimes. Yeah. Yes, it does, though. Right. But you know, ending it, I think what I'm trying to get to is Dominic, when you know who you are, you are just firm in your belief, like, this is who I am, then everything else should flow from that. And that should dictate and determine how you relate to your brothers, how you relate to your, to the rest of the family. I'm not saying, oh, just give up on them, dump them, you know, tell them bump you. I don't ever want to talk to you again. That's not what I'm saying. And the end what I'm saying is Dominic, learn who you are. And then once you know who you are, and by that I mean, what do you like, what don't you like, what will you put up with, what you won't put up with, just as a human being from people, regular everyday people, but also from family. And just because they're family that does not give them a pass to not treat you with respect or the way you want to be treated. And so whether you are an only child or you are the middle of five or the oldest of five or the youngest of five or however many, as long as you know who you are, then you will know how to navigate, navigate this and never, never stray from that. You'll always be safe and secure when you know exactly who you are. How old did Dominic, is Dominic, did he say he didn't say? Yeah. Well, that's, you know, like maybe in his 20s. Still not self assured yet. Right. Right. But you know, life has a way of seeing it. Right. I mean, it's all about boundaries. Yeah. And it takes a while to learn what your boundaries are and then learn how to protect them. And that takes some practice. And if Dominic, if you are young and you're just learning it, that's what, you know, you're you're, you're going to have to figure that out instead for so many levels of your life. Because if you're not able to do it with your, your brothers, you're probably not doing it on the job. You may not be doing it with your chosen family and friends. And that's, that's work that, you know, at some point you can't avoid that. Right. There's sacrifice. There's sacrifice in, when you set boundaries, you then learn who your, who your friends are. Yeah. And really sometimes who your family, who your family is. And with that sacrifice, so you have to be comfortable in the sacrifice. I know because of the boundaries I've drawn and the things that I won't do that I probably limited opportunities for myself. And you know what? I am just fine with that. Just fine with it. You have to be just fine with the known sacrifices that come with setting those boundaries. Working on your mental health doesn't happen all at once. It happens in moments, one conversation, one deep breath, one session at a time. Growth therapy makes it easier to begin. As a coach and an athlete, I've always believed taking care of your mind as part of taking care of your overall game. You train consistently, you build the right support around you, and you give yourself space to improve. Therapy can be part of that routine. Whether it's your first time in therapy or your 50th, growth makes it simple to find a therapist who actually fits you. They connect you with thousands of licensed therapists across the US with virtual or in-person sessions, including nights and weekends. You can search by insurance, specialty, identity, or availability and start in as little as two days. No subscriptions, no long-term commitments, just pay per session on your time. Whatever challenges you're facing, growth therapy is here to help. Growth accepts over 100 insurance plans, including Medicaid in some states. Sessions average about $21 with insurance, and some pay as little as $0 depending on their plan. Visit growththerapy.com slash IMO today to get started. Ask growththerapy.com slash IMO. Growththerapy.com slash IMO. Availability and coverage vary by state and insurance plan. And on the other end of that, those boundary settings, there's room for new, better, more. Because if you free yourself up from the things that don't serve you and bind you down, you'd be surprised, Dominic, that there's room for something really special in there. I mean, you talk in your book, Jonathan, about your chosen family, this beautiful New York light that you've built for yourself. And having that attitude led you to what felt as you described it, this amazing community of support, full of diverse people who accepted you and the dinners that you all would have together, the travel, what that all did to expose you. You developed a love for other countries and because you created some boundaries that opened up opportunities to bring other people into your world. And also with this New York family, as I read out, met these people through a friend who said, come to this party and then he didn't come to the party that I walked into this room. I felt like just a giant hug because in the room, well, the nerds, other black nerds, and I could like that, I called them that, but these were special. But these were African-American mostly, not all, but young professionals to whom I didn't have to explain anything. They knew, they understood where I was coming from, similar backgrounds. We all watched the old train, Saturday morning. We all knew the music and the songs and we bonded over that from disparate parts of the country. And here we are in New York, young black professionals and we have this common language. And we have these common aspirations. We came to the city to do stuff, to make names for ourselves, to just forge a life on our own. And when you realize that you, especially for an only child of a widow who had this destination with no roadmap, doing all this stuff on my own, and I walk into this room and I'm surrounded by people who are all doing the same thing, generally speaking, but come from different backgrounds and different sized families. And we all have this common cultural ancestry. I mean, just the shoulders come down. I mean, that's why Martha's Vineyard is such a special place. That is a place where shoulders come down. That is my New York, this family was formed in the mid 90s in New York. And then come to Martha's Vineyard in my tender age, early 50s. And again, it's that place where the shoulders come down. I am with friends who I know from outside the vineyard, but we're there and we don't have to explain a lot if anything. And sometimes we just, we need to have those places. And I would encourage Dominic to focus his energy on building that place. You call it the chosen family. And it's not to replace the current family, but we all have chosen families. I mean, I love my brother, but he's not coming to the vineyard. I come to the vineyard. Thank God for my chosen family because my actual family is not choosing me. Dominic, just hit your brother's one at a time. One at a time, take him out one at a time. Find out which one is the leader and which one you can pick off and then slowly get him into your chosen family. That's actually a good point. Why are you doing all this stuff with all the brothers? That's, yeah, that's what you close this to. Just go and just hang out with him and do that with each one. And I think, I think, you know, life is individual relationships. Yeah. Jonathan, thank you. Jonathan, you are a beautiful storyteller. And your life is, it is rich. And thank you. Thank you for your willingness to share it. And thank you for being out there on the front lines. And fighting for our democracy, it is sometimes thankless work, but you do it with grace. Thank you. It's a calling. Yes, it is. It has been a calling from the time you read in the National Geographic. It's a low kid. A low kid. A low big kid. But it appreciate the truth. It is. It is. It is such a pleasure. Oh, thank you. This was fun. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.