Openly Gay Player

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My daughter goes to a Catholic school so if the players are gay they are not openly so in high school. Women's lacrosse is very open to gay players, in fact at the college level from what I understand it may even be majority in some places. I was told this by a straight college player is was one of one or two straight women on her team.


What Catholic high school doesn’t have openly gay kids?


Probably. The Heights and Prep.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
I have a son who is gay who is afraid to tell his teammates and it has been hurting me.


Why does he even want to tell his teammates? They don't want to know about it. Sounds like this is really all about him and his urge to say "look at me I'm special, don't you think I'm great?"


Well Said.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
I have a son who is gay who is afraid to tell his teammates and it has been hurting me.


Why does he even want to tell his teammates? They don't want to know about it. Sounds like this is really all about him and his urge to say "look at me I'm special, don't you think I'm great?"


Well Said.


Don’t be ridiculous. My youngest came out at 14. He is 20 now. Of course friends and teammates knew he was gay. Kids talk about boyfriends/girlfriends. It’s not about “look at me”. It’s about being yourself around your friends. It was never an issue for my son. Kids do not care. Not sure why the adults in the room don’t get this. Even in rural Mississippi where my son came out, kids did not care.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
I have a son who is gay who is afraid to tell his teammates and it has been hurting me.


Why does he even want to tell his teammates? They don't want to know about it. Sounds like this is really all about him and his urge to say "look at me I'm special, don't you think I'm great?"


Well Said.


Don’t be ridiculous. My youngest came out at 14. He is 20 now. Of course friends and teammates knew he was gay. Kids talk about boyfriends/girlfriends. It’s not about “look at me”. It’s about being yourself around your friends. It was never an issue for my son. Kids do not care. Not sure why the adults in the room don’t get this. Even in rural Mississippi where my son came out, kids did not care.


16 y/o here. I don’t associate myself with gay kids, and just about every lacrosse player my age is the same. Just don’t say that shit in front of parents because yo Karen’s will get mad.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
I have a son who is gay who is afraid to tell his teammates and it has been hurting me.


Why does he even want to tell his teammates? They don't want to know about it. Sounds like this is really all about him and his urge to say "look at me I'm special, don't you think I'm great?"


Well Said.


Don’t be ridiculous. My youngest came out at 14. He is 20 now. Of course friends and teammates knew he was gay. Kids talk about boyfriends/girlfriends. It’s not about “look at me”. It’s about being yourself around your friends. It was never an issue for my son. Kids do not care. Not sure why the adults in the room don’t get this. Even in rural Mississippi where my son came out, kids did not care.


16 y/o here. I don’t associate myself with gay kids, and just about every lacrosse player my age is the same. Just don’t say that shit in front of parents because yo Karen’s will get mad.


Welp, that settles that. Let's move on.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
I have a son who is gay who is afraid to tell his teammates and it has been hurting me.


Why does he even want to tell his teammates? They don't want to know about it. Sounds like this is really all about him and his urge to say "look at me I'm special, don't you think I'm great?"


Well Said.


Don’t be ridiculous. My youngest came out at 14. He is 20 now. Of course friends and teammates knew he was gay. Kids talk about boyfriends/girlfriends. It’s not about “look at me”. It’s about being yourself around your friends. It was never an issue for my son. Kids do not care. Not sure why the adults in the room don’t get this. Even in rural Mississippi where my son came out, kids did not care.


16 y/o here. I don’t associate myself with gay kids, and just about every lacrosse player my age is the same. Just don’t say that shit in front of parents because yo Karen’s will get mad.


Why would a 16 y/o be on DCUM? I call BS on this. That said, I think the sentiment is probably common that kids say one thing in public and another in private. I think the private calls of fag or other derogatory term eventually get out and do nothing but hurt the kids who just want to be treated like any other.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
I have a son who is gay who is afraid to tell his teammates and it has been hurting me.


Why does he even want to tell his teammates? They don't want to know about it. Sounds like this is really all about him and his urge to say "look at me I'm special, don't you think I'm great?"


Well Said.


Don’t be ridiculous. My youngest came out at 14. He is 20 now. Of course friends and teammates knew he was gay. Kids talk about boyfriends/girlfriends. It’s not about “look at me”. It’s about being yourself around your friends. It was never an issue for my son. Kids do not care. Not sure why the adults in the room don’t get this. Even in rural Mississippi where my son came out, kids did not care.


16 y/o here. I don’t associate myself with gay kids, and just about every lacrosse player my age is the same. Just don’t say that shit in front of parents because yo Karen’s will get mad.


Why would a 16 y/o be on DCUM? I call BS on this. That said, I think the sentiment is probably common that kids say one thing in public and another in private. I think the private calls of fag or other derogatory term eventually get out and do nothing but hurt the kids who just want to be treated like any other.


These kids don’t want to be treated the same as everybody else, they want special attention. They post all over their social media feed about their sexuality and shove it down others throats. They wear particularly colorful clothes that stick out, dye their hair, and other BS.

Does your trans/bi/pan -sexual (they/them) child want a sticker? Tell them to toughen up. Parents offended by this, you should toughen up too.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My daughter goes to a Catholic school so if the players are gay they are not openly so in high school. Women's lacrosse is very open to gay players, in fact at the college level from what I understand it may even be majority in some places. I was told this by a straight college player is was one of one or two straight women on her team.


What Catholic high school doesn’t have openly gay kids?


Probably. The Heights and Prep.


None of the teams have openly gay players.
Anonymous
Did J Gruden’s kids attend private school and play lacrosse?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:My daughter goes to a Catholic school so if the players are gay they are not openly so in high school. Women's lacrosse is very open to gay players, in fact at the college level from what I understand it may even be majority in some places. I was told this by a straight college player is was one of one or two straight women on her team.


Seems kind of hard to believe. I follow women's lacrosse a bit and it seems pretty straight even at the college and post-college level, especially compared to other team sports.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I don't think its a gay or straight thing that US lacrosse has to address but more the whole boys identifying as girls and vice versa.


Society has to address it. There are males and females, it's determined at birth and it cannot and should not be changed. Fact.

Common sense but controversial in our "woke" society.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Second the poster who wrote that this generation of kids doesn't care at all about this stuff.

Open or not, it doesn't take a rocket scientist to notice the preponderance of gay athletes, particularly in women's sports. Take a look at your roster - at least 40 percent of its members are probably gay. And no one cares. It's a great development among this generation, IMO.



10% would be on the higher end of the estimated range, assuming you're legitimately discussing.


Only the WNBA and maybe high-level softball are that lesbian dominated. Educated guess - the women's national lacrosse team would be maybe 10-20% lesbo, and the men's team would have no out homosexual players
Anonymous
I have a hard time believing any boy on the Landon Lacrosse team is openly gay.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I have a hard time believing any boy on the Landon Lacrosse team is openly gay.


They might not be gay, but they are still messed up in the head. They only Rape girls in college and cheat on their SAT.
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