I began to rebel – wearing crop tops and outrageous outfits. We struck up the best friendship and I was instantly introduced to the scene.
In college, I made a new group of friends that included a fabulous drag queen. I continued to deny it right up until college. The theatre, singing and dancing didn’t stop either, and perhaps didn’t help my case – along with my slightly camp demeanour. It didn’t stop any bullying however, and I think the other kids knew I was gay. I also joined various groups and did hobbies to try and mask who I really was and fit in. Coming to terms with my sexualityĪs I began to move into secondary school, the feelings that I was different grew stronger and I struggled a lot with my sexuality.ĭesperate to fit in and not be the ‘weird adopted kid’, I had girlfriends. I began to make friends at school and felt settled in my life. Younger life then began to settle into holidays, days out and the ‘normal’ family life. We were given a second chance, but my birth mum and birth dad were always in my mind. It wasn’t easy, as we both came with a lot of emotional baggage, but our new parents worked extremely hard to ensure that we spoke about our past and were a very open family with the best chance in life we could have. We met them a few times and eventually began to spend weekends and weeks with them.Įventually we moved in with them, and their two cats. When you have been passed around a lot as a child, you just think it’s another move into another home. I remember not really understanding what that meant. Some were good, healthy places and others were the type that you read about in the papers today. We continued to move through various foster parents and children’s homes. This was the last we saw of her, and I remember the pain and tears of being torn away. Very little explanation was given, but we had one hour with her to play and take photos.Īfter this time, they literally took us away and at that age, it was hard to understand why you are not allowed to see your mother again. Social services eventually decided to split us up but thankfully, this decision did not result in us losing each other.ĭuring this period, we still had supervised visits to my mother and by the age of about four or five, she had fallen pregnant again with my sister.ĭuring one of these visits, we were taken into a room before meeting our mum and told that this would be the final time we would see her. We were moved into a variety of foster homes, all with the hope that we may be eventually adopted into a new family.īecause we were two boys, it became difficult to find us adoptive parents who wanted two children. This all occurred within the first three years of my life. It was decided that she could not cope and my brother and I were taken into foster care. But the relationship broke down and I moved with my mother to London, where she became pregnant with my brother.īy this point, she was struggling to cope and had developed a strong drug and alcohol addiction, which at times, put my brother and I in dangerous situations. However, that did not stop rampant speculation and snark online.My mother was around 17 when I was born in Glasgow in 1982 and my father was roughly the same age.įor the first year of my life, we lived as a family. Trump was likely trying to quote one of his father’s gay supporters. Thank you for protecting our neighborhoods and thank you for protecting our cities.”Įric Trump is married to Lara Trump, née Yunaska, and has two children with her.
I am part of that community, and we love the man.
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The LGBT community, they are incredible, how they come out in full force for my father every single day. “Ainsley, that person’s there, I’m telling you,” Trump said. “It was Brett Stephens, who’s been a critic of your dad, who wrote the editorial,” co-host Brian Kilmeade added.Įarhardt asked Trump if he was “counting” on so-called “secret Trump voters” like the one Stephens described in his column, and Trump said he indeed was.
“She doesn’t want to use her last name, and there are a lot of people that are voting for your dad who aren’t admitting it,” Earhardt said. In context, it appears Trump may have been trying to quote some of his father’s LGBTQ supporters, even though that was not made clear when he said he was “part of that community.”įox & Friends host Ainsley Earhardt brought up an op-ed piece by conservative writer Brett Stephens that was published in Tuesday’s New York Times called “ Meet a Secret Trump Voter.” In the column, Stephens said his friend Chris, a lesbian, plans to vote for Donald Trump based on the economy and the level of crime she says is rising in her neighborhood. I'm part of that community, and we love the man." /hl51ftW8l2 And you should see how they come out in full force for my father every single day. Eric Trump: "The LGBT community, they are incredible.