Welcome to Just Breathe Parenting, your LGBTQ team, the podcast transforming the conversation around loving and raising an LGBTQ child.
Heather HesterMy name is Heather Hester, and I am so grateful you are here.
Heather HesterI want you to take a deep breath and know that for the time we are together, you are in the safety of the Just Breathe nest.
Heather HesterWhether today's show is an amazing guest or me sharing stories, resources, strategies, or lessons I've learned along our journey, I want you to feel like we're just hanging out at a coffee shop having a cozy chat.
Heather HesterMost of all, I want you to remember that wherever you are on this journey right now, in this moment in time, you are not alone.
HostWelcome to Just Breathe.
HostI am so happy you all are here today, and I am really happy just to jump right into this chat with Michael and just.
HostWe have so many things to learn from him, so many really, really cool things that he is doing currently.
HostBut before we get into all of those amazing works that you're doing, I would love, and I know that everyone listening would love to know kind of how you got started in this work and what your story is.
MichaelOkay, sure.
MichaelWell, thank you, first of all, for having me here, Heather.
MichaelI'm very excited and I'm, you know, I was.
MichaelI love what you're doing, and I just want to thank you, really, from the bottom of my heart for what you're doing, because it does inspire me to also grow and do more.
MichaelSo a little bit about my story, you know, is.
MichaelI guess it's a pretty atypical growing up gay story, which led me to where I am today.
MichaelYou know, I am a.
MichaelI'm a master life coach now, but I wasn't always that there.
MichaelYou know, that's really where I was led, where my heart was led to.
MichaelBut before that, you know, I had a pretty.
MichaelPretty tough childhood.
MichaelMy.
MichaelNot so much in my family unit, but outside of the home, where I was pretty severely bullied for being that sissy and for being overweight.
MichaelI was very overweight as a child, which, you know, all of that led me to really not being okay with who I was.
MichaelYou know, I was hiding every aspect of who I was.
MichaelAnd, you know, now that I've been doing so much inner work and over the years, I've realized that, you know, so many gay children really learn how to navigate and overcompensate.
MichaelFor shame.
MichaelEssentially, you know, we knew.
MichaelI knew.
MichaelI should say I knew I was different.
MichaelI knew there was something that was inherently wrong with me because I wasn't like everyone else.
MichaelSo I'm telling you a little bit of this story because then it'll sort of lead to how I got to what I'm doing right now.
HostAbsolutely.
MichaelYou know, that, that being bullied constantly.
MichaelYou know, I was the kid who was bullied on the playground all the time, who heard names that were so deep rootedly painful that I didn't even realize the impact of them.
MichaelYou know, I was the kid in junior high that every day was thrown into a locker and locked in there and never felt like I had anyone who I could go to, including, you know, the teachers and the counselors to support me because I didn't want to rock the boat.
MichaelAnd I certainly didn't want to tell them why I was being, you know, bullied the way I was.
MichaelBut all of that bullying and all of the pain and the fear, the deep rooted fear was something that I carried into adulthood.
MichaelAnd then I realized, actually I was sort of a late bloomer in the gay world.
MichaelWhen I was 24, I actually realized I was gay.
MichaelAnd I had done such a great job of covering myself out in the world and navigating myself to look like and act like everyone else that, you know, I was just going along and I didn't even realize what was actually going on.
MichaelI had no, I had no one around me who was gay that I knew.
MichaelSo I had no example.
MichaelAnd.
MichaelBut I was in art school, actually.
MichaelI went to school and got a Bachelor's of fine arts.
MichaelAnd while I was in college, that's when actually I realized I was gay.
MichaelBut I still decided to hide it because there was still a shame even within an art community for me at that time.
MichaelSo I was really a master at hiding who I was.
MichaelAnd you know, I've since come to learn that there are stages of shame that most gay children and then gay men, which is who I can speak for, go through that, lead them through their life.
HostYeah.
MichaelSo life goes on.
MichaelAnd I get all the high paying jobs and I have a beautiful apartment and I have all the things that we do to show the world externally that we are okay.
MichaelBut inside I wasn't and I knew I wasn't.
MichaelAnd I was hiding my truth to my family.
MichaelI was sneaking out at night with my friends, having, you know, big time.
MichaelI had dual life at that point.
MichaelOnce I graduated from college, I will note that when I left, when I left College, I was 150 pounds overweight and I lost that weight in a year when the first time I went to a gay bar, someone shamed me in the bar and I thought, wow, even within my own community, I'm not okay and there's something wrong with me.
MichaelSo I did go and I lost the weight.
MichaelI was motivated and my life, you know, I started meeting all these people.
MichaelMy life changed.
MichaelBut again, I was doing all this perfect cover up of what life could be like.
MichaelAnd life went on.
MichaelI had big paying jobs, I was vice president of companies, I was the president of a company.
MichaelI was in a creative, I was a creative director for 30 years and I was winning awards.
MichaelI was doing all of this stuff.
MichaelBut inside I knew something was still missing.
MichaelAnd fortunately, I was led to a workshop by the late bestselling author Debbie Ford called the Shadow Process.
MichaelAnd in that weekend, I don't know if you're familiar with it or Debbie's work, I was introduced to this thing called the shadow.
MichaelAnd how the shadow actually holds us back from the truth of who we are and living life the way we want it to be.
MichaelThe shadow is something we acquire at a very young age, usually under the age of 10.
MichaelAnd I work with clients to actually start to uncover these shadows.
MichaelAnd what we do is we make something, we make the world mean something about us.
MichaelWe are meaning making machines naturally, as human beings, but as a child, we could not discern what, what really was truth and what, you know, I say what's fact and what's fiction.
MichaelSo I took it all in as fiction.
MichaelAnd then I held onto those shadow beliefs through my life.
MichaelAnd they were the driver, they were my operating system for how I led my life, which quite honestly was very steeped in fear.
MichaelSo everything I did was fear based.
MichaelI believed the world was not safe.
MichaelI believed I was not safe.
MichaelSo as this gay man now out in the world, who was outwardly very successful, inwardly, I was not.
MichaelAnd that weekend completely transformed my life when I realized that that was the, that was the, the real root of my shame.
MichaelThe core of the shame was these beliefs that I had acquired.
MichaelNo one sort of gave them to me.
MichaelBut again, I was acquired by that, you know, and held onto them.
MichaelAnd once I was able to work with that, I was able to see, wow, this is transformational.
MichaelYou know, as a gay man, I could actually changed the way I feel about myself at such a core level.
MichaelAnd I was blessed with a coach who approached me that weekend and said, hey, I would love to work with you.
MichaelI'm specifically focusing on gay men or the gay community, and I'd love to work with you.
MichaelAnd he allowed me to work with him.
MichaelAnd from there, I just uncovered all things about my worthiness and about self love and about, you know, these commitments that we make to ourself.
MichaelAnd I was able to shift my life.
MichaelYou know, that inner journey was such an important aspect of the whole journey for me.
MichaelYou know, the author Neil Donald Walsh says, you know, if we don't go within, we go without.
MichaelBut I was so scared to look inside because I.
MichaelFirst of all, I'd never, you know, I was a kid from New York, you know, like, what is this?
MichaelI don't go inside, you know, but doing that and really going in and having that inner journey opened me up to finding the most important person in my life, which was me.
HostRight?
MichaelYou know, really learning to love myself.
MichaelSo out of that, doing that work, still creative director, still having this life out here, I also started working on my path to becoming a life coach.
MichaelBecause I thought if I can just hold space, because that's really what a life coach does for others, to have these kinds of exploration and revelation.
MichaelOy.
MichaelThat's my purpose in the world.
MichaelThat's my passion, you know, to hold that space.
MichaelAnd from there, I.
MichaelI got certified with the Debbie Ford Institute.
MichaelAnd then from there, I've now been part of a wonderful institute called 11 Life Coach Academy, where I have additional certifications as a life coach.
MichaelAnd then a couple of years ago, I said, okay, it's time to leave corporate.
MichaelThank you for the gifts you gave me.
MichaelNow it's time to really focus on being a life coach and getting out into the world and really helping to support people as best as I can.
MichaelTo, you know, I use the terminology of.
MichaelOr the acronym of fly, which is fly, which is to first love yourself.
MichaelBecause I realized that when I did that, that was the real game changer for me.
HostIt's so true.
MichaelYeah, that's how I got here.
HostAmazing.
HostOh, my goodness.
HostI always love hearing people's kind of lifeline, right?
HostThe quick version of your life and how.
HostWhere you started and how you got here.
HostI think it's so fascinating.
HostAnd there were a couple of things that really, really struck me as you were talking.
HostAnd one of them I'd already written down that I wanted to talk to you about the shadow belief and definitely want to touch on that some more.
HostBut one thing that I thought as you were talking about those, really start creating them, becoming attached to them when we're young, so very young, and especially depending on kind of what's going on in your life as a child.
HostAnd I'M curious as to whether or not in your learning about these and studying that those are also kind of like survival techniques.
Michael100%, you're absolutely right.
MichaelYou know, the beliefs that we, you know, when, when we're children, we form that belief.
MichaelIt's a way that we then learn how to navigate through life.
MichaelSo it becomes our protective, you know, it's.
MichaelIt's our survival mechanism.
MichaelExactly.
MichaelYou know, so if I can think the world isn't safe, then I.
MichaelI'm always on guard.
MichaelYou know, I always say, even, you know, I did a men's group this week and I said to them, I still read the room.
MichaelI walk in a room and I read it.
MichaelAnd I'm not saying that everyone doesn't do that.
MichaelOn some level, I do it for.
HostMy own safety, right?
MichaelI look around and go, is anyone going to make fun of me?
MichaelIs someone.
MichaelEven if no one's necessarily going to do that, I still play those tapes and go, am I going to be accepted?
MichaelIs this going to be okay for me?
MichaelSo that still became.
MichaelBecomes sort of how I'm navigating through life now.
MichaelThe beauty for me is that I can go, oh, there's that shadow belief, right?
MichaelLet me just put it to the side.
MichaelYou're safe, you know, and then I evidence in the opposite, right?
MichaelI'll make sure I talk to people and I feel good about the interaction so that then I have more evidence that, you know, I can be safe when I walk in a room.
MichaelBut it is definitely something that becomes our natural navigating system until we realize that it no longer serves us.
MichaelAnd that usually happens in adulthood when, when you just realize that you're just not okay and life is not okay.
MichaelAnd luckily you not luckily, hopefully you have the desire to go and get some help.
MichaelAnd when you do, you know, when you discover these kinds of things, that's when then you can shift.
MichaelAnd when you make those shifts and let it, you know, I always say, is it controlling you or are you controlling it?
MichaelSo when you can control it, it becomes much more comfortable.
MichaelBecause then you could just say, oh, yeah, there you are.
MichaelDon't worry, I got this right?
HostOh, my goodness.
HostA hundred percent, 100%.
HostAnd two, I think, you know, on top of that, is that.
HostOr the first step of that really is that awareness, right?
HostBecause that's such.
HostI know for me and for a lot of people that I've worked with walk through life for so long kind of unaware, right?
HostThere's all this stuff going on and.
HostBut you're unaware of how it got there that you even can do something about it.
HostYou just know that you feel not right.
HostRight.
HostAnd, you know, whatever you're feeling word is for that for yourself.
HostAnd so having that awareness to be like, oh, okay, that's what that is.
HostAnd I love that because I do that too.
HostLike, all of a sudden, I'll catch, you know, I'm doing that thing where I'm, you know, one of, one of my big techniques was to, like, always survey everything and to know, like, the, you know, three possible outcomes of any situation and work it through in my head so I knew what all the outcomes could possibly be.
HostAnd then whatever happens, I will already know.
HostRight.
HostI didn't realize I was doing that all the time.
HostI mean, no wonder I was exhausted.
HostBut now it's such a gift to be like, oh, I know what that thing is.
HostI know what you're doing.
HostLike, enough.
HostIt's okay.
HostI'm good.
HostWe're safe.
HostEverything's fine.
HostRight.
HostYou know, whatever your internal dialogue turns out to be.
HostSo I do love that.
HostI think that's so interesting and I really thank you for sharing that.
HostThe name of that book, the Shadow Process by Debbie Ford, and that's also the institute that you worked with to get your certification.
MichaelAnd just for clarification, the book is called the Dark side of the Light Chasers.
MichaelIf you read book, the back end was called the Shadow Process.
HostGotcha.
HostOkay.
MichaelBut the, the book, it's on it.
MichaelYou know, it's, it's very popular.
MichaelIf you just.
MichaelIt's on Amazon lots of places.
MichaelIt's called the Dark side of the Light Chasers.
MichaelAnd from there you'll learn about the shadow.
HostThat's.
HostSo I've, you know, I've heard it mentioned in different contexts, and I never was quite.
MichaelAnd I think it was Carl Jung who actually sort of brought it to light, so to speak.
HostSure.
MichaelAnd Debbie took it.
MichaelAnd now I'm, again, I'm working with the Levin Life Coach Institute.
MichaelNancy Levin has also taken it a lot of work around the shadow as well.
MichaelAnd she's training coaches out there, people who want to get out there and support people in the shadow and other things as well.
MichaelSo.
MichaelBut, you know, when, when you realize that those shadows are there, so much of life begins to make sense, Heather.
MichaelBecause then you can go in and we say, you know, we, we sort of say we want to uncover them or bust them open.
MichaelAnd then the intention is to go in and shift your, your understanding of, of how life Truly is like, then it's what's fact and what's fiction, you know, so we actually go back to what we.
MichaelWe call the origin point.
MichaelLike when you actually made that commitment, when you embraced that the world was not safe.
HostRight.
MichaelAnd we look at it through the eye of the child and we realize that we're looking at it through the eye of a child.
MichaelAnd then we reinterpret the situation as an adult and we say, okay, so.
MichaelOr even as a teenager.
MichaelOkay, so is this really still true?
HostRight.
MichaelDoes this still hold truth?
MichaelOr is it something that we can change and we could look at the situation differently and that's what you work through them.
MichaelIt's not quite as simple as 1, 2, 3, like that, but.
HostNo, it's not.
HostBut that is basically.
HostYeah, that is exactly right.
HostThat is how it.
HostI mean, there's a lot.
HostAnd it's.
HostEverything's intertwined, right?
MichaelYes, absolutely.
MichaelWe don't realize that so many of our habits and behaviors and those types of things are driven by our beliefs, essentially.
MichaelYou know, so.
MichaelSo often it's just helping.
MichaelFor me, it's helping clients just look at your behavior and that's going to tell you so much about what you believe.
HostRight.
MichaelAnd your outward world is an expression of your internal world.
MichaelSo whatever you're feeling inside is going to actually be out pictured there.
MichaelSo if you're.
MichaelIf you're feeling anxiety or stress, like, look outside and see where is there unrest and unsettled in my world.
MichaelAnd then what can I do to settle it down?
MichaelWhat do I need to do?
HostRight, right.
HostWhat tools do I need or what?
HostYou know, that's where all of the.
HostHaving tools at hand or being able to recognize and name the whole.
HostJust be able to name these things is so incredibly helpful.
MichaelYes.
MichaelAnd as I always said, I wish that I had that when I was, you know, 18 years old, you know, like when I was much younger, so that I can.
MichaelI could have left it behind and move forward.
HostYes.
HostGoodness.
HostI would have settled for it, you know, at 30.
HostRight.
MichaelOkay.
MichaelI'll even take that.
HostSure.
HostI think I would have known much better what to do with it at 30 than maybe at 18.
HostBut still.
HostOh, my goodness.
HostYes, I do have that.
HostI'm like, why did it have to take so long for me to learn these things?
HostAnd then, of course, now, as you.
HostI'm sure you're the same way.
HostThe more you learn, the more you want to learn, the more you want to uncover and the more you want to just continually like when you realize that you can do so much to grow and to evolve and then help others grow and evolve.
MichaelWow.
MichaelYeah.
MichaelCoolest thing.
MichaelYeah.
MichaelBecause the thing, you know, it's like, yeah, what I'd love to do it at 18, would I love to do it at 30.
MichaelBut for me to be as in alignment with the people that I work with, I also feel like I needed the journey for.
HostSure.
HostThat's part of what makes you so relatable.
HostRight, Right.
MichaelYeah.
MichaelBecause my thing too is, and I always say this to people I work with as well, if you don't understand the dark, you can't appreciate the light.
HostRight.
MichaelGot to know both.
MichaelSo I know for myself, so much of that was my journey.
MichaelThat was my hero's journey, so to speak.
MichaelYou know, Joseph Campbell, hero's Journey.
MichaelThere we go.
MichaelYou know, it's like, I know that that was my journey to go out and to live this life that I just was sort of traipsing through, ultimately knowing that I wasn't okay.
MichaelAnd then, you know, again, so fortunate to find the path, which then led me to spiritual centers and spiritual travel and all kinds of things that really has helped me turn it all inside, where I know that's really where the wisdom lies.
MichaelSo the more we can, you know, guide ourself, and then, you know what I love Lady Gaga always says, you know, the more we can love ourself, then it becomes infectious for the rest of the world.
MichaelAnd, you know, that's.
MichaelIt's so true and so key because everything can shift when we're okay with who we are, when we're not.
MichaelWe can't really be.
MichaelWe can't show up the way we really would love to show up or authentically show up when we are having all of this thunderstorm inside of us as well.
HostRight, right.
HostThat is so incredibly true.
HostAnd I think too, you know, circling back to the understanding the dark, embracing the dark so we can appreciate the light.
HostThat.
HostThat's a big piece.
HostIs actually being able to.
HostI mean, that sounds kind of like, oh, of course.
HostWell, that's really hard to do.
HostRight.
HostI mean, to.
HostActually, I'm just thinking of, you know, certain.
HostCertain people in my lifetime that I have known how difficult that that would be for them.
MichaelThat.
HostThat.
HostThat is just something that I don't, you know, I don't know that they will ever do because that.
HostIt's hard and you have to be super vulnerable.
HostAnd there's a lot of work that goes into that.
HostBut, you know, again, to your point.
HostIt is incredibly worth it.
MichaelYeah, it is.
MichaelI mean, that's.
MichaelYou know, it's.
MichaelYou know, one of the things that I've become aware of recently is that so many.
MichaelYou know, because I've been dealing, I've been working a lot.
MichaelI've been exploring a lot with shame and trauma and, you know, the effect of that on the LGBTQ community.
MichaelAnd, you know, so much.
MichaelSo much writing and so many things that I've realized is that so many people can go through life completely unaware and stuck and in this sort of.
MichaelOn that hamster wheel of self abuse and shame and, you know, and never.
MichaelNever want to.
MichaelNever feel like or, you know, want to take the time to say, well, what can I do for me?
MichaelYou know, they will actually go through a lifetime, as you're saying, without any inner peace.
HostYeah.
MichaelAnd some of it, unfortunately, is because, you know, outwardly, the world also tells us, as gay men, you know, in the LGBT community, you know, that there's something inherently wrong with us.
MichaelNot everyone, for sure, but there is still a collective consciousness.
HostRight.
MichaelThat holds many people in.
MichaelIn that victim consciousness, and they don't ever really get the opportunity to work through that.
MichaelAnd I know people who will go to their grave that way.
MichaelIt's very interesting when you think about that, and.
MichaelAnd you're right.
MichaelLike, how many people will never really even contemplate because it's almost too scary.
MichaelLike, what is light?
MichaelWhat is dark?
MichaelWhat is that all about?
MichaelIt's too scary.
MichaelI don't.
MichaelI don't want to know that stuff.
HostRight, Exactly.
HostI'm fine.
HostI'm fine.
MichaelRight.
HostI'll just.
MichaelI'll go on, as I call it, autopilot, and I will just continue to slide through life and do my thing, and.
MichaelBut inwardly, I knew, for me, I couldn't do it.
MichaelI couldn't anymore.
HostWell, and I think when I had this, you know, for.
HostFor me, when I had this revelation and started on this path is.
HostIt was such.
HostI was so blown away that all of this was available to me, that I had all of these choices suddenly that I never realized I had.
HostSo I was like, oh, I can do this.
HostYou know, I'm allowed to take care of myself, or, you know, I'm allowed to take time to learn.
HostAnd.
HostAnd that actually wasn't okay.
HostLike, that's not the way everybody grows up or whatever, you know, Whatever.
MichaelRight, right, right.
HostSo I think, you know, there's also that where you're just like, holy cow, this is extraordinary.
HostAnd I want everybody to Feel this way.
Heather HesterIt.
HostYes, it can be scary, but the other side of it is so worth it.
HostSo that's, you know, that's a joke.
MichaelAnd say, like, once I became certified the first time in my coaching, I was like, they should give this away at the grocery store.
MichaelYou know, like, this is like.
MichaelThis is like something that should be handing out because it is life changing.
HostRight?
HostYeah, I mean, it is.
HostIt totally is.
HostJust so I really, I wanted, before I lose this, because I keep looking, I made a note.
HostI wanted to ask you, you had mentioned this, stages of shame.
HostAnd since we were kind of circling around that again right now, I wanted to ask you about that and if you could talk about that a little bit, because I do often talk about.
HostActually I'm doing a series right now on the stages of coming out, which, of course, there's a lot of shame that's, you know, talked about and worked through in those stages, but this is even more specific.
HostSo could you talk about that a little bit?
MichaelYeah.
MichaelAgain, I'm sort of in this exploration around it because I am in the process of writing a book and, you know, so much of it is about the, you know, working through my own shame, realizing what it was, realizing that it was there.
MichaelAnd I, you know, a lot of it.
MichaelI'm going to reference specifically the Velvet Rage.
MichaelI don't know if you're familiar with that book by Alan Downs.
HostSo good.
MichaelHe talks so much about shame and how it is this.
MichaelThis guttural core feeling inside of gay men.
MichaelAgain, he's.
MichaelHe's marginalizing, even within the community to gay men because that's the experience he has.
MichaelSame thing myself, where, you know, he talks about stages of shame.
MichaelAnd I, as.
MichaelAs I was learning and reading, I was like, wow, that was totally me.
MichaelYou know, the first, which is very common, is that, you know, when we were.
MichaelWe're younger, we sort of are in the avoidance stage where we're like, this is.
MichaelThat's not me.
MichaelYou know, like, I can't be that way, even though deep down inside we know something is different.
MichaelSo everything is done to fit the norm, so to speak.
MichaelYou're going to dress a certain way, you're going to act a certain way.
MichaelYou're going to go, you're going to join the football team, you're going to, you know, go to the dances, you're going to have a girlfriend, possibly.
MichaelYou're going to do things that are just in a way for you to avoid what might possibly be going on.
HostRight.
MichaelAnd that is really just a way of pushing down all your emotions.
MichaelBut ultimately, you know, again, something is not completely in alignment with everyone else.
HostRight.
MichaelSo that's when you really learn to navigate and to.
MichaelIn this first stage where you learn to navigate your life.
MichaelAnd I know for me, I did that and it was interesting.
MichaelAs I look back, all of my friends in high school, with the exception of two, were all girls because that was my safe place, right.
MichaelAnd they all thought I was fun and, you know, that kind of thing and, you know, and it was easy and.
MichaelBut like I was going to avoid gym, I was avoiding locker rooms, I was never going to be in any of those kinds of situations, but I went to the prom, I did all of that kind of thing.
MichaelSo that first stage is pretty influential until you sort of leave the home, if you will.
MichaelPerhaps you go to college or, you know, you, you go out and work and, and you're suddenly in a different place.
MichaelAnd he calls the stage two, which I love is the overcompensation stage, where you, the shame is almost like your drug and you used it to motivate you to move forward in your life.
MichaelAnd, and that's when you will see so many gay men who are very high paid, who have many degrees, who are fashion designers, who have big cars and vacation homes and, you know, all of those things.
MichaelThey have the perfect body, you know, they, you know, are the social light.
MichaelYou know, I always used to say I was the funnest person in the room.
MichaelThe only person that was not having a good time was me.
HostRight.
MichaelBut everyone else was having a great time.
MichaelOutwardly, I looked like the life of the party and I had a beautiful apartment and I had more than one home and at homes and a great car and a great job.
MichaelAnd all you do is overcompensate, compensate.
MichaelAnd you use that as, this is my belief, you use it as sort of like a hit on it from a drug almost where it's like, if I could just get that new car, then I'm okay for right now.
MichaelBut then that goes away and then if I could just get that new boyfriend, then look at me, I'm okay, you know, so there's that overcompensation stage that many men live through their entire life and never can get out of that stage.
HostRight.
MichaelBecause we don't realize that it's there.
HostYeah.
MichaelSo when you can embrace yourself, when you get to the point, and honestly, a lot of times, you know, it's about like, I just can't go out one more day.
MichaelAnd try and dress up and look this way, and it's like, because you're so inauthentic on so many levels that you.
MichaelYou just can't do it anymore, and you realize that you need to shift.
MichaelAnd again, for me, I was very fortunate to find that weekend workshop.
MichaelYou know, there are lots and lots of resources to help, to help.
MichaelAnd again, you don't have to wait like I did until, you know, I was 50 years old.
MichaelYou could do it much younger, where you can really look inside and return to yourself.
MichaelAnd when we can, when we do that inner work and you allow yourself to acknowledge the shame, to work with the shame, to realize what motivates it, that's when you sort of move into the next step, which is more of an acceptance, and you realize that just being you exactly as you are is enough, and it's perfect.
MichaelAnd that's when, again, you learn to control the shame versus it controlling you.
HostRight.
MichaelYeah.
MichaelBecause I'm not going to say that the shame doesn't still pop up for me, because it does.
MichaelYou know, I still can be that little boy on the playground with people calling me fat and stupid and a sissy, and I can hear it, and I can go right back to it.
MichaelAlmost like I could see the clothes I was wearing.
MichaelNow I can quickly march in and go, that is not your truth.
MichaelYou do not have to hold this any longer.
HostThat's right.
HostYeah.
MichaelSo that's a little bit about the stages.
MichaelThere's lots more.
MichaelBut, you know, the.
MichaelThe.
MichaelThe shame part is.
MichaelIs huge.
HostWell, it is.
HostIt's such a huge part that I think it's important, you know, anytime we have a chance to discuss it, talk about it.
HostRight.
HostBring it out into the light.
MichaelAnd I'm gonna say that.
MichaelBring it to the light, please.
MichaelBring it to the light.
MichaelEven if you're.
MichaelYou're talking to, you know, if you're a parent talking to a child who's coming out and you want to be supportive.
MichaelSupportive, like just acknowledge it, you know, not in a shameful way, but just acknowledge the feelings that could potentially, and I underline that be there that are associated to how they are navigating their life currently.
HostRight, right, Exactly.
HostOh, my goodness.
HostThank you for sharing that.
HostI really appreciate it.
HostYou had mentioned a little bit ago your kind of your.
HostYour secret sauce for your coaching program or the coaching that you do is the acronym fly.
HostAnd I'd love to talk about that a little bit before we wrap up today, because I think that's so cool and I love that you.
HostThat is such a key, very key piece of being able to really step into your life.
HostSo.
MichaelYes.
MichaelYeah.
MichaelSo I use the acronym fly Fly.
MichaelYou know, first love.
MichaelAnd oftentimes, like at the end of a reel or in my email, weekly email, you know, I'll always say, remember, you have wings to fly.
MichaelFirst love yourself.
MichaelBecause when I realized, because this was a big thing for me, to have, a person who I needed to learn to love was me.
MichaelAnd I did not love me because the world didn't love me in my mind.
MichaelSo when people tried to love me, I couldn't be loved.
HostNo.
MichaelBecause I didn't even understand what it was.
MichaelSo after I went inside, the person I fell in love with the most was really me.
MichaelAnd then I was able to see everything different and navigate life completely different.
MichaelYou know, I was able to love and accept myself completely.
MichaelAnd I always say, exactly as you are.
HostYes.
MichaelNo matter what it looks like, it's right and perfect.
MichaelSo when you could first love yourself, then you are in a position also to love other people.
MichaelAnd I don't mean just romantic love.
MichaelI'm just talking about love life in general.
MichaelBe there to support people living from a place of love versus a place of fear was the big game changer for me in my life.
HostI love that.
HostThat is wonderful.
HostBefore we wrap up, I would love if you could offer either words of advice or words of wisdom to either a young person coming out or the parent of a young person coming out, or both.
MichaelSure, I would love to.
MichaelSo, of course, first love yourself.
MichaelCan't forget that one.
HostExactly.
MichaelFor, you know, for those who are in that space of if I come out, then what happens?
MichaelYou know, Find your.
MichaelFind your safe harbor.
MichaelThere is someone out there who is your safe harbor.
MichaelYou may not even know who they are, but they're out there.
MichaelAnd the.
MichaelAnd allow yourself to start there and allow your voice to sort of practice to be there to allow yourself to say, this is who I am.
HostRight.
MichaelIt doesn't have to be necessarily run out and swing the doors open of whatever or raise the biggest flag or whatever it needs to be.
MichaelDo it in your way and do it in a way that you feel safe, even if it takes a long time.
MichaelIt doesn't have to be an overnight thing, but give yourself the opportunity to find your inner strength first.
MichaelGo inside.
MichaelIf you need to meditate or journal or whatever.
MichaelGo out in nature, you know, and just find a space within yourself that can give you enough courage.
MichaelAnd then find that safe harbor to have that conversation.
MichaelThere's so many organizations in the United States, so many places where people are there to support you.
MichaelIf you don't have a loving space within your family dynamic, and even with your family, it doesn't have to be this, let's sit everyone down, you know, like, do it as you feel it's necessary.
MichaelYes.
MichaelSo that you're safe.
MichaelAnd then on the flip side of that, if you're a parent, you know, just hold space.
MichaelEven if you are really wrestling with it inside, just hold space for the news.
MichaelAnd even if you need to take a pause by just saying, you know, thank you for that, you know, I love you and it might not be that easy, but, you know, thank you for that.
MichaelJust give me a couple of minutes to process this or, you know, realize as a parent, this person, this child has known this for a long time.
MichaelAnd I know Heather talks about this in her coming up because I listened to them all.
MichaelYou don't necessarily, you may have an inkling, you know, my mother said I always knew.
MichaelWell, I wish you would have said something.
HostYou know, it would have been helpful.
HostYeah.
MichaelSo that's what I'm saying.
MichaelIf you get that opportunity and you, and, and, and, and your child is coming to you, just being a space to listen and just to be there.
MichaelDon't feel like you need to fix anything, ask questions.
MichaelYou don't need to also even say, I'm okay with this because it's not about you being okay with it, it's about them being okay with it.
MichaelIt, you know, just be in a space of whatever you need to do to let them know that you are there.
HostYes.
MichaelYes.
HostThank you.
HostI love that answer.
MichaelEven that was a long one.
MichaelThat's okay.
HostNo, as well, it was, it was filled with very important, all very important pieces of information.
HostSo thank you.
HostThank you.
HostAnd I think also pieces of information that bear repeating often.
HostSo I do appreciate each one of those things you shared.
HostBefore we wrap up, is there anything that you would like to add or share or just say?
HostIn fact, I would love for you to let people know exactly where they could find you.
HostI mean, I'll have it all in the show notes as well, but at the very least let people know that.
MichaelYeah, that would be great.
MichaelI would, you know, Certainly my website, michaelmamina.com on there, I highly recommend you get my ebook, which is really like, it's five, five minute steps to the life you desire, not just for adults.
MichaelIt can also be great for teens as well.
MichaelYou can find Me on Instagram, on Michael Momina, same thing.
MichaelFacebook.
MichaelAnd I have now done the TikTok world.
MichaelSo you can find me in the TikTok world, fumbling all over the place.
MichaelIchael Mamina.
MichaelOr it says coach Michael.
MichaelMichael Mamina.
MichaelYou know, just exploring that world too.
MichaelSo.
MichaelBut if you go to my website, that's really the best place you can receive a weekly email.
MichaelI'm just.
MichaelThis was just beautiful.
MichaelThank you for giving me the space to actually let my story be heard and seen as well.
MichaelYou know, again, I would just say my.
MichaelMy final thoughts are everyone, not just people within the LGBTQ community should really learn to fly and love themselves, but most importantly, live their life authentically exactly as they are.
MichaelAnd if you cannot do that, reach out.
MichaelThere are so many resources out there to support.
MichaelYou know, I don't believe for a minute we were put on this planet to do it alone.
MichaelSo it, you know, if you don't do it, ask yourself why you don't do it and then go do it.
MichaelYou know, like, you know, so find what you need to get the best life you possibly can.
MichaelAnd it's never too late and it's never too soon.
HostThank you.
MichaelThank you.
MichaelThank you so much.
Heather HesterThanks so much for joining me today.
Heather HesterIf you enjoyed today's episode, I would be so grateful.
Heather HesterFor a rating or a review.
Heather HesterClick on the link in the show notes or go to my website, chrysalismama.com to stay up to date on my latest resources as well as to learn how you can work with me.
Heather HesterPlease share this podcast with anyone who needs to know that they are not alone.
Heather HesterAnd remember to just breathe until next time.