spoonikkelson:

My motivation was to show people that you don’t have to give up on your dreams to be who you are…I’ve been given a special opportunity to be visible for those who can’t be. Being a professional athlete, I’ve been given a platform to speak about my history and the things that I’ve been through. So hopefully the other people that have been going through what I’ve been through can kind of find a voice in me.

Making History: Jessica Platt, Toronto Furies

End The Stigma

carters-hart:

okay, so this is going to be a serious post and could be triggering.

Today is January 31st and its Bell Let’s Talk Day. This day means a lot to me even though I was never diagnosed with anything during my life. Mental Health should not be seen as glamorous and should not be romanticized at all. Mental Health is a very serious issue with people around the globe nowadays. Nobody should be put down because of the stigma behind it. As Bring Hockey Back says, “Puck Stigma.” 

When I got into hockey I was in a very dark spot in my life. 1,043 days ago I held a blade against my skin for the last time. That tracks back to March 25th 2015, when I went to my first Chicago Blackhawks game at the Wells Fargo Center. This was not my first NHL game. (That was in January. Flyers vs Capitals) People always wonder why I love the sport so much and they assume it is only because of the guys because I can not give them the real answer. So I get looked at like one of those girls who only like the sports for the hot guys or to get guys. This hurts me so much because that is not the truth. 

It means a lot to me that loads of hockey players share this tag to help end the stigma. It makes me so happy because they helped save me. I have no clue where I would be without the sport and I owe my life to it. 

Now as of today, hockey is still influencing me for the better. My thoughts are much happier and I’m gaining so many true friends because of the sport. I’ve made internet friends that actually care about me. I’ve had the best luck that I could meeting one of my closest internet friends Autumn and it’s so good to have someone that understand how much the sport means to you. Whether it’s been several years or just yesterday that I start talking to a new friend, it makes me so happy that I can spread the happiness of the sport. 

Sorry to go all serious on you guys, but most people wonder why I got into the sport and this shows it. Please remember that you can message me and talk to me. I’m always here for you guys because everyone single one of you is important.

“Keep your gloves on kid, you don’t have to fight anymore”

Hockey’s Angels:

Wade Belak, Rick Rypien, Derek Boogaard, Daron Richardson, and Clint Reif 

The NHL and Bettman want an openly gay player to parade around so they can say “Look, we did it!” without actually caring about the player’s thoughts and feelings on the matter, or even if the player was actually ready to come out publicly.

yolowoho:

Yup! Like the co founder of Outsports wonders why they don’t want to come out to the media when he describes them like this

“All professional sports leagues are quote-unquote ready for an out player. But the gay athletes are just afraid. They’re cowards,”

Cyd

Ziegler told the Blade.

“The gay athletes in the major men’s professional sports today are cowards. And even worse than the athletes that are active in sports are the dozens or hundreds of gay athletes who are retired who won’t come out,” he said.

“I mean, they have nothing to lose in the sports world,” Ziegler said.

“At this point the most important thing any of these advocacy groups can do is identify professional LGBT athletes and work with them to come out publicly. I don’t think any of them are doing that,” he said.

That is so horrifying that the only thing they think of is how to get those players to come out, not to make them feel safer or more accepted. They want those clicks and positive press, and don’t truly care about the athletes’ comfort. 

And Bettman and co. desperately want those brownie points as more athletes from the big sports leagues come out and the NHL stays silent. The only thing that matters for them is that a player comes out, so they can say they’re inclusive without having to any more to actually combat the NHL’s issues. I’m going to quote a section that article Pain and Consumption: What Society Really Wants From an Out, Gay Athlete:

White, cis, gay men are simply the most marketable athletes within the LGBTQIA spectrum – much in the way that white, cis men are generally considered to be the most valuable demographic in mainstream culture.

A white, gay, cis, male athlete in a major sports league could be consumed in a variety of ways. He could be worn like a badge by his employers and by the league he plays in, like a human version of adding the rainbow flag to a corporate logo. 

He most definitely would be used to illustrate the diversity of a specific organization and league, without having that team and league do the hard work of challenging and changing the intertwined systemic issues of racism, religious discrimination, sexism, homophobia, and transphobia that are endemic to the sports entertainment industry. 

Even when he doesn’t come out, he is still available for consumption, as we saw recently in the infamous and dangerous piece in which a straight Daily Beast reporter used Grindr to profit and capitalize on the sexuality of gay athletes while simultaneously jeopardizing the safety of those athletes.

And that about sums up how the media and these leagues treat and view closeted and out lgbtqia athletes and why no NHL players have come out yet.