Jake Bain Reflects on Being One of the First Openly Gay D1 Athletes

During an assembly his junior year of high school, Jake Bain began his speech with tears in his eyes: “Most people don’t have to come out. Most people don’t have to worry that they will be judged based solely on who they’re attracted to.”

Maybe you wouldn’t expect a teenager to be so nervous. After all, the world has changed, right? In the past decade, treatment of the LGBTQ community has improved. In 2011, the military repealed its “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy. In 2015, the Supreme Court legalized same-sex marriage, and this year it banned LGBTQ discrimination in the workplace. More than half of Gen Z doesn’t identify as heterosexual, according to a recent poll by YouGov.

Despite what seems like a lot of progress, however, Bain was still a Missouri high school football player about to come out. When he was finished speaking, the crowd gave him a standing ovation. “It was me finally letting so much weight off my shoulders that I had been carrying for so long,” he says.

In the fall of 2018, Bain matriculated at Indiana State University to play football, becoming one of the first openly gay Division I team athletes in history. Still, he was struggling emotionally on two fronts: He’d recently lost a childhood friend and he’d begun to further question his sexuality.

Bain says the death of his friend made him prioritize people and things that weren’t football: “I needed to take a step, get my feet settled, and figure out what it was exactly I wanted to do.”

So in 2019, he quit football. He transferred to North Carolina State University. In an Instagram post a month later, he decided to come out—again. “I have come to realize that my sexual orientation is truly a spectrum,” he wrote. Bain stated that he was pansexual, meaning a person who’s not attracted to just one gender.

Today he’s studying to become a sports psychologist. He wants to help other young athletes find clarity and maybe answer some of his own questions about his identity.

“I certainly miss football sometimes,” he says. “I feel more at peace and I definitely am happier than I was a year ago.”

Via Yahoo!Life

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