March 15, 2010 9:02 AM

Coming Out of the Closet, in Retirement

(AP)  On his 75th birthday, Bill Farthing decided to be reborn. In the six years since he'd buried his wife of 45 years, he'd felt as he did long before: Lonesome, different, outcast. He wondered if he was going crazy; he contemplated suicide.

Looking back, the clues leading to this day had been scattered throughout his life, but only made sense just now.

So Farthing dressed in the most basic of blue wool skirt suits he could find on the Internet, with a white blouse and low-heeled, open-toed white shoes, and went shopping. Arms loaded with skirts and blouses from the clearance rack, Farthing approached the checkout.

"Did you find everything you wanted, ma'am?" the cashier asked.

Farthing looked over his shoulder, then realized she was talking to him. He had pulled it off.

He had become a she.

The Elderly Come Out

Increased awareness and acceptance of varied sexualities and gender identities has led Americans to come out far younger, as early as middle school. A less noticed but parallel shift is happening at the other end of the age spectrum, with people in their 60s, 70s and 80s coming to terms with the truth that they are gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender.

While no one tracks the numbers of the elderly who come out, those who work with older adults say the trend is undeniable, and a resulting network of support groups and services has cropped up.

The decision can fracture lifelong relationships. Or it can bring the long-sought relief of an unloaded secret.

"For the first time in my life, I'm not putting on a show," said Farthing, who eventually had sexual reassignment surgery and changed her first name to Chrissie. "It seems like I've been out on a cloud all my life and now I'm not. I'm me."

Outing yourself late in life can be complicated after having lived through times when being openly gay could get you arrested, put in an institution and given shock treatments. It's snarled in a lifetime of trudging along through society's view of normalcy and the resulting fear of being ostracized by children and grandchildren. And it's marked by a nagging doubt that all the heartache, all the potential for it to go wrong, may not be worth it with one's years numbered.

"When somebody comes out at the age of 20, they have their whole life ahead of them," said Karen Taylor, the director of training and advocacy for SAGE, a national group that works with LGBT seniors. "There's a real sense of regret and loss for somebody who comes out later in life, even when talking to them and they say the decision was the right one."

Still, many seniors have felt empowered by the growing presence of gays and lesbians in pop culture and some high-profile, late-in-life outings. Among the most notable, "Family Ties" star Meredith Baxter came out in December at 62; Richard Chamberlain, long the target of rumors, came out in 2003 at 69, decades after the height of his career as a TV heartthrob.

Those who've mustered the gumption to out themselves say they feel as if they've been given a second chance.

Carl Martin, 83, of Falls Church, Va., came out as gay not long after his wife died in 1997. He says he was happy in his marriage but had known of his feelings for men since he was in high school and revealed an unrequited crush to a friend. Coming out, he says, has changed him from a withdrawn, tense, reticent bystander to a vibrant social butterfly who even talks to strangers in the supermarket.

"I would describe these as the happiest years of my life," he said. "I'm free to be who I am. I was not free to be who I was before."

The realization often doesn't come easily. Sue Pratt, 74, of Kirkwood, Mo., remembers having feelings for her high school English teacher, but she wasn't sure what to do with them when she always dreamed of getting married and having a husband. She got her wish, but even when her husband left her, she still couldn't come to terms with the truth.

"You would think I would say, 'I'm free now,"' she said. "But that thought never occurred to me. I was so deep in denial."

Eventually, in her 60s, she answered a personal ad and slowly began coming out to her loved ones as a lesbian. Not everyone has taken it well, as she feared would be the case, but she has no regrets.

"I didn't want to have a secret," she said. "It doesn't matter if I lose every friend that I have, this is what I have to do."

Dr. Loren Olson, a psychiatrist in Des Moines, Iowa, who has studied late-in-life outings, said for most such seniors, there are losses, though they are typically less than they fear, and often vary greatly by socioeconomics.

Olson himself was 40 before he came out. While it may seem incomprehensible to some, he said it makes sense that many can't face the truth for so long, even if some around them have surmised it.

"We don't like disharmony in our thinking so sometimes we block out things that really are in opposition to really what we believe is true," he said. "It's like a child believing in Santa Claus: You just hang on to that as long as you can."

Missed Signals

Farthing's life was sprinkled with hints.

As a boy, his mother asked one day how he liked school. "It was OK," Farthing said. "But it would be better if I was a girl."

He didn't want to do the things other boys did. Girls didn't want him around. He fought every haircut.

"We've got a homo on our hands," he overheard his father say.

But with no sense what to do with his feelings of being different, life wore on. He served in the Air Force. He lived overseas. And then there was that girl he found at a pub in England.

She felt different, too, always attracted more to women than men. But they got along so well. And they fell in love.

Sex was never a big part of their relationship, but a daughter was born. The marriage, Farthing says, was happy. Both of them thought they would die with their soul mate by their side.

She did. He wasn't so lucky.

Afterward, he tried anything to keep busy. He got his pilot's license back. He bought a small plane; he built a hangar.

One day, he needed a brass, elbow-shaped piece for his plane's fuel line. They call them male-to-female fittings, and he typed some such phrase into his computer. One of the search results that popped up was titled "The Male Lesbian Complex."

"That's stupid," he thought, moving along to find the part.

But later, something drove him back. The description of the "complex" sounded just like him. Was he always meant to be a woman? Was he too old to accept this?

"I read it and it was so close to me that it made the hair stand up on the back of my neck," Farthing said.

The transformation that followed has not sat well with all, of course.

A neighbor runs indoors now when Farthing comes outside of her Oakville, Mo., home. A brother-in-law and other relatives have cut her out of their lives. And her volunteer work at a nursing home had to end when her secret became known.

But those who are closest have accepted her. And now, in life's twilight, she says she finally feels whole, finally feels normal.

"For the first time ever my life feels like it's in the right place," she said. "I'm going to check out of this world the way I was meant to come into it."

© 2010 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 49 Comments
by armyoftwelve March 16, 2010 12:31 AM EDT
You don't see too many people from Africa or the former Sovie Union wasting thier estates on sex-changes...those people have bigger problems than this sissy!
Reply to this comment
by barbaram99 March 16, 2010 12:23 AM EDT
run2jazz2, just so ye know I would never change my gender. I am and was born female. I would not want bigger breasrts. I would only have operations that ARE medically needed. The same with medacations. I don't have a problem with anyone's walk with the Lord . Yer post bring out good points..What hurts most is they think their way is right. I left mormoniss 27 year ago as they scared me. My late father taught me his version thr golden rule..Treatinging others as a ye want to be treated. It is not my place to judge others. In my heaert I do believe in Jesus. Dawn ye know when a person speaks their voice tells me the person's gender. Be it msle or female.
Reply to this comment
by DawnBroderick40 March 15, 2010 10:11 PM EDT
Farthing has never been, nor will HE ever be a woman. Referring to him as "she" and "her" is preposterous. Mental illness can be a very scary thing. Damaged signals, such as being attracted to the wrong sex (wrong obviously being a male to male or female of female), feeling feminine incorrectly, being schizophrenic, or one many scientific abnormalities of the brain, are unfortunate and hopefully one day treatable. Embracing them is some PC determination that not everyone has to embrace. As a person of science, I hope one day these conditions/abominations will be cured. People hide behind the words "homophobic", which I am not, I just have every right to feel this way and just because it's not PC anymore, some think it's not OK. Well, tough, many like me are here to stay just like those afflicted claim to be.
Reply to this comment
by ibsteve2u March 16, 2010 7:13 AM EDT
Afflictions suffered by mankind vary and can have hugely negative social impacts. Once upon a time in Europe, close-mindedness swept the continent. Today, that period is known as "The Dark Ages".

It reappears occasionally; e.g., the Spanish Inquisition, Nazism, Islamic Fundamentalism, the Modern Republican...
by run2jazz2 March 15, 2010 7:46 PM EDT
First, I do not believe the Creator of Heaven and Earth has made a mistake with the reason why we are here on this planet. He made each of us uniquely and yet there are those who believe that GOD somehow made a mistake in their design and we have the right to change it?

We have become the creation in his likeless who if we don't agree with something we will do whatever it takes to change it. Don't like our breast, enlarge them. Don't like our nose or lips make it slimmer and make our lips fuller. Don't like our flat butts that is okay we can remove fat from you stomach and fill in your butt in no time.

Jesus Christ the Son of GOD loves the sinner as his Father sent him from Heaven to Earth to lay his life down for us. GOD loves the sinner whether they be a Aryan or Muslim, Gay or Lesbian, Molester or Adulter or a Killer and Rapist. For those who believe in his son will be saved if they ask for forgiveness and repent. I do believe this with all my heart and will do so until I meet Jesus in the air or in Heaven on my last day.
Reply to this comment
by ladyang March 15, 2010 7:28 PM EDT
Grand Pa, I mean Grand Ma is that you!?
Reply to this comment
by barbaram99 March 15, 2010 3:26 PM EDT
Would Jesus hate..I think not..This is 2010..This not the dark ages. As for bible it has been written so many times as books are missing and such..So a christian tell me if I believe in Jesus He could heal my blindness from birth. I told him my walk with Jesus is bewteen Him and me..They are so busy saving others that they fail to raalise they neen saving. They have have eyes that are sighted are more blind than mine. They that have a brain fail to use it. I am legally blind from birth and I will be so to my death. Docs can't fix what I never had..Yet the medical care is there to fix a body to match the brain gender. Ye judge all thru a book that is so old it is what causes hate. Pity . I hate that. So it is yer fear of what..What yer family will think..What is awful is what that nam vet said of war,,I hate war. It is none of our business if they are gay,transgender etc. It is my business to learn. It is my business to help my trangendered room mate. In America we have sep of church and state..The church does not have the answers. Manners and the social graces..Yer children are going to see this . The golden rule- Do under others as ye would have them do under ye..Who is selfish..
Reply to this comment
by Another_Devil_Advocate March 15, 2010 2:54 PM EDT
...It's my body...my soul...and my well being. I can do whatever I want with it as long as don't hurt anybody physically!
Reply to this comment
by vjhahn March 15, 2010 2:37 PM EDT
Why are people so threatened by the GLBT community? If your religious beliefs are in conflict with being gay/lesbian, then I recommend not being one. But people have all sorts of belief systems. Stop pushing your ideals on everyone as if your way is the only way. I believe God will judge us all one day - even you - haters.
Reply to this comment
by 4merGOPr March 15, 2010 1:58 PM EDT
My brother came out in his mid 20's after being married and one of the most vapid homophobes. Take that as proof that those who yell perverts the loudest are, in most cases, closet cases. Its time for the conservatives to stop pushing their agenda down America's throat. If you don't like freedom leave this great country. Freedom has made us great, you will be responsible for tearing it down.
Reply to this comment
by NowBeWithThat March 15, 2010 1:53 PM EDT
'That's stupid,' he thought, moving along to find the part.
_________________________

Yes, it is.

Mr. Farthing is a surgically and chemically altered male. If his wife were alive, this would certainly have killed her.
Reply to this comment
by howbizarre March 15, 2010 2:12 PM EDT
No, I don't think it would have. Didn't you read the article? It said his wife always felt different also, more attracted to women than she was to men. I'm sure she would have accepted him. Maybe it would have made her feel comfortable to come out also.
by NowBeWithThat March 15, 2010 4:36 PM EDT
I stand corrected.
See all 49 Comments
.
Scroll Left
Scroll Right More »
CBS News on Facebook