The Province

Life in closet ‘incredibly unhealthy’

ATHLETES SHARE CHALLENGES: COC launches LGBTQ inclusion in sport campaign

- LORI EWING

TORONTO — In the moments before Anastasia Bucsis stepped on the ice to race, when her sole focus should have been on what she had to do to win, the speedskate­r would be consumed by worries that went way beyond sport.

What if her competitor­s knew she was gay?

“Which is ridiculous because it shouldn’t matter,” Bucsis said. “But when you are still in that closet and you know that you are being inauthenti­c, for me that was an all-encompassi­ng issue and it was incredibly, incredibly unhealthy.”

Bucsis, rhythmic gymnast Rosie Cossar and paddler Connor Taras share their challenges of growing up as gay athletes in a new Canadian Olympic Committee public service announceme­nt. Launched Tuesday, the spot is part of the COC’s #OneTeam campaign, which promotes LGBTQ inclusion in sport.

Their stories are varied, but their hopes identical.

“I came out so that others that were struggling with the same issues would feel as though when they came out that this one piece of their identity wouldn’t define them,” Bucsis said. “And if I have to talk about it a little bit right now, I’m more than happy to take up that challenge.

“I’m just happy that I can help someone because when I was in that position I had no one, and I really made a promise to myself that I would take up that role if needed.”

The campaign, which was created partly for the COC’s Education Youth and Community Outreach program, explores the theme of inclusion and includes images of Bucsis, Cossar and Taras as children.

Taras, a native of Waverley, N.S., came out publicly before last summer’s Pride celebratio­ns in Halifax. A massive weight lifted, he went on to have his best summer of competing.

“Probably for about 75 per cent of the year, you’re living with your teammates and on top of the stress of training and competing … you’re trying to play this game from the moment you wake up in the morning, trying to hide this, every minute you’re worrying about it,” said Taras, who recently retired from competitio­n. “It was debilitati­ng at times.”

Cossar, a 23-year-old from Toronto, had a similar story of isolation. She travelled the world in rhythmic gymnastics, but never met another gay athlete. She came out to her teammates one by one.

“Some of them I was worried about because I had heard some homophobic comments from them,” she said. “But I realized, and they told me, that when you’re brought up in a certain culture where people throw around comments, you don’t really think about it, you just copy and say the same thing.”

Sport is the “final frontier” of homophobia, Bucsis said.

“It’s still a very conservati­ve realm of life and there’s gender binaries and there’s language that we use that we don’t even realize. … There’s a cult of masculinit­y about ‘harder, faster, stronger, bigger,’ and not fitting into that definition of normal is not really talked about, and it’s stifling,” she said.

But sport also provides a platform, and gives athletes a voice. And Bucsis, Taras and Cossar will happily speak for others who can’t.

“That’s one of the most amazing things that sport can give us, it really is a microcosm of life and they say that sport is a mirror to society and sometimes a magnifying glass,” she said. “And I’m just so proud of our COC for undertakin­g this initiative and I think it really will change the landscape not only here in Canada but worldwide.”

“I’m just happy that I can help someone because when I was in that position I had no one.”

— Anastasia Bucsis

 ?? GAVIN YOUNG/CALGARY HERALD FILES ?? Anastasia Bucsis says she would often worry more about keeping her secret that she was gay than competing.
GAVIN YOUNG/CALGARY HERALD FILES Anastasia Bucsis says she would often worry more about keeping her secret that she was gay than competing.

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