Is nurse blake gay

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As usual I’m with my husband Brett with two T’s, and I’m going over all of my favorite things this past year. As Nurse Blake prepares for a 68-city tour, he talks about the conversion therapy his parents sent him to in order to switch him from gay to straight (it didn’t work), his eye-opening experiences with panic attacks, and the time he spent in a mental health rehab facility following his divorce.

The entry from July 12, 2007, reads:

I’ve stopped reading my Bible and I’m not writing much anymore. I need you to understand conversion therapy isn’t therapy. Now I know it means remembering, but refusing to let the pain define you.

If you’re reading this and you’ve been through conversion therapy or if you’re still fighting to accept who you are in any way, I want you to know something I wish someone had told me at 15:

You are not broken.
You are not wrong.
You deserve love without conditions.
You deserve peace, not shame.
And you deserve to be here, exactly as you are.

The world needs you, your voice, your heart, your truth.

To anyone who believes conversion therapy can be justified, please listen to those of us who lived it.

No shame, no stigma, and maybe a few laughs.

Like this podcast? It’s honest talk from people who have been there and know their stuff. Conversion therapy takes that fragile process and weaponizes it against you.

is nurse blake gay

I have a strong and supportive community and a life that 15-year-old me could never have imagined.

Photo Courtesy of Barry Brecheisen

I’m sharing my story now because the Supreme Court agreed to hear a case about conversion therapy and whether states should be able to ban it. It’s slow and messy and nonlinear.

It’s about control. The God they used to justify conversion therapy is not the God I know. Slowly, I started to heal and comedy became that outlet for me.

When I started making videos, it wasn’t about going viral. They’ve never apologized. I’ve been “no contact” with them for years, and while that’s painful, it’s also freeing.

https://nurseblake.com/ Thanks for listening!

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The next morning, my parents showed up at my school, cleaned out my locker, and brought me straight to a counselor’s office — a pastor who said he could help me “change.” That first appointment was the gateway into what would become three years of conversion therapy.

For 36 months, I sat in fluorescent-lit rooms with strangers who promised that if I prayed hard enough, journaled enough, cried enough, I could become someone else.

It’s about telling young people that their very existence is a problem to be solved.

I’ve met countless people who went through conversion therapy. We had to journal why these thoughts were “wrong” and why we “were stronger than sin.” I was told I’d die of AIDS before 30. It wasn’t in the “your arm is broken, let’s get you a cast” way, or the “you’ll grow out of it” kind of way.

It’s in holding another man’s hand in public without fear. Some don’t make it out at all. Nurse Blake recently embarked on his 68-city “But Did You Die?” tour running through December 2025 and will dive into the wild things patients and their families say and do at hospitals. It’s in mentoring young LGBTQ+ nurses who tell me they finally feel safe to be themselves at work.

I used to think healing meant forgetting.