Ben Starr

The Ultimate Food Geek

Mulligan’s Manor

This is not Sean. This photo is of a boy like Sean, who wasn't as lucky.

I want to tell you a story.  It’s about a boy.  I don’t know his real name.  That information is confidential.  So we’re just going to call him Sean.  He grew up in a conservative family in California.  Like all kids do, he loved his family, even if they were not perfect.  And for many years, he kept a secret from them.  A secret fundamental to his existence and identity.  Sean was a boy who was only attracted to other boys.  He couldn’t help it.  And he couldn’t explain it.  That’s just how he was naturally.

One day he couldn’t keep this a secret from his family any longer.  So he told them.  Expecting only what every kid expects from his family.  Their love and support.

Sean’s family didn’t understand.  And they did not like what Sean had to say.  They figured the problem could be solved by a good old fashioned spanking.  And when that didn’t seem to negate his sexual orientation, a stronger beating seemed in order.

When Sean woke up in the hospital with 100 staples in his back, he discovered that he didn’t have a family any more.  It wasn’t his decision.  The government had taken him away from his family for his own protection.  (And if ever there was a situation where a kid should be torn from his home for his own protection, this was it.)

Sean was relocated to live with extended family in Phoenix, but was physically abused by them, as well.  So he entered the group home system, living with other “troubled” kids whose parents “couldn’t handle them.”  In typical fashion, he was relocated from group home to group home.  He had 6 different “families” in 18 months.  He was picked on by the kids he lived with.  He was even picked on by some of the house parents in the homes.  Because he was different.  Gay, lesbian, and transgendered kids in the foster care system are at the bottom of the pack.  Sean had showed an interest in makeup at an early age, and this made him an easy target.

A home without judgement.

But Sean is a smart kid.  He wanted a place to truly call home, where he wouldn’t have to worry about hiding himself from his “siblings” and house parents.  He did his research…and he discovered Mulligan’s Manor…a group home of a very different sort.  It was started in November of 2011 by a woman named Jenny Diaz.  Jenny had a background in social work and cases of sexual abuse, and wanted to provide a safe place for some of the many children in her community who needed loving homes.  (There are over 7,000 children without families in the county where Phoenix is located.)  But within that unthinkable number are underdogs.  The kids that the rest of the kids pick on.  The kids that foster parents don’t want.  Gay and lesbian kids.  And kids who were born into bodies with a gender that they don’t feel belongs to them.  Jenny discovered through a bit of research that these kids, more than any others, have the most difficulty adjusting in group homes.  So she decided to take her own house…the house where she had raised her daughter Shannon…and turn it into a safe haven for THOSE kids.

Sean went to live at Mulligan’s Manor.  He found himself surrounded by kids who were like him.  Kids he could talk to without worrying about being beaten up.  Kids who would HELP him put on his makeup, if he felt like wearing it.  Perhaps most importantly, he was welcomed by house parents who showered love and acceptance on him.  Who assured him that he could tell them ANYTHING at all, and he would always be loved.  And who would give him lessons on applying makeup, if that’s what he wanted to do.

Also, Sean discovered that all his house brothers weren’t necessarily gay or transgendered.  Some of them were heterosexual.  Because Mulligan’s Manor is a place where kids learn from each other about acceptance.  To learn to be each others’ allies, rather than perpetuating separatism and discrimination.

Sean’s story is not unusual.  In the past 2 years, Mulligan’s Manor has been called “home” by 13 kids with similar stories.  Kids who might not have made it otherwise.  Like Evan.  (That’s also not his real name.)  Evan was in the foster care system as a toddler, and was eventually adopted in elementary school by a very conservative, devout family.  When he became a teenager, he confided in his parents that he was gay.  It did not go over well.  No longer welcome in his home, feeling persecuted and rejected by the only family he ever knew, Evan was found on the verge of suicide and was placed in a behavioral health clinic until the danger of suicide passed.  While he was there, a social worker told him about Mulligan’s Manor, which is now his home.  He has only been there for about a month, but he’s already teaching his house brothers how to play piano and sing.  And, ironically, the fact that he grew up with a steady adopted family (a rarity for kids in the system) has allowed him to share a level of stability and connection with his house brothers that they are not accustomed to.

Volunteers fixing up Mulligan's Manor before the arrival of their first kid

Because many of them have never experienced long-term love before landing at Mulligan’s.  Take Alex, for instance.  That IS his real name, because Alex just turned 18 and is no longer a ward of the state, so he can give authorization to use his real name.  Alex entered the state ward system at age 4, and before he landed at Mulligan’s at age 16, he had lived in 29 group homes.  That’s a new family every 6 months.  Can you imagine that lack of stability in your own childhood?  Alex has now graduated from high school and is interviewing for jobs.  He’s saving up to buy a car, and he’s applying to universities.  Shannon (the daughter of the founder, a former house parent at Mulligan’s, and their fundraising coordinator) had a chat with him recently about his experience at Mulligan’s, and he said something remarkable.  He had been in therapy continuously for much of his life.  But he said that it never seemed to work, because he couldn’t understand what the therapists were telling him.  Words like “love” and “trust” and “compassion” and “empathy” made no sense to him.  He had no frame of reference with which to understand them.  They were just words with memorized definitions.  But after a year at Mulligan’s, therapy started working for him.  Because, he said, for the first time in his life, he was experiencing love.  Love for others.  Others loving him.  And, most importantly, discovering how to love himself.

Alex, on his 18th birthday. (This is his real photo.)

I first encountered Mulligan’s Manor last summer at a fundraiser organized by my friend Donna Donahue.  Donna is one of those one-of-a-kind people that you never forget.  I had interacted with her, as a MasterChef fan, on Facebook and Twitter, and on one of my trips out west to LA, she said that if I was coming through Phoenix, I should stop for a drink and meet her.  Phoenix isn’t directly on the way to LA, it’s about a 100 mile detour.  But something told me I should meet Donna.  So I did.  And I became great friends with her and her husband Chuck.  Donna works at a nonprofit that supports at-risk youth in Phoenix, and she invited me to come help with a bake sale her kids were doing to raise money for the “No Kid Hungry” organization.  While we were setting up, a group of young gay kids came up and offered their assistance.  I assumed it was a youth support group, like the kind I was involved in after moving to the big city for the first time.  But I learned from their house-parent, Marcus, about Mulligan’s Manor.  The boys worked very hard at the bake sale.  They ran up and down the street, telling people about the delicious yummies for sale, and how 100% of the proceeds went to ending child hunger.

Volunteers at Mulligan's Manor, including the founder, Jenny Diaz

And at one point in the evening, I just sat down and cried.  Here were all these kids, disadvantaged to a supreme extent, working up a sweat to raise money for OTHER kids.  It was overwhelming.  I bought them all pizza from a famous Phoenix food truck and sat down at the table to listen to their stories.  And I tried to be a big boy and not cry.  But when you are looking at a beautiful, creative, hopeful, talented, articulate, extraordinary 13 year old boy with his whole life ahead of him, you wonder what kind of person would toss him out onto the street.  Don’t they see what I see?  Someone who deserves to be loved unconditionally?  Someone who can change the world if he wants to?

Donna was as surprised to see them show up at the fundraiser as I was.  The youth organization she works for isn’t related to Mulligan’s Manor.  But, in typical Donna fashion, she adopted the Mulligan’s boys as her pet project.  This past Christmas she took donations and was able to fill virtually every gift on every boy’s Christmas list.  She goes to the Manor to teach them cooking classes and just be a friend.  And they love her.

Green breakfast for the kids on St. Patty's

Mulligan’s isn’t your typical group home.  While licensed group homes can have up to 10 kids at a time, Mulligan’s tries to stay closer to 5, so the kids can build meaningful family connections with each other, have individualized attention and care, and be able to enjoy activities that kids in larger group homes don’t always get to, like personalized tutoring, field trips and weekend retreats.  While they definitely target gay, lesbian, transgendered, and questioning youth, those kids can be difficult to “find” in the system…because you learn early on to hide your sexuality to avoid rejection and violence.  But, at the same time, they also want to foster kids who identify as heterosexual because it’s important for these young gay kids to see supportive straight people as allies and friends.  No kid leaves Mulligan’s Manor until they turn 18, unless they need a higher level of medical or psychological care than the Manor staff can give them.  Mulligan’s Manor is their home.  Unless their natural home becomes a welcoming place for them again.

The ultimate goal at Mulligan’s is to reunite kids with their natural families.  Because people can change.  If parents prove eager to have their child back, and can prove to the state that they will provide a loving, nurturing, healthy environment…and if the kids come to learn that their families have had a change of heart and want to prove their love and acceptance…a kid can be reunited back home.  Unfortunately, this type of happy ending is far less likely than the kids “aging” out of the system at 18.  Which is why Mulligan’s is often the last group home a child ever has to be placed in…because they are there to stay, in an environment of love and acceptance.

This does not come without cost.  Mulligan’s Manor is supported primarily by donations.  And, as you can imagine, raising money for a charity that the public might view as a “gay charity” can be challenging.  They’ve had trouble making payroll for the already under-paid angels who devote their lives to helping these kids have a life of pride and success.

So this Saturday, July 13, they are hosting their first annual “Bowling for the Manor,” a fundraiser to bring awareness to the community and raise money so they can keep doing what they’re doing.  If you live in the Phoenix area, you can join the bowl-a-rama (either as a team or an individual), or win some great prizes from local businesses in their raffle.  Or place a bid at the silent auction for some really big prizes, like 2 tickets to anywhere Southwest Airlines flies, or a weekend getaway at the legendary Clarendon Hotel.

If you don’t live in Phoenix but your heart reaches out to these kids, who’ve endured so much, yet only want to be loved and to find their own special place in this big world, you can make a donation on their website.  Whether it’s $5 or $20 or $100 or more, it will do far more good for the world than that caramel macchiato you were gonna get tomorrow, or that new pair of shoes you’ve been thinking about.  And you’ll feel WAY better about yourself, knowing you’ve actually done something that helped change a kid’s life.

As I was finishing up this post, I texted Shannon because I realized I had completely forgotten to ask about the origins of the name “Mulligan’s Manor.”  I was imagining that the founder Jenny, Shannon’s mom, must have had a very special gay uncle named Mulligan, or something of the sort.  But Shannon set me straight.

It turns out I know very little about sports.  In golf, a “mulligan” is a second chance…the ability to do something over again without being penalized.  So many kids get penalized simply for being who they are, and absolutely nothing else.  Mulligan’s Manor is giving these kids that second chance…to become the extraordinary person they truly are, rather than be penalized for who they are not.

A mural at Mulligan's Manor. Each kid who lives there gets a flower with their name beside it. (Names removed because they are wards of the state.) In this way, each kid becomes forever part of the home that saved them.

Follow Mulligan’s Manor on Facebook to find out what their kids are up to.  Even if you’re broke as a joke, like I am at the moment, send them a few bucks at the very least.  Doing good for others feels WAY better than a midnight taco run.  And if you know of similar organizations or programs in your town, tell us about them in the comments below.  It’s heartening to hear about amazing people doing good for those who need it.  And for those of you doing the good work at Mulligan’s, I thank you from the very bottom of my heart.  You are truly changing the world for the better.

(I was unable to show you photos of any of the kids at Mulligan’s Manor other than Alex, because they are still minors and are considered wards of the state, and their identity is confidential.  Phoenix-area folks are welcomed to volunteer at the house and meet the kids.)

ADDENDUM:  After such an amazing response in the comments here and on Facebook, I’m gripped with the need to say that, as much time as I spend criticizing MasterChef for stooping to the lowest common denominator these days, none of you would have a clue who I am without MasterChef, and I’d have never inherited this AMAZING family of fans all over the world who care so deeply about the important things in life.  So they must be doing SOMETHING right, and as upset as I am over the directions they’ve taken, the fact is that they are still introducing genuine people to a larger audience who can, with YOUR help, make a difference in this world.  Thank you, all of you, for being amazing.

57 responses to “Mulligan’s Manor”

  1. Jamie C. Baker Avatar

    THIS IS AMAZING!!! I was so afraid that this story was going somewhere dark, until you mentioned Mulligan Manor. What an incredible place. I hope this inspires donations and maybe inspires some people to make efforts to establish their own Mulligan Manor in their community.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Jamie, we get enough dark stories on the news. This is a blog about hope and the goodness of humanity!

  2. Susan White Avatar
    Susan White

    oh Ben…you made me cry..we need MORE awareness and love for kids..

  3. Rebecca K. O'Connor Avatar

    1) Done. 2) My first decent book contract, I’m taking in a foster kid. This cinched it. 3) You better meet up with me when you’re in Cali, Ben!! Promise!

    1. Ben Avatar

      Rebecca, I didn’t think it was possible for me to think more of you than I already did…but now I do. I can’t WAIT to meet you, and yes…I PROMISE…I’ll meet you. Week of August 19!

      1. Rebecca K. O'Connor Avatar

        Marking on my calendar not to run off to Bora Bora or get arrested or anything else that might indispose me that week. 😉

  4. Andrea Avatar
    Andrea

    My heart hurt while reading this. All the discrimination in the family really hurts, and unfortunately, sexual orientation is just one of the reasons why kids may be mistreated. And it’s not their fault. It’s because people are afraid of accepting that we’re different, and we can’t ‘adjust’ to other people’s views. We are who we are, and if we can accept other people’s way of being, why can’t we be accepted?

    Thank you for sharing the story of this wonderful haven, Ben.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Andrea, you and I have the same delicate heart. I know how much you care for your LGBT friends in Colombia, and your love for them may be the one thing that gets them through some particularly dark night. Bless you. *hugs*

  5. Jamie Gardner Avatar

    I think this is fantastic! Cyndi Lauper actually does something similar and for the same reasons, though hers is focused on LGBT homeless youth. My mom worked in a children’s home when I was young and I saw how hard *straight* kids have it when they are in the system, I can’t even imagine what it must be like for other orientations (though there may have been some there and we just didn’t know). Thanks for sharing this. Some people don’t deserve children, but all children deserve love.

    1. Ben Avatar

      “Some people don’t deserve children, but all children deserve love.” What a powerful statement, Jamie! Thank you. *hugs*

  6. Holly Avatar

    This is an amazing story! I, too, was raised in group homes until I was 12 years old. I was one of the lucky kids. Being a kid nobody wants is tough no matter what your situation is. The amount of bullying you are subjected to can be unbelievable. I cannot possibly imagine how much worse it can be if you are one of these kids that already doesn’t fit the social “standard’ and then add “family-less” on top of it. I really hope that Mulligan Manor understands the impact that this home will have on these kids’ lives.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Wow, Holly, thank you SO MUCH for sharing your story. I simply cannot imagine what it’s like for ANY kid to be without a family. It’s an honor for you to share. Thank you!

  7. louise siebert Avatar
    louise siebert

    What a wonderful (though sad) story. I’ll absolutely send a donation to this charity…what wonderful people they are at the house.
    We all wish the world could be more open but the sad fact is that not everyone is. The people in this story give us hope that bit by bit, piece by piece individuals can make changes!

    1. Ben Avatar

      Louise, you are so sweet. Thank you. I miss you and Karl! We need to do dinner sometime!

  8. lcromwell Avatar

    Well Ben I was for years on the otherside of this story,but never never bullied or abused anyone. Now and for many years I have learned to be tolerant. I cannot begin to imagine going thru being trapped in the wrong body.
    I hope your parents accepted you as you are. I only know of you thru MC. Your personal life is your own period! I don’t judge it. I accept that’s who you are. I think the story you just shared here is a wonderful testament to some really carring people helping others find peace and love in this sometimes cruel world.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Lee… I’m speechless. I have always respected you for being brave enough to share your opinions on my site, even if they run contrary to my own. I SO appreciate you making this comment. I withheld the truth from my parents for MANY years…out of respect to them, not fear. My parents instilled their values in me, which I hold dear to this day, so I never doubted for an instant that they would stop loving me. But I knew it would shake the foundations of their faith, and cause many nights of sleepless struggle and prayer…and nobody wants to put people they love through that. But before MasterChef aired, I realized that they deserved to know the truth from me, rather than be told by their television. It was not easy for them. It still is not easy for them. They are struggling to understand. But they are not struggling to accept or love. They have made it VERY clear to me that they love me as much today as they did the day I was born, and that their own understanding and reconciliation with their faith is their journey to take. I could ask for nothing more. My parents are extraordinary people, and I owe every last bit of the person I am today to them.

  9. Sara Ann Avatar
    Sara Ann

    Dear Ben, I am so happy you took the time to write this and educate people about this wonderful place. I chair the fundraising board and the advisory board of our local children’s home which is also a “last stop” home for many of the same kids being helped by Mulligan’s Manor. Our abused, neglected and abandoned kids are too traumatized to be “attractive” enough for foster parents. So we have them. I consider them all my personal children, and I introduce them as such when we go places together. It’s Country Acres Children’s Home in Titusville, Florida. I would love to show you around. Our kids love to cook and we just put a new stove in the house along with new pots and pans. I bake with them. I’m so proud of you for championing those who are so deserving of a champion. I need you in Florida, too, if you’re ever led our way. I could see us putting on an amazing dinner to raise money. God bless you as you bless others!

    1. Ben Avatar

      Sara Ann, I didn’t realize you were involved in helping out these kids, too. BLESS you for that good work that you do. I would love to stop by Country Acres next time I’m through Titusville. (I HAVE been there before, multiple times! I’m a sucker for rocket launches.) Cooking is one of the single most valuable things you can teach anyone, and I’m SO proud of you for teaching the kids to bake! I’d LOVE to help put together a dinner to raise money to help them out!

  10. Maggie Avatar
    Maggie

    Every kid desverves a family. Sometimes it is not going to be family of the blood but family of the heart. Nobody can define or say what a family is. Just finished going through this with a friend of my sisters. She had to stay with us because her mom threw her out of the house. She said she didnt approve of her “lifestyle” , My mom sat down with her mom and said “what life style? she is a lesbin and she is living a lifestyle of a seventeen year old student. Lifestyle? the real housewives choose to live a rich and spoiled lifestyle as a hetrosexual woman. Some homesexuals choose to live the lifestyle of hippies some the lifestyle of jetsetting adventures. She did not choose a lifestyle to live. She just chose to live her life and make honest choices who to live it with. The mom came over for dinner a few times and went shopping with us and agreed to go see a counslor and she asked her daughter to move back home. But it makes me sad to think if she didnt have our house to come to she could have ended up on the street. No kid should end up on the street or without “people”.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Oh, Maggie, you’ve got me bawling my eyes out. I don’t think ANYONE reading your comment would have a clue it’s coming from someone as young as you. But then, you’ve always embodied a soul that is wise far beyond most of our years. I’m so grateful that your amazing family reached out to help that girl. You are right…every kid deserves people who care about them.

  11. Nick Avatar

    Wonderful article about a wonderful program for kids!

  12. Karen Watkins Avatar
    Karen Watkins

    Ben, I don’t know if this is THE most important story you’ve written, but it is certainly right up there at the top. What Mulligan’s Manor is doing for these young people is inspiring, and I only wish there were more of this type of group home throughout the country… Hell, throughout the world! You write beautifully, and blogs like this truly do remind us of hope and the goodness of humanity. Many thanks for the impact you make. <3

    1. Ben Avatar

      Thank you SO MUCH, Karen! *big hugs*

  13. Valéria Avatar
    Valéria

    I’m touched . Thanks for sharing this. Ben, I start to force me to read more english… You share good energy of love. Always. But this website, to make a donation: is it possible from Brasil?
    a ffew bucks is more than nothing.
    bjim

    1. Ben Avatar

      Bom dia, Valeria! I believe it is possible to make a donation from Brasil on their website. “A few bucks is more than nothing” is VERY true! If lots of people can each share a little, we can change many lives! *beijos*

      1. valéria Avatar
        valéria

        Bom dia e obrigada!

  14. Karen Avatar

    Wonderful, moving story. Passing it on. And making a donation.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Bless you, Karen! Lives will be better because of you!

  15. baronessheather Avatar

    Count me in the “broke as a joke” camp, but I can and will boost the signal. I’m sure I know at least a few people who can do more!

    1. Ben Avatar

      Then you’ve done your part, Baroness Heather! Thank you so much. *hugs*

  16. Donna Donahue Avatar
    Donna Donahue

    Ben, thank you oh so much from the bottom of my heart for this beautiful blog. Alex was my personal cooking buddy. For Christmas my personal gift to him was a french cookbook and a special apron. You are a very special dear friend.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Oh, Donna, now I’m crying. I think I spent all of 5 minutes talking to Alex, yet he left a lasting impression on my heart. I love that kid and want nothing but the best for him.

  17. Chuck Avatar
    Chuck

    Ben, as usual you’ve written a very nice article that explains exactly what needs to be explained. Thanks for the article, I’ve shared it on Facebook and Twitter.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Thanks, Chuck, and thanks for all you do to support the kids in Phoenix. My partner can probably share some mutual woes with you about having a spouse who is always running around doing things for other people, and those at home sometimes get neglected in that absence. BLESS you for being supportive of Donna and for all the work you both do to help these kids!

  18. Julie Avatar
    Julie

    Ben thank you for sharing this. How anyone can abuse a child, who only wants love and acceptance, is beyond me. I saw it every day when I worked in the public school system. Sexual orientation is not a choice, but even if it were, who cares? Who are gay people hurting by finding a loving partner who wants to be with them? The world sickens me sometimes, but this story is wonderful. I’m definitely going to donate, & I’m going to share this with friends. Thank you for being the amazing person you are & for a making a difference in so many people’s lives. Hugs, hugs, & more hugs, Julie

    1. Ben Avatar

      Oh, Julie…I do hope you know exactly how much I adore you! It is in moments like these that I know MasterChef has a higher calling than what it appears to when you watch an episode.

    2. Constance Avatar
      Constance

      Ditto to everything Julie wrote.
      When I read stories like this I thank heavens that my parents, despite their, um, many issues, were loving and accepting at heart. When my brother came out to them I don’t think they were too surprised and they loved and accepted him as much as before.

  19. Shannon O Avatar

    Ben, I just made the entire staff at Mulligan’s Manor sit down and read the blog and each one of them left the computer saying “WOW!” You depicted everything we described to you perfectly. And thank you to all the commenters and donors. We appreciate you so much. xoxoxo

    1. Ben Avatar

      Shannon, all I did was write a few words. YOU folks are making the real difference in these kids’ lives every day.

  20. Cherielle Avatar

    An acquaintance shared this link with me, as I am in the process of looking for a charity within the LGBT community to assist. I am a bootblack in the local leather community, and have experienced the intolerance that people can have when someone is different than they. I am looking forward to finding a way to help out these boys, even if it’s just a few dollars after every event I attend and bootblack.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Cherielle, that’s how we change the world. A bit of effort at a time!

  21. Jim in PA Avatar
    Jim in PA

    Bravo for letting all of us know about a truly wonderful and deserving organization…which many of us wouldn’t have known about without your words.

  22. debbs in TX Avatar
    debbs in TX

    This brought tears to my eyes for a few reasons. Every kid deserves to be loved and it hurts my heart that some of these kids are…scratch that…were not loved and accepted by their own families. That there are places like this brings tears of joy. God bless Mulligan’s Manor and all who dwell within.

  23. MaryAnn Avatar
    MaryAnn

    Thank you Ben. This story so paralells what I’ve had friends tell me about their experiences. I was in tears but absolutely loved hearing about Mulligan’s Manor.

  24. Gregory Wright Avatar
    Gregory Wright

    I sometimes work with children who have been shuffled around like this, unloved for various reasons. It’s heartbreaking to have them have no understanding what-so-ever of what it’s like to have family that cares about them. To read this and know how terribly it affects any kid is too much. To find out that someone has taken action to provide kids with stability, love and understanding is just amazing. It really takes special people to step up and help kids who’ve gone through so much, who’ve lost trust in people. Thanks for sharing this. What wonderful people you’ve exposed us to.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Thanks so much Greg. I agree…it’s overwhelming to think that people can turn away a child who just wants to be loved for who they are. But running across places like Mulligan’s gives me such hope for our future.

  25. Doris Land Butler Avatar

    Ben, this is absolutely AMAZING!! Just the type of thing I wish I could have done when I was a little younger. Thank you for sharing this amazing story and reminding that there are still some INCREDIBLY good people in the world. I will definitely be sending in a donation soon. (I just opened a new account and don’t have a card yet to send. I will check and see if they take Paypal though.) THANK YOU AGAIN!!!!

    1. Ben Avatar

      Doris, they DO accept PayPal! That’s how I made my donation. Thanks so much for your comment! *big hugs*

  26. Nick Shiraef Avatar
    Nick Shiraef

    As an avid golfer, I have a special relationship with the word, “Mulligan.” Perhaps in this context, though, the word’s true value is revealed. And it’s not just for the victims. Those who have passively allowed this kind of hate and discrimination to exist, can also “take a mulligan” and effectively erase their error by donating to and believing in places like the Manor.

    While abuse as a child never truly goes away (I’m a victim of neglect and I am still learning what a powerful effect it has on my adult life), the power of love to overcome those negative effects is a real and highly effective tool that everyone human is capable of using.

  27. Tim McHenry Avatar
    Tim McHenry

    I have suffered through verbal abuse at the mouth of my stepfather in the past, and I have suffered some ridicule and…not exactly being pushed away, but awkwardness with fellow friends when I revealed to them that I was bi. Having the two not only be combined together, but be made worse…I can’t imagine what these kids must be going through.

    The fact that Mulligan’s Manor is willing to take in kids with that much emotional baggage and devote a great deal of time and money to healing them and spreading tolerance brings tears to my eyes, but those tears turn slightly bitter when I realize that I can’t donate without money. However, with your permission, I’d like to link to this blog post on several message boards that I am a member of. If at least one person can donate, I’ll have at least done something to help these kids.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Tim, sharing this post with as many others as you can is an amazing way to contribute!

  28. Jenny Diaz Avatar
    Jenny Diaz

    Dear Ben et al –
    As the founder of Mulligan’s Manor, I just want to thank you from the bottom of my heart for bringing attention to this cause. With so many good causes out there, I am humbled that you would take the time and thought to do this. I hope that there are others who will have the desire and ability to open more houses like MM to support “our” children because I can honestly say that the boys who have come here are stronger and happier young men who will change the face of the world. On behalf of the boys, I love you and send all my gratitude! Jenny

    1. Ben Avatar

      Jenny, it’s an honor to have you comment on this post. Thank you from the bottom of my heart for being these for these boys. You are changing lives in a massive way.

  29. Hannibal Rex Avatar
    Hannibal Rex

    Jenny is doing the heavy lifting society as a whole ought to be doing. Full stop.

    Heroism is stepping out in front of evil and saying “No, I will not bow to you”. Anyone want to say what we’re watching here doesn’t fit that?

    Yeah, I thought not.

    Look; I was raised in a traditional family and I fit the mold I was given. Guess what; there’s a legion of kids out there who don’t. I think those kids deserve the same stability, the same love, and the same encouragement I was given growing up…and hey guess what, I’m not going to say that a gay kid or a trans kid deserves anything less, because they don’t.

    Those kids deserve to learn what I learned. Family values know no boundaries.

  30. Nancy Kolecki Avatar
    Nancy Kolecki

    Jenny I am so proud of you! I remember the passion that you had when you were developing Mulligan’s Manor. You are a remarkable woman and what a difference you have made in so many lives. God’s blessings to you and your staff.
    ntf: what a wonderful article

  31. Stacey Avatar
    Stacey

    Dear God. What is wrong with people? I am a very liberal college professor coming from a super-conservative background. I teach a lot of LGBT literature though I am straight because it’s deeply important for people to consider life from a viewpoint different from their own. My own mother sometimes asks me if I worry that my eleven-year-old might “become” a lesbian because she has so many gay and lesbian “aunties” who adore her. I generally respond, “Who the *eff* cares?” Why is sexual orientation STILL such a big deal? I just don’t understand it at all. Blessings to those at Mulligan Manor and elsewhere fighting for acceptance and equality.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Stacey…I hear ya. It’s baffling. It comes from 2 places…Christianity and machismo. The Christianity thing SHOULD be easy to remedy. Jesus taught us to love everyone, period. The more people focus on his teachings, and less on Old Testament law, the more accepting and loving Christians will become. As for the machismo thing…shoot, I think we’ll still be dealing with that a thousand years in the future.

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