That's why SAGE, a senior center designed for LGBTQ+ elders, was created in 1978, said Steven Wilkinson, the director of SAGE Centers.
[Ads /]
WorldPride NYC coverages begins at 11:00 a.m. on Sunday, June 30 with an ABC News Pride special on Channel 7 and abc7NY.com. And then at noon, join our team of Ken Rosato, Sam Champion, Lauren Glassberg and Kemberly Richardson for live coverage of WorldPride NYC 2019 on Channel 7 and abc7NY.com.
"The really don't have the support of their families or friends, so we're here to provide that for them," he said.
Each New York City borough has a SAGE; the largest, in Midtown. More than 4,000 seniors participate in a wide variety of programs designed to help them feel engaged physically and mentally, experience comradery, and most importantly, be respected for who they are.
"Isolation is a very big issue at all stages of coming out, all stages of being gay and lesbian ... some of it is self-isolation ... and some of it is isolation that comes for hearing people speak badly about the LGBT community," said Sandy Warshaw, a SAGE member.
Warshaw didn't come out until later in life, and now, at 86, this mother, grandmother, and activist says she's proud to be "gray and gay."
She said despite social progress, older LGBTQ+ people have very few role models.
[Ads /]
"Being LGBT is still seen as something that young people do because, in many people's minds, (LGBT) is about sex ... and nobody thinks people over 50 have sex," she said.
Participants must be over 60. They don't have to pay a fee, but there is a suggested donation for a hot meal, which is as much about companionship as it is nutrition.
Discrimination for gay seniors certainly still exists, especially in housing and nursing homes, but this is a resilient group.
"We've got every right, and you're not going to make us invisible," Warsaw said.
Discover more Pride stories at abc7NY.com/pride.