You are using an outdated browser. Please upgrade your browser to improve your experience and security.

Skip to main
Blog

The 25th Anniversary of TrevorLifeline

BY: Trevor News
Donate

August 11 is an anniversary that defines Trevor’s legacy. The Trevor Project’s formal founding occurred on March 25, 1998, but August 11 marks the 25-year anniversary of the launch of TrevorLifeline, the first 24/7 national lifeline supporting LGBTQ youth in crisis. 

The Academy Award®-winning short film, “Trevor,” a story about an LGBTQ teen who attempts suicide, was set to air nationally on HBO on August 11. The filmmakers — Peggy Rajski, Randy Stone, and Celeste Lecesne — wanted to include a number to a suicide lifeline for young people that might feel similar to Trevor’s character. After learning that LGBTQ young people in crisis didn’t have a place to call in real life, the idea for creating TrevorLifeline was born. HBO aired the short film, and featured a phone number for LGBTQ young people in crisis to call. On August 11, 1998, over 1,500 calls came in to TrevorLifeline from across the United States, and Trevor hasn’t stopped taking calls since. 

Since 1998, we’ve provided 25 years of crisis services for LGBTQ young people; we’ve also grown our programs to include research, advocacy, public education, and peer support — all with their own milestones (like publishing the largest survey of LGBTQ youth mental health annually, launching chat/text and eventually making them 24/7, helping to pass The National Suicide Hotline Designation Act, the first bill that is specifically LGBTQ-inclusive to pass Congress unanimously in history, and so on.) We also launched 24/7 crisis services for LGBTQ youth in Mexico, expanding our life-saving scope.

As we celebrate our 25th anniversary of Trevor Lifeline, we continue to imagine a world where all LGBTQ young people see a bright future for themselves and can always find community. Until then, we will continue to be here to meet the moment.

Read more from
Blog

Three individuals supporting each other.
Blog

Title IX and Back to School: What it Means for LGBTQ+ Young People

It’s back to school season, and millions of young people across the country are returning for another academic year. Returning to school can bring up a multitude of feelings — excitement to see old friends and make new ones, anticipation of meeting new teachers, and even some nerves about more difficult course material. LGBTQ+ young people experience all of the same emotions when returning to school, but there’s often additional factors including  anxiety, depression, and other adverse mental health outcomes depending on how supportive and affirming their family, community, and school environment is.  This past April, the U.S. Department of…
Blog

Drag Race Winner Nymphia Wind releases new book chapter, calling for more open conversations about mental health during AAPI Heritage Month

Nymphia Wind, the winner of RuPaul’s Drag Race season 16, released a chapter of her book Breaking Wind, The Art of Letting Go in collaboration with The Trevor Project. While the book that was dreamt up by Nymphia as part of a Drag Race challenge is fictitious, Nymphia’s reflections on her own mental health as a queer member of the AAPI community are very real. Read Nymphia’s latest chapter, written in collaboration with The Trevor Project, below. A special chapter of Breaking Wind: The Art of Letting Go, written in honor of AAPI Heritage Month 2024 By: Nymphia Wind The…