angledge: (heart)
I'm having a slow day at work, so I'm livestreaming the NY State Senate proceedings, hoping that one more Republican senator will find it in his heart to do the right thing & give NY State marriage equality. I hope.

The NYS Senate vote is obviously getting a lot of news coverage today, including a nasty little poll from radio station WBEN in Buffalo. Four choices out of five allow you to express exactly WHY gay marriage is icky, & the fifth choice lets you say "Eh, whatever". Despite that in-built bias, look at the results! I hope.

And then someone linked this incredible video, made from a speech made by Harvey Milk. And I'm nearly in tears, here at my desk. What would Harvey Milk have become if he hadn't been gunned down? He saw things so clearly - not just for LGBT issues, but for all the "us's" out there. And the hopeful part is - gunning him down didn't shut him up. Didn't work on Martin Luther King Jr. either. Maybe decency, & equality, & love are things that can't be gunned down, not for long. I hope.
angledge: (Speak your mind)
I am having a slow day at work, so Facebook is eating my brain again. I think if I read one more thing about Tyler Clementi or any of the other victims in the latest cluster of bullying-related suicides, I will burst into tears. Or kill the next person through the door of the mapping office. Or both.

I think that a lot of straight people have no frickin' idea how scary the process of coming out can be. I can't think of any other rite of passage quite like it. The pressures that society puts on everyone to be straight are so pervasive & so subtle, that just getting to the point of realizing for yourself that, hey, maybe that's not me - that can take years. And during that whole time, there can be a constant sense of somehow being wrong, out of tune, deviant, or sick.

Then you finally start to realize or suspect that you're not what everyone is telling you that you are supposed to be. You're a girl, but you don't really like boys - you like girls. Internally, this feels true, but there's a long road of reconciliation between this inner truth & the outside expectations of heterosexual conformity. Depending on your upbringing, there can also be a tremendous backload of internalized homophobia to process as well. There are real risks & sacrifices involved in coming out - especially if you come from a conservative family. The day I came out to my parents, I had my bags packed in my car - with the car pointing down the driveway in case I needed to make a quick getaway. And my parents were totally, 100% supportive of me! Imagine how much more fear a child of truly conservative parents would feel. And then on top of that, you are:

  • putting yourself at risk of bashing;
  • putting yourself at risk of being fired - just for being gay (legal in 28 states!);
  • putting yourself at risk of being assumed to be HIV-positive, or a man-hating Amazon;
  • giving up the chance to serve openly in the military (a deep sacrifice AND a loss of opportunity for some); &
  • having to tell people something deeply personal while knowing their first reaction might very well be "Ewww, disgusting!!!"


I have been trying to come up with an analogy for coming out - & mostly failing. But here's a thought-experiment. Imagine an auditorium filled with all your family, friends, & co-workers. If you're religious, add everyone from your place of worship. If you're on a sports team, add everyone from the locker room. If you're a teacher, add all the parents of your students. If you have access to health care, add your doctor(s). Add a military recruiter, some suspicious cops, & maybe a disapproving old lady from next door. You may even want to add Fred Phelps & the National Organization for Marriage & Fox News commentators & a row of politicians to the mix (because it's their right to be up in your business too). Now, jump up there on the podium aaaaaaaaand....
angledge: (polar bear paw)
Today Ingrid, Cousin Matt, & I saw an all-female cast perform Shakespeare's "Taming of the Shrew" at the Globe Theatre (any & all lesbian dinosaur jokes are hereby declared obvious) (though I guess I inadvertently made one in this post's title).

I now solemnly declare that I am completely crushed out on the incredible woman who played Petrucio.
angledge: (Default)
I went to Bible study this morning & it was the last time I'm going to see my pastor before I leave for Edinburgh. So here's a bit of praise for Rev. Dr. Raymond R. Roberts, the pastor of Grace Presbyterian Church in Jenkintown, PA. )

song lyrics & music!

Ah, family

Aug. 20th, 2003 09:35 am
angledge: (polar bear paw)
My cousin Ashley outed me to my grandparents this weekend. Nice going.
angledge: (Default)
I just came out to my Bible study group. It's a small group (8-10 most Wednesday mornings), but there are a few members (conservative older white men) to whom I would've never imagined coming out. But we were discussing what people outside of the church might see within the church that they would want (fruits of the Spirit). I was silently considering the question when Sam said, "Angela, I can see that you're mulling this over; do you want to tell us what you're thinking?"

I couldn't turn down an opportunity like that, so I said, "I'm gay, so the community I interact with is completely different from the ones you all are involved with. It's hard to take the Gospel to the GLBTQ community because most of them are familiar with only the hateful, condemning face of Christianity." Then I told them about the picketers at SundayOUT. I told them that what the GLBTQ community is looking for - that the church can offer - is peace, love, comfort, hope - in other words, the same things straight people are looking for.

Afterwards, the only other woman in the group thanked me for sharing my life with them. Ray said that they loved me. But no-one else said anything. I think I really shocked some conservative old white men today.

Here are some of the things that make it hard to preach to my "Family":

http://www.confessingchurch.homestead.com/
http://www.augustinecollege.org/papers/EH_00_3.htm
http://www.godhatesfags.com

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