LGBT
Related: About this forumPride month
BTW I'm not "new" to DU. Refurbished and will remain only an occasional visitor.
I get to attend SF pride this year. My adoptive son is flying up for a bay area staycation. I'm so stoked. Circumstancially (workplaces, surgery) it's been nearly a decade since I am able to attend a Pride. My last one prior to health issues, however had a profound small family triumph over bigotry I want to share.
My brother lives in a small Midwestern city I was visiting for the second summer in a row, circumstancially. The first summer, my brother accompanied me to his citys Pride celebration. He enjoyed the experience immensely..
Over that year between, he and my previously staunchly homophobic sister in law must have had discussions about that.
So it surprised me she decided to tag along. She was morose enroute, but realized once we arrived, people. Just people. Hundreds of them, many in flamboyant regalia, but none of the debauchery she had the impression Pride was all about from the sensationalized media.
But then the clincher-- there it was. The outreach booth from HER CHURCH! She gravitated and stayed there chatting up for about a half hour.
Then we had hot dogs. She enjoyed the musical performance. She was beaming and joyful on the way home.
And for the first time ever, she treated her gay brother in law like a human being. I wish this could reach a wider demographic than "preaching to the choir" on this thread. It's important to go participate in the local hoopla.
I'm so disgusted with all the LGBT bashing came with MAGA bullshit no matter how they embellish up "LGBT for Trump" nonsense.
MLAA
(18,669 posts)🌈🌈🌈🌈🌈🌈🌈🌈🌈🌈🌈🌈🌈🌈🌈🌈🌈🌈🌈🌈🌈
LeonidPlanck
(231 posts)Were loud and proud, and we like to get a little out of the norm, I guess. Its like Santa Cruz, where anything goes. I remember the day I first got to Soquel I picked-up the Gazette and was reading while eating my tacos and drinking a Pacifico with a lime. There was an entry about a tutu tête-à-tête at The Lane (if youve ever spent any time in Canna Screws, you know The Lane on West Cliff). I was surprised with joy to find dozens of guys riding unicycles and wearing pink tutus!
Admittedly, at first it was a bit strange, but within minutes I had introduced myself and had conversations and they were guys just like me. Im not sure Id ever wear a tutu or learn to ride a unicycle, but they were software engineers, professors, cops and lawyers just out having a great time celebrating Pride - and thats something I can get behind. Didnt matter which way they batted, they were people having a great time.
Ive never been homophobic but, being straight, its just not my experience. Giving straight people the opportunity to not be phobic might be the key. Not saying its a duty or responsibility, but it might be a keen path of least resistance.
As a straight dude I get out and cheer for anyone who has the freedom to be who they are, and in my town, everyone can do that - and its wonderful!
Think. Again.
(19,040 posts)That experience is EXACTLY the hope behind each and every Pride event that is held (sometimes at great risk) in every town, city, and nieghborhood in America.
I'd like to suggest that you write about that experience, in a little more depth, and offer it as an article to any of the pro-LGBTQ publications you might find. As I mentioned, people put themselves at some risk to hold these events, even to attend them, and your honest story of WHY could re-affirm to many that their efforts are certainly worth it.