Day: November 14, 2022

Be More Gay

After my last post, I kept thinking about how to take these ideas and invite in a collective conversation, as well as a more intentional strategic response. The conversation part that I’m thinking about is a kind of playful response to the Florida laws (as well as the various anti-trans moves, especially in Texas and Tennessee) that a group of us have been calling our Be More Gay Campaign.

In response to the active attempts to minimize, or shame, and to actively silence the idea of being gay, or trans, or queer we don’t just say that it’s ok to talk about it, or even that we accept you if you are.

We say, really go for it. Bring your whole, true self.

Whatever that looks like and whoever and however you love.

What ever your truest expression of your gender.

And however any of these things change and shift across your lifetime, or even within the day.

You are loved in the truth of yourself. You are seen. You are welcome. You are celebrated.

It’s especially powerful to me as a message from a church community. To say that by our faith we know and affirm that gay isn’t just ok, it’s fabulous, and cherished, and even holy. And our church wants you to not just not be quiet about it, we want you to feel like you can let the fullest truest parts of yourself emanate from you. Be more you, be more love, and be more gay. (And yes, I do kind of like the play on the word gay, as in happy!) We’re thinking t-shirts, and bumper stickers, and street signs and….

Beyond this conversation piece, though, we are also looking at ways we can intentionally up our supportive response. We’re listening for where the gaps are in community support for queer and trans youth and young adults, and for their families. We are considering how we as a church can level up in our trans welcome. And we are talking with our community partners about how we can engage these questions intersectionally, and engage our queer BIPOC community members.

I don’t know where exactly this will take us, but I trust that there’s something really right about this path. Because in response to so much small mindedness and fear, this is a move that is hopeful, and playful, and joyful and generative. I mean, it’s very gay!

Gay Enough

My partner Carri and I were pretty early in our relationship when we started to wonder if we were “gay enough.” It wasn’t a new question for me; as a bi-identified person, more than a few lesbians have over the years questioned my queer credibility with a curious insistence: do you think you’ll end up with a man, or a woman? I remember this one woman who asked me this question so directly all I could think was: are you flirting with me? Like, is that a dare? Or an insult?

It was the 90s, before we had language of non-binary, and when ani difranco was singing about the pressure to pick a side making all the bi folks feel seen.

But this was more than just bi-phobia that Carri and were running into. This was a complicated tension that happens in the queer community.

In those days, we were hanging with an amazing group of queer friends, most of whom were poly, some in the kink and/or leather scene, and were all creatively pierced and tattoed. They were experimenting with different ways to make and claim family. I say all this in the past tense because I’m describing a time in our collective lives, but these things all continue to be true for all of them. They were and are powerfully and beautifully queer.

No one ever said anything, and it wasn’t that we weren’t all close. But there was a day where I remember Carri asking me if maybe we weren’t gay, or really queer enough,or if this group didn’t think we were queer enough to be their friends.

Despite the fact that Carri and I both have both long identified as queer – not gay, which is important. To us it meant feeling in our core a sense of being an outsider, of not fitting with the expected norms, in all sorts of ways, including in terms of sexual orientation. It is claim of both loyalty, and love.

It’s just that, unless you count having a very extensive costume bin (we were so good at costumes back then), we were not all that “outside the norms” in a lot of ways. I mean, we were both totally open to the idea of poly relationships, but mostly realized we didn’t have the time. Not to mention, we only have one tattoo between us, and Carri doesn’t even have her ears pierced.

Sometimes we have cherished our stealth mode, like I talked about in my earlier post. It’s a privilege to be able to pass, especially in a unsafe communities or settings. Not to mention it can be a kind of fun chance to catch people in their cognitive disonance thinking that they are just talking to a couple of suburban moms, only to realize they’ve been hanging with the queers. (A party trick we unintentionally play many Saturdays on the sidelines at our son’s football games…)

It’s just that when we are out of suburban mom mode, and actually wanting to be seen and affirmed in our own community, stealth starts to translate into suspect. For all the ways we reject the policing of gender and relationships in straight culture, the queer community has its own versions. Especially for those who fought hard for the right to be as far far out of the norm as their truest selves call them to be, our slippery signaling has at times made us seem less trustworthy, like we were spies for the straights rather than the eager partners in mischief and magic we longed to be / are.

It can be really painful, and confusing, especially for baby queers. You finally make it out of the closet, only to encounter this gatekeeping and judgment from within the community you worked so hard to claim.

I’d like to imagine that this whole idea is as dated as ani’s binary bi anthem, but spending any time on queer Tik Tok makes it clear that it isn’t – if anything, it’s expanded. Just today I saw a video someone seeking affirmation because they’d just been told by a group of queer friends that their relationship was not a queer relationship, even though they are non-binary and queer identified – because their partner is cis and straight.

I’ve been thinking about all of this lately as we’ve been planning this idea of a Be More Gay Campaign. Which is, basically, a celebration of being fully yourself, in your whole truth, and being loved exactly as you are. Where some right now are admonishing teachers to not “say gay,” we’re like, go for it, celebrate it, bring it.

And, along side this, I think we need to be extra clear that this campaign is definitely not an attempt to measure if any of us are gay enough. Just like it isn’t an attempt to see if we are good enough, or activist enough, or smart enough, or rich enough, or….whatever message any of us have gotten that says we need to be more in order to be worthy of love. It is instead a wild embrace of the most wildly you parts of you. And if those wild parts of you come embodied in a suburban mom package, you go girl. That’s you being more gay. Or rather, on Saturday mornings on the sidelines of the middle school football game, that’s me, and Carri!

One other note. I also think it’s important to lift up that if you are authentically totally straight in all the ways, then this campaign can be an invitation to hold the sign that says be more gay! Especially on the sidelines of football games! ….and also on college campuses, and in school open houses, and in grocery stores, and at family reunions, and wherever else you might run into a queer person wondering if who they are is compatible with being loved. Be willing to stand out and make things a little less comfortable for yourself, on behalf of the kids wondering if there is a place in this world for them. In other words, be more queer in your welcome of queerness, even if you aren’t queer yourself.

Now is not a time for passing

With every new headline or “debate” about the latest wave of anti-LGBTQ legislation, I hear Audre Lorde: “My silence had not protected me. Your silence will not protect you.”

In Florida, the literal intent of the law is silencing- to stop conversation and education that is anything other than cis and hetero. In Texas, the intent is both silencing, and threat. To make parents afraid of caring for their child, to make children afraid of listening to themselves, to make health care workers afraid of doing their jobs.

Florida and Texas are grabbing the most headlines, but there are a dozens other states making similar moves right now. All in an effort to make it scarier and more shameful to be a queer person, and especially a queer youth today.

And the reality is, it will work, is already working. Even if people don’t go literally back into (or remain in) the closet, they will work hard to pass, to seem “normal,” as in, conforming to hetero and cis gender norms, and ways of doing relationships, and ways of being in the world. We will double down on the “we’re just like you” strategy that brought us marriage equality and gay characters on network TV.

Or at least, those of us with the privilege to pass will.

For me, embracing being more femme has been both authentic, and also a fun way to subvert expectations of queer identity – which is not the same thing as being in the closet. I hardly remember what it means to be not out – I have two teenage children whose arrival meant the permanent end of the closet. Over and over children say without thinking, my moms. Or, my other mom. Over and over, with health care staff and school staff and friends’ parents and neighbors, we are a momentary confusion translated by kid clarity.

Now that my kids are older, they are more aware, and more intentional – and many moments pass by with us passing. Moments where just one mom is with them, and they let whomever imagine that dad is somewhere else. I think these moments must be a kind of relief for them, to just let their family be for a minute, an uncontested reality.

Like I said, it’s a privilege.

And, over these last few weeks, and months, and years, I have remembered, it’s a privilege that keeps us caught. The silence of passing does not protect us, and the quick relief of being unseen only perpetuates the notion that we have something to hide. Tamping down whatever weirdness we’ve got – in ourselves, in our families, in our communities – makes us all think weirdness is weird. That being queer is scary, unusual, threatening, something to legislate and control and shame.

When really, weirdness – by which I mean, particularity and singularity and creativity and eccentricity – is regular. We all have something. Something that makes us different, and freaky, and non-conforming to some universalized idea of human expression and love. Which is actually the weird thing. To imagine that difference is not the most universal truth. To imagine that difference is not the thing that makes us beautiful, and lovable, and capable, and free.

Behind all these legislative moves and school board fights there is fear. Fear of what we don’t know, fear of what we don’t understand, fear of our own freakiness. For some kids and even for some adults, the safest way to respond to these fear-based tactics is going to need to be getting as closeted as they can until another day comes. But for others of us – and I believe this is more of us than we think – the safest and freest response to this fear is to go the opposite direction. We need to get more visible. We need to get more gay. More queer. More surprising and non-conforming, and more particular.

Now is the time to shave your head, and get that tattoo, and get that extra piercing. Now is the time to fly that leather flag and wear that t-shirt that would make your parents blush. Now is the time to be yourself in the most particular ways you can, and to celebrate the ways that others are themselves in the most particular ways they are.

I know very well the sort of comments that this sort of free-flying freakishness might inspire – so we will need to bolster ourselves. Since cutting my hair a few weeks ago, I’ve already gotten a few choice responses. But for every attempt at policing and quieting, I think of the kids in Texas wondering if their very existence is an impossibility, if the world has no place for them, and I feel proud to have the chance to resist. To be a part of the alternative story that is in all of us, the alternative vision of this world that celebrates instead of silences, and instead of trying to stop us from saying gay, says let’s be more gay.

So whatever queer you’ve got today, bring it all. Especially if you have the privilege to pass, choose not to. Not just for the sake of those kids in Texas, or for those families in Florida, but for us all.

Don’t Say BE MORE GAY.