Category Archives: LGBT

Promise an Authentic Life Before Asking Someone to Give It

This new campaign delivers a body blow. Called “Freedom to Serve, Freedom to Marry,” the information campaign is targeted at educating the public about the Defense of Marriage Act and its impact on gay and lesbian military families.

Evan Wolfson, the founder of Freedom to Marry, one of the organizations behind the campaign, spells it out:s:

Many people assume that, with the repeal of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” gay men and lesbians serving our country are now being treated fairly and equally, but that’s not the case. We ended the ban on open military service for gay and lesbian Americans, but there is still federal ban on treating married service members as what they are: married.

(Thanks to towleroad.)

UK Homecoming

Grab a hankie…

Let’s Not Waste Our Energy, Okay?

Nixon and Marinoni with their son, Max Nixon-Marinoni

The rainbow-hued wires have been buzzing this week with bitching and tsking over actress Cynthia Nixon’s interview with the New York Times Magazine, where she told writer Alex Witchel that for her, being gay is a choice.

Her comment was made while telling a story about how she prepared an empowering speech for a gay audience, and was counseled to edit out the line, “I’ve been straight and I’ve been gay, and gay is better”. Event organizers felt that Nixon’s statement implied that homosexuality can be a choice which was not a message they supported, to which she replied, “And for me, it is a choice. I understand that for many people it’s not, but for me it’s a choice, and you don’t get to define my gayness for me.”

Immediately, Nixon began to be pecked at by the self-righteous peckers of gay rights organizations and the gay press, who hopped up and down and said her statement fuels the conservative belief that gay can be prayed away.

Today, Nixon made a statement to The Advocate, in an attempt to clarify and contextualize her comment:

“My recent comments in The New York Times were about me and my personal story of being gay. I believe we all have different ways we came to the gay community and we can’t, and shouldn’t be, pigeon-holed into one cultural narrative which can be uninclusive and disempowering. However, to the extent that anyone wishes to interpret my words in a strictly legal context I would like to clarify:

“While I don’t often use the word, the technically precise term for my orientation is bisexual. I believe bisexuality is not a choice, it is a fact. What I have ‘chosen’ is to be in a gay relationship.”

So there. We made her turn in her gay card so she could be reissued a bi card. Now that we’ve forced the woman into clarifying her sexual orientation for us, we can all feel better about our own gayness.

Why does the LGBT community continually act like it’s Gay Day at Disneyland and the gayest amongst us will go to the front of the line at Space Mountain?

Nixon, 46, was in a 15-year relationship with a man that started in her early 20s. The two have two children together. Since 2004, she has been in a relationship with education activist Christine Marinoni. Marinoni gave birth to the couple’s son in 2011.

Nixon’s story isn’t that different than mine (well, except for all her talent and fame). I also came out in my 30s. I was married to a man, and together we had a child. Since I’m confessing: it was actually my second marriage to a man. I was involved in two opposite-sex relationships that totaled nearly 27 years, the first a right-after-college-graduation marriage to my high school sweetheart.

No one, especially  not a reporter, has ever sat me down to ask if I think my lesbian identity is a choice. But I’d probably say “yes”.

Make no mistake, I’m as gay as the next dyke. But somewhere back before the turn of the century, I made a clear-cut decision to come out and live the rest of my romantic life in the company of women. Life with men wasn’t awful. I suppose I could have kept doing it – and millions of women have, for reasons of security, religion, and fear of being ostracized.

But the question of could I do it again is a much tougher one. There are just too many variables. I’ve never identified as bi because I never pictured myself returning to relationships with men. And, admittedly, I’m the first one to rankle when Dan Savage starts talking about the sexual fluidity of women. I don’t think of my sexuality as all that fluid. Before I came out, I just hadn’t considered my options.

I thought of myself as perfectly straight, right up until I met a woman who rang my chimes harder than any man ever had. While I didn’t have a relationship with her, I was so unnerved, I was compelled to look deeper into myself. It was my own dark night of the soul. But unlike Jonah, I wasn’t coughed up in a ball of whale spit. Instead, I landed on the beach covered in lube and waving the rainbow flag.

So I was married to men. Does that make me less gay now?

Consider this: With the exception of a very few Gold Star Lesbians, every lesbian woman I know has slept with more men than I have (three).

I understand why we don’t want to give haters any more ammunition to use against us, but the sort of backlash aimed at Nixon fractionates us. It divides our own community into gay, gayer, gayest, bisexual, and so forth. It’s a complete waste of energy that could be better spent scaffolding our community, not tearing it down.

This type of reactionary thinking panders to conservatives and will ultimately hinder the gay rights movement.

For example, in a 2006 article in Pediatrics: The Journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics supporting gay marriage, the Academy stated  that the vast majority of children with parents in same-sex relationships were conceived in heterosexual relationships. So when we talk about gay families, should we exclude them from our numbers? Make them draw a bi card? No, we need to coax these moms and dads out to be counted. We need to encourage them to come out to their family doctors. Then, perhaps the estimated number of kids being raised by gay parents won’t be so wide-ranging, anywhere from 1 million to 10 million in the U.S., and will settle near the higher end (and probably more realistic) figure.

That’s how we gain political clout.

For political recognition, we don’t need fractions, we need whole numbers. We need to throw our gay arms open and embrace the entire damn rainbow.

While we’re at it, let’s all apologize to Cynthia Nixon. She tries to do right by our community. And, she’s more than gay enough for me.

A Lesbian Holiday Tradition

This is the time of the year when Joe over at Joe.My.God posts his holiday classic, Dance of the Sugar Plum Lesbians. It’s up for the eighth year and it’s still one of my favorites. Wander over and check it out.

Tell Them We’re Home

When the crew and family readiness group of the dock landing ship Oak Hill sold raffle tickets for the first kiss at homecoming, Petty Officer 2nd Class Marissa Gaeta bought 50. Since that is fewer than many people buy, Gaeta never guessed she win the kiss. But she did, and when the Oak Hill docked in Virginia Beach after nearly three months training with military allies in Central America, Gaeta’s girlfriend of two years, Petty Officer 3rd Class Citlalic Snell, was waiting when she crossed the bow.

This is the first time the happily reunited couple has been gay. The women kissed and the crowd cheered.

Don’t ask. Just tell them we’re home.

Landmark Lesbian Publisher Dies

Recently, when I packed to move, I found a copy of Katherine Forrest’s first novel, Curious Wine, on my bookshelf. Published in 1983, the novel about two women sharing a room in a Tahoe cabin is still considered the classic lesbian romance. It was given to me by my first girlfriend, who said it reminded her of my own coming out story. She, in turn, had received it from another lesbian.

Before the days of the internet, the lesbian community could only find literature that reflected their culture in women’s bookstores. You were lucky if your community had one. Or, you were gifted books passed hand-to-hand through friends. Continue reading

Where Lesbians Are Legal

Alice Dreger is a professor of clinical medical humanities and bioethics at the Feinberg School of Medicine of Northwestern University in Chicago, and a guest advisor to Savage Love. She writes a number of blogs, which you can read here. This essay, about a child’s view of gay marriage rights, recently appeared on the Psychology Today blog.

Last week, my son and I were trundling up the hill from the Washington Metro station to our hotel when he spoke a line that has been ringing in my ears ever since.

We had just passed two women, one carrying a baby in her arms, the other pushing a three year old in a stroller. We had been eavesdropping as we passed, and so we had heard the two of them talking about schedules for later that day. I subconsciously read these two women as either two friends or as a woman with her nanny. But my son, who had just turned eleven, read them differently. As soon as we cleared them, he said to me, “They might be lesbians. They’re legal here.”

Read the rest now.

See Dr. Dreger’s brilliant TED Talk, “Democracy After Anatomy“.

Talkin’ Bout an Evolution

AmericaBlog.com has the perfect t-shirts to poke the President. Click on the photo.

It’s been pretty clear these past few weeks that the man who stood on “Hope” and had the blue states chanting “Yes We Can” is still using semantics to drive his campaign.

Staring into the face of a re-election campaign, President Obama is once again using a catch phrase, only this time he’s “evolving”.

(Now, I’m a science-y dyke, Mr. President, and I know that “evolution” doesn’t always mean a change for the better. You’re buying time, the way a pestered parent does by saying “let me think about it”.)

I expected better from a man who was born at a time when anti-miscegenation laws would have prevented his own interracial parents from marrying in parts of the United States.

I expected him to know that “granting rights” and “recognizing equality” are not the same thing.

Over this past Pride weekend, the New York Times editorial staff took President Obama to task on his wishy-washy stance on same-sex marriage:

Fundamental equality, however, is hardly the equivalent of a liquor law that can vary on opposite sides of a state line. Why is Mr. Obama so reluctant to say the words that could lend strength to a national effort now backed by a majority of Americans?

You should read the whole editorial.

Why Marriage?

Whenever the topic of same-sex marriage arises, there inevitably has to be an explanation of why domestic partnership agreements and their cousins aren’t marriage. Even with a civil union, it can take time, lawyers, and money for a couple to duplicate the rights granted by traditional marriage.

In support of Pride month, the employees of LUSH Fresh Handmade Cosmetics offer this explanation.

Now that you’ve finished watching, go take a hot bath with a Butterball Bath Bomb and plan your dream wedding!

The Internet Brings Men Together, as Lesbians

The internet community is still reeling from the news that lesbian Syrian blogger “Gay Girl in Damascus,” Amina Arraf, who built a reputation on writing vivid accounts of revolt in Damascus, is actually a man.

After Gay Girl’s reported detention fueled internet and media attention, this identity was revealed to be an elaborate hoax. Tom MacMaster, a 40-year-old American man living in Scotland has apologized for inventing, and posing as, the blogger.

It’s amazing how the internet can seem so vast and impersonal, and yet has an ability to pull people together in the weirdest possible ways. Continue reading

Not Just for Gays

I couldn’t be happier to make my 700th blog post one with Neil Patrick Harris, my gay man crush! In case you missed the opening of last night’s Tony Awards:

Justin Does Dani, Dani Does Justin

Baby dyke singer-songwriter Dani Shay, 22, rocked the internets with her America’s Got Talent audition – “What the Hell,” a song addressing her uncanny resemblance to Justin Beiber (or rather Justin Beiber to her).

Watch her audition below and try not to think about the possibilities for twin porn.

Bargain Away the Gay

(Thanks to Dan Savage for this!)

It’s Not Nice to Tease the Gays, Old Navy

Earlier this week, LGBT bloggers and the Twitterati erupted in “huzzahs” at the announcement Old Navy would carry Pride t-shirts in its stores and on the company’s website*, beginning June 1. Furthermore, it was announced, 10 percent of the sales would be donated to the It Gets Better Project. The project is near and dear to the hearts of many of us lesbihomogays, especially those that grew up outside of gay Meccas where gay visibility is almost non-existent and there’s little support or acceptance for queer teens.

But June 1 came and went, with nary a shirt to be seen on the website.

It turns out Old Navy is limiting the distribution of these shirts to those same gay Meccas where they are sure-fire sellers and where their display won’t roil the retail waters for the heartland-targeted chain. The shirts are being carried in just 26 of the companies 1,030-plus stores.

I think it’s really sad that the parts of the country most in need of queer visibility won’t be able to easily access these shirts.

Continue reading

Old Navy Styles Pride

More update: The shirts can be ordered by phone and shipped. See the list of stores selling the shirts here.

Update: Apparently Old Navy doesn’t intend to sell these shirts on the company’s website, but rather only in selected stores. I’ve written to the company’s customer service department to request a list of stores with the shirts, but I haven’t received it yet. I’ll update when I do. Meanwhile, you can email Old Navy, custserv@oldnavy.com, or contact the retailer by Twitter, @OldNavy, and let them know this is a great idea, but only if the shirts are accessible to Pride supporters everywhere. After all, the point of the It Gets Better Project is to make sure that support is visible to teens in every nook and cranny of the country, right?

Mega-retailer Old Navy is lending its support to the It Gets Better Project in the form of Pride t-shirts.

The shirts go on sale Wednesday, June 1 and will be available in sizes for men, women, and babies.

Old Navy has a long history of selling over-the-top patriotic get-ups for the Fourth of July. The retailer’s LGBT and homogay-supportive customers will find these a colorful and welcome switch-up.

Ten percent of the sale of each shirt will be donated to the It Gets Better Project, founded by Dan Savage and his husband, Terry Miller. The project aims to help aims to help disenfranchised gay kids get through their difficult teenage years by by presenting positive images, and the stories, of queer adults.

Want to show your support? Visit Old Navy’s website Wednesday and order a t-shirt. Or, make a donation directly to the It Gets Better Project through the organization’s website. (While you’re there, check out the video contribution by LGBT employees of The Gap, Old Navy’s parent company.)

Apple’s Beautiful “It Gets Better” Message

There have been thousands of video uploads to the It Gets Better Project, and with the recent release of the It Gets Better book, the project continues to expand its global gay-kid supporting hug. This new video by Apple employees just knocked me out. I love my computer, love my iPhone, and wish I could have danced with Woz. Now I’m in love with the staff, too. Really. I want to hug them back.

Hatin’ On Bullies, FCK H8 Style

I love nothing more than running into an unexpected FCK H8 t-shirt. For some reason, I see them mostly in grocery stores. My latest sightings: “Some chicks marry chicks – get over it” in Whole Foods and the “Some dudes marry dudes” version in the Berkeley Bowl.

There are now tons of cool t-shirt options for homos and liberal-minded straights, as well as underwear, hoodies, bracelets, stickers, and more.  Find them all on fckh8.com.

The f-bomb dropping campaign has taken on bullying. Warning: The soundtrack of this video is definitely not safe for work.

O Captain! My Captain!

I’m loving this video featuring the newest release from Men, the art/performance collective that includes JD Samson, also of the iconic feminist electropunk band Le Tigre. There’s a build-up… wait for it!

Better in Georgia

This sweet version of an It Gets Better video is from Georgia high school student Marina Belotserkovskaya.

With thanks to Joe.My.God.

The First Lady’s First Lady

Hickok, left, and E.R., right

Although the most famous illicit love rumor associated with the White House may have been JFK and Marilyn Monroe, there was another that people are still talking about today.

Lorena Hickok, popularly known as “Hick,” was the friend and confidant of Eleanor Roosevelt. It appears they had a passionate romantic relationship that evolved into a life-long friendship. It should be noted that Roosevelt was far from naive about lesbianism. Biographer Blanche Wiesen Cook, the author of Eleanor Roosevelt: Volume One 1884-1933, wrote that after 1920, many of Eleanor Roosevelt’s closest friends were lesbians. She has said Roosevelt both honored their relationships and their privacy. Continue reading