Okay,
so this is a different
kind of Pride
month.
No parade
means
I shall not be
stripping
down and marching in my rainbow thong this year,
middle-aged
belly
flopping over,
glitter
stuck to my sweaty
forehead,
an opportunistically branded
bottle
of
gay soda in my hand.
Oh,
god. Virus, schmirus. I’m the
reason
they’ve
canceled
the
celebrations!
Sorry ’bout that.
Moving
forward, I promise
to
leave
the
Speedos
to the
gay
men’s
swim team
and the
thonged
thingies
to the
twenty-somethings
who juggle
their
day calendars
between
tanning appointments,
gym workouts and whatever
it is that social media
influencers
do.
Alas,
the
world
has coughed
on our 2020 parade.
I’m pretty
sure
Vancouver’s
harbor cruise
has
been
called
off as well.
(Don’t know how any part of the
cruise
industry—big
or small—will ever
recover.)
To
be
honest,
I’m not mourning. Parades,
cruises
and beer
garden
mixers
aren’t
my thing. I’m proud in my own stereotypically
reserved
Canadian
sort of way. I’ll probably wear
my rainbow Converse
and
rainbow socks on June
28
to commemorate
the
Stonewall
Riots of 1969. A
splash of flash is
enough.
This
year
seems
like
the
perfect
time
to
take
a
break
from flaunting our gayness
(“Does
this tank top show off my biceps?”)
and be
more
reflective,
thinking
about what makes
us proud. (Surely
it’s about more
than
biceps!)
I’m
proud of my own personal
journey
in achieving
self-acceptance,
at
least
with respect
to being
a gay man.
I’m
proud of the
lovely
gay men
I’ve
befriended
along the
way:
some
I’ve
lost
to AIDS and to other
dreadful
things like
brain
cancer,
some
I’ve
lost
due
to
time
and
distance,
others
I’ve
kept
as close
confidants
or as simple
Facebook
friends.
I’m
proud that I’ve
fallen
in love
a
few
times,
even
if it never
ended
well.
I dove
in,
committed
fully and maybe
learned
a few
things in the
process.
I’m
proud, too, that I resisted
many of the
showier,
riskier
and
darker
parts of gay life
that
existed
while
I
was figuring things out in my twenties
and thirties.
I
found a way to be
gay
and still be
plain
old me,
values
and integrity
intact...for the
most
part.
I’m
proud that, somewhere
along
the
line,
I
stopped
caring and worrying about what others
might think about me
being
gay. I recognize
the
courage
that
it took coming out to family, friends
and co-workers, especially
when
some
of
those
conversations
didn’t go so well,
as when
I felt
religious
judgment
from some
Texas
friends
and when
my disclosure
was
met
with dead
silence,
first
from my best
friend
and later
by my brother.
I’m
proud that I transitioned
from dramatic coming out conversations
to me
just
being
me,
casually
mentioning
that I’m gay as part of general
introductions in mental
health
support groups or as the
fact
that I’m gay became
relevant
in some
other
conversation.
It’s been
ages
since
I’ve
watered
down partners
and boyfriends to “friends”
or altered
or deleted
pronouns when
talking about dates.
Some
of
this change
has
been
part of my own evolution,
but I recognize
that
a major nod must be
given
to the
fact
that North American
society
has gotten
more
familiar
and accepting
of LGBQ people.
(I’ve
purposely
omitted
the
“T”
because
I
think much more
work
must be
done
for
Trans people
to
feel
safe,
much
less
accepted.)
I’m
proud that I’ve
incorporated
gay topics in my writing. Somehow
I’ve
managed
to maintain a blog since
June
2008
about mostly gay things. I
don’t know how I feel
about the
fact
that a 2013
post regarding Ricky Martin remains
my most seen
post. (Do
people
read
it or did they
just arrive
at
my site
when
Googling for pics of him?) Still, the
blog
is
a place
where
I’ve
tried
to be
extremely
open
about my struggles
as a gay man while
also
featuring
items
about gay culture
and
trying to keep
people
aware
of
how HIV and AIDS have
impacted
where
we’ve
been
and shaped
where
we
are.
I’m
proud that one
of
my blog posts got national exposure
when
the
Globe
and
Mail published
it as a First Person
essay
during
Toronto’s
Pride
celebrations
last year.
My writing also includes
two
gay-focused
manuscripts that I’ve
revised
many times
now and I’m ready
to begin
(re)submitting,
hoping that an agent
and a publisher
will find either
or both works to be
worthy
novels.
I’m
proud that I overcame
a
period
of gay/AIDS burnout and complacency
and I thirst again
for
new
knowledge
about
gay history and new
expressions
of gayness
in literature
and
other
media.
I am aware
that
I am still very
much unaware...of
what it’s like
to
be
a
black, Asian or Muslim queer
in North America,
of how to become
better
educated
and to impact change
in
countries
where
LGBTQ
rights do not exist
and of how to keep
up with and support more
nuanced
identities
that
many people
feel
better
align with their
true
selves.
How wonderful
to know I have
so
much ahead
of me!
This
Pride
month
seems
like
the
perfect
time
to
start digging deeper,
shifting from
a primary focus
of
raising
other
people’s
awareness
to strengthening
our
own. Knowledge
is
power.
1 comment:
Bravo, RG. Bravo. You've spoken for me too. Great job, as always,
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