I had a dream last night that I was being bullied.
It was some spoiled kid from my elementary/high school (who later actually came out, I believe). Admittedly, the bullying in question — both the dream and its real-life counterpart — were nothing serious or systematic, but one thing about both incidents (real and subconsciously synthesized) struck me.
I didn’t fight back.
Instead, I learned to hide, to “pass”, to subsume my true identity. I’d let parts of it discreetly shine through — I was a nerd, I liked computers and science fiction, all that — but that certain fascination, that quickening of my heart when I walked past a a good-looking boy in high school… well, I ignored that impulse, pretended it wasn’t there, thought it was anything but what it really was. And for my troubles, I was (limitedly) rewarded: the bullying stopped. In exchange for suppressing who I really was, I was quietly ignored.
But eventually, the elimination of a fundamental part of what it means to be human — to love, to date, to marry, even (yes) to have sex both meaningful and not-so-meaningful — took its toll. From early adolescence right into my twenties, I could never remember what dreams I had after I woke up. It’s as if my subconscious had switched itself off.
Then, one snowy February night, after a traumatizing friendship and falling out with a fetching lad in college (nothing happened, alas, except to me, internally), I sat beside my parents’ cat on the sofa at two-thirty in the morning and laid the truth bare.
The cat’s reaction was predictably unenthused, but for me it was a revelation — the revelation — that would change the course of my life. But it took time. I was scared — terrified of those feelings that are for many the baptism-by-fire of teenagerhood. I gradually told friends, then siblings, then parents. It wasn’t until my mid-twenties that I began dating. It wasn’t until my very late twenties that I experienced love, if only briefly. It was only in my thirties that I had my first serious, multi-year relationship.
I’ve often mused about the awkwardness of Pride: a combination party and political rally. But, then, maybe that’s the point. Unlike most minoritarian identities, being gay is something that lives dormant inside you, only reaching fruition with the onset of adult emotion. As such, it’s easy to suppress, ignore, wish away, be told doesn’t exist.
Which is why Pride is what it is: a fight for your right not only to party, but to love, marry, form families, be happy with yourself. Proud. That’s what those youths and drag queens, fighting the New York City police at a speakeasy many Junes ago, understood better than so many of us in the mainstream did: that coming out is, for each of us who’ve gone through it, a mini Stonewall inside ourselves to awaken who we truly are.
Happy Pride to all.
Nice post. Happy Pride!
when my late son, Peter, told me he was gay, at the age of 23, in about 1970, thank God I said ‘how brave of you to tell me. It must have been a hard thing to do. I love you exactly the same as before.’ Thank God, that’s what I said and meant. But did I mean it totally, deep down? Not quite. I was born in 1928 and I literally didn’t know that some men were born homosexual until I was maybe in my 20s. If someone had told me, I would have scarcely believed it possible. Yes, that’s how uninformed and dumb I was. And yet, I instinctively knew that ,just as some people are born left-handed or blue-eyed, being born gay was innate and should not be challenged.
Great post David! We should all be proud of who we are, even those of us who take a long time to discover ourselves.
I’m proud of my husband, our friends, straight and gay who stand up for us, my chosen family who encourage us, and my godchildren who accept no prejudice in orientation.
I am especially proud of your father who, by marrying us, made it all the more significant.
Having a gay older brother afforded me a very different experience. I went through the same high-school crap, did the same conformist dance, but always had a living example of the alternative.
My brother was unabashedly gay throughout high-school, in a small red-neck prairie city. I didn’t appreciate until much later the courage and sheer gall that took. His reward for being a positive (if unintentional) role model was harassment by our neurotic mother for setting a bad example for me. She harassed him right out of the house, at age 17.
My move to Montreal coincided with the beginnings of the Gay Village. It all started with a couple of very “quetain” alternatives to the older gay establishments (a.k.a. bars) around Peel & Ste. Chatherine, and by now is a full-blown commercial and residential community with plenty of tourist appeal and political influence.
It’s a bit too ghettoish for my taste, but I do love to visit. It’s too bad you missed all of that David. It’s so ironic that as you were leaving Montreal, it was becoming one of America’s most gay-friendly cities.
I’ve been to (and marched in) gay pride parades in Montreal, Toronto, and New York, and for me pride is not just about the politics or freedoms of the participants, or partying until you drop, but also about showing the vast hidden membership of the gay community that there is an alternative. Whether in Montreal, San Francisco, Sydney Australia, Butt-Wipe Iowa, or Lower Kyrghismania, it’s all about visibility.
We’re here! We’re queer! Get used to it!