Thinkety think think
Heavy: I had forgotten....
Sat, July 21, 2007 - 11:29 PMAt the market, there were several people dressed in the standard issue Mormon ensemble. There seemed to be an event that brough many people from out of town. I had noticed as I drove past the temple that there were groups of people, some having signs that said things like 'Fairfield Ward'.
The parking lot of the market had quite a few young people in it, interestingly enough, Mormons blasting hip hop from their cars. All greeting one another quite happily but bristling as I walked by, going silent and such.
I am generally a cordial person, so when I get close enough to a stranger and we make eye contact, I smile, and say hello. In this case it fell on hostile and deaf ears. Everyone I passed in the store turned their eyes from me and yet said hello to others. I felt like an anthropologist transplanted into the mid-west.
I forget how much I blend in in the Bay Area in a way that makes me not necessarily dykey, but if you were to put me and many places east of here, they would brand me a diesel -dyke. Really, I am not that butch, but some places are adamant that a woman look a certain way.
So the Mormons have some really good things about their community. They come together and assist when one family has difficulties like hospitalization. They are frugal and do things themselves rather than hire another. They try to be 'good' people.
The dark side reveals though that they have also campaigned fervently against any legislation allowing non-heterosexuals the right to marry. Their Prophet even sent out letters to encourage all mormons to donate money to any cause against gay marriage.
That I do not fit the image of what they see a woman fitting somehow seems to offend. i don't exaclty nderstand this since I am not Mormon, but there it is. I have experienced this more than once. Oh well. I have no plans on giving myself over to the White Salamander anyway.
The issue though is that I forget that people who stray from the iconic look of their gender are forgiven less in other places. Interestingly enough, when I returned to Grrr's house in order to restock the freezer and play more with Ophelia, I meandered on to the Logo channel and found a documentary on gay bars in not-so friendly places.
The people interviewed spoke of a place where a person could be accepted, a shelter from an unforgiving and hostile world. There was a piece on a man who was tortured and burned alive, an interivew with Reverend Phelps, and a description of a secret bar in his home town that was eventually seized and sold by the local community.
I forget that there are many places that are wholly intolerant of a person who diverges from the norm and treats those people as if they were less than human and in some cases, less worthy than a dog.
My creepy moment at the Woodminster Market was nothing compaired to what many people experience elsewhere every day.
My heart goes out to those people.
Sat, July 21, 2007 - 11:29 PM -
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Sun, July 22, 2007 - 5:07 AM
Yeah....the big cities tend to lull one into a belief pattern that tolerance now exists "aaaaaaaaaalllll over the world" but that is not so and I'm sorry you had to deal with that intolerance...you are a cute li'l pixie and they were just being stupid. stupid heads.
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Sun, July 22, 2007 - 8:17 AM
Thanks LaLa....
I have grown up with the hostility as a theme. Though Sacramento isn't quite as bad anymore, there are still neighborhoods where I would get the look.
I guess the aspect that makes me most sad is that I won't ever really be able to afford a home in a place where people are open enough to see my humanity. Really though, I don't think I throw out -that- much dykey-vibes, but then I wander into a group like that and suddenly I'm Aileen Wuornos. Well it hasn't devastated me or anything. |
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Unsu...
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Sun, July 22, 2007 - 10:41 AM
I could go into my religious rant but I'll save that for a private forum, I'm SO sorry you went through this. Granted it's not psychologically scarred you for life but it's still not right that we can't accept one another for who they are. Especially when you are just going about your daily business and if anything being polite to those with such prejudice.
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Sun, July 22, 2007 - 11:15 AM
I'm all about the religious rants...
...and the reality is that my queer appearance isn't the only reason I feel uncomfortable with the fundy-Jesus types. I have Christian friends who aren't quite so intolerant, so it's not Jesus' fault to be sure. But there is much in the way of rejection in many churches.
So yeah, I have friends who have had much worse happen in their lives, so I can't complain too much. On some level it makes me more firm in knowing and liking who I am, but it firghtens me with regard to how other people who live in fundy land risk their lives on an almost daily basis. </rant> |
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Sun, July 22, 2007 - 1:43 PM
Isn't is surprising? I forget sometimes too because I live in a city where you take some things for granted. I never really think much about what Bruce and I look like together but on our trip recently I realized that many folks in Belfast, Ireland don't think much of a union like ours. Boy did we get some dirty looks from some folks there! I guess they are just now getting past the Catholic vs Protestant thing so different races is too much still.
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Mon, July 23, 2007 - 12:26 AM
Yeah that's a bummer
My guy said that he didn't experience any racism until he was sent to a private school in England. I found that odd, but maybe that's because we only hear about the racial discrimination that goes in in our own country. I've wondered if they'd have an issue since he's Thai and I'm not.
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Mon, July 23, 2007 - 1:56 PM
Every place has their issues. In the US we are actually far more open about talking about ours than many other places. If you talk to most Brits they will flat out deny that racism is a problem in their country and they will readily tell you that it is a huge problem in ours. Still they are advanced enough to let gay marriage happen but not so advanced that they won't still heckle a guy for being a poofter.
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