Quote from: SadieBlake on May 26, 2019, 10:19:45 PM
Linde, you start from here:
You're aware that this amounts to homophobia, right?
I think so, but that was the way we were brought up. We overcame that mostly, and gave them more freedom in our country than they ever will have in the US!
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I don't think it's really your business whether people choose to be 'in others faces' and I think it would help if you understood the origins of pride marches. We are in fact at 50 years since the Stonewall riots. (and 53 years since the Compton's cafeteria riots
Homophobes, particularly the police very much made the sex lives of lesbian and gay and trans men and women their business (in the form of harassment, beatings, arrests) Pride is very much about responding to that in an affirmative way.
I think it is very much my business, if people are in MY face! They can march as much as they want, but when I listen to the reaction of my cis friends, these marches do not earn them a lot of sympathy!
I also do not want to be dragged into these marches, and even tough I am three letters "ITL" out of their logo, I do not feel any real connection to them. I did not do any pride marches when I was hetero, and I will not do any now that I am lesbian.
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This has already been discussed but it's important to me to respond again to the title of this thread that suggests that being gay, lesbian etc is a 'lifestyle'. I'm lesbian and I also happen to have some fairly strongly felt sexual kinks. These aren't things I choose, they're just part of me.
As it happens I'm not all that comfortable around a lot of heterosexuals and just this afternoon I was talking with a lesbian friend about the difference we feel in the safety of 'queer space'.
Like you I'm first female, trans is really just the path I took to being a woman. I also happen to be lesbian and I also happen to be an activist. I *ALSO* dress pretty conservatively in most circumstances -- even when I was recently on stage in the performance of the vagina monologues, I chose an outfit that expressed the sexy side of an outfit that would have been appropriate at a business celebration.
I am like you, I happened to become a lesbian, because I became a woman. My sexual orientation did not change, but i don't have any kinks that I am aware of, I am just a pretty boring older woman who happens to be a lesbian.
But I am also an activist, not for any sexual orientation, but for women in general. We help less fortunate women to get back onto their feet again, after they hit a streak of bad luck. And I also dress to the more elegant side, and hardly would wear a t-shirt in public.