For Coming Out Day, How I know homosexuality is not a CHOICE

This is a very personal diary and not a story I've told to many.  It wasn't until the last couple of years that I told it to ANYONE.  But I know from personal experience that being homosexual is not a choice and I will share that here on this very important day.

And why this year?  Because California may pass a ban on Gay Marriage, they may write this bigotry into the State's Constitution.  And even though my husband is running for State Senate, I believe this bill is far more important than him winning.  Yes.

Why?  Because it can't be undone.  It's 2008 and we can't let a bill like this pass.  If you call yourself a progressive or a Democrat or even a liberal, we cannot say that civil rights can wait until later.  They cannot wait.

Now, I have to start at the beginning because it's all part of the narrative.  My father left when I was rather young and he was a broken man.  He was addicted to heroine and bi-polar and my mother kicked him out one day when his dealer came to their apartment (Really, my grandparents basement) and said, "Ron said I can take anything I want".  Heavy..

My Mother had her issues and I grew up in a very toxic and dysfuntional home but the details don't matter.  I love my Mother very much and she's an awesome grandmother.  We all screw up, the question is, do we forgive?  Do we say we're sorry?  All that has passed and all that matters to me is she loves me, my husband and my daughter and is doing the best she can.  She really turned her life around and I'm proud to say I know her.

I kept to myself in High School, wore a little too much black and hated the beach.  Not very good when you leave in surf city USA, Huntington Beach, CA.  But I survived that and for reasons I still don't understand, I skipped the SAT's and got a job.  I had no intention of going to college, I had no idea what or who I wanted to be.

I managed a small bookstore and took classes at the local community college.  I fell into an interesting crowd of artists and art galleries and started to write more and more poetry and prose.

It was in 1991 that I met her.  She was beautiful and smart and she was so into me.  I had a very difficult time with relationships and my upbringing had made me wary of any intimacy.  But she, she brought me out and I loved her.

I loved her so much I was confused.  I went to therapy, I thought maybe I was dealing with my own homophobia because I couldn't consummate this love, this very real and very intense love that included notes, dinners and sharing.   The dance went on for far longer than it should have and I realized that the issue really was that I was not a lesbian.  That's it, I'm not gay.

But this had been my first love for all intents and purposes in the most purest and sweetest way, it just wasn't lust and it just wasn't romantic love.  But for someone who had grown up so isolated, lonely and so closed off to intimacy, it was the closest thing I'd gotten to real love.

Yes, I tried very hard to be a lesbian because I loved a woman so much. It most certainly is not a choice.  And I'm blessed to still know this woman after all these years.  Sadly, I don't see enough of her at all.  We've grown apart, I married in 1998 (Went off to School at Smith in 1994) and we just don't spend as much time together as I wished we did.

She was the maiden of honor in my wedding.  I still love her very much and I hate that I don't see her more often.  That weird thing happens when you have children and you live just a little far away.  I hate that about life, I really do.

But recently she got married, legally married and I found out via facebook and it broke my heart.  And I thought, I want to be at that big wedding she's planning in June of next year and I want it to be legal.  I want to see her dance her first dance.  I wanted to be there.  But they had just a small wedding due to finances and the fact that they fear they won't be able to have that big wedding in June.

So when I drove by people holding signs that said, Yes to Prop 8, I thought, why does it matter so much if my dear friend wants to marry her girlfriend of EIGHT years.  Why?  And I got angry and teary eyed and I yelled.

Oh, my five year old was in the car too and she wanted to know why I was so angry.  I said, well I just don't agree with those people with the signs (We were at a stop light) and she told me to HONK at them.  I didn't want them to think that I was in any way supporting their bigotry, I drove on and I told my daughter that it wouldn't help.

But I want her at that wedding too.  I want her to know that love, in all its forms, should be celebrated.  That God gave us this gift of love and that we should share it with everyone we know.

So, that's my story, all sordid and complicated as it is, it's part of who I am and I wouldn't change a damn thing about it.

So on this coming out day, if you are thinking of doing it, don't worry, tomorrow is another day.  No matter what happens, you will be loved, someone will love you just for who you are and you can make a new family if you must, but you will be loved.



Display:


Re: For Coming Out Day, How I know ... (2.00 / 7)

Thank you for such a heartfelt diary!  It brought me to tears - Well done!

Much love

Dizzy


-- Dizzy
Proudly cross-posting everything to:
http://www.computerqueen.net/
http://clintonistasforobama.blogspot.com /
by DizzyQueen on Sun Oct 12, 2008 at 01:00:34 PM EST

Me, too... (2.00 / 6)

I'm also crying now. Sometimes, it's easy to forget how emotional the coming out process can be. This also reminds me why it's important for us to defeat Prop 8. Now that the door to equality has opened here in California, I don't want it to close again!


No way, no how, no McCain! :-)
by atdleft on Sun Oct 12, 2008 at 01:34:31 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Me, too... (2.00 / 7)

Thank you.  I will do everything I personally can do to stop this measure from passing.  This would have repercussions throughout the Country considering that California is seen as one of the most liberal States in the union.


Mr. Ellinorianne for CA State Senate! (Gary Pritchard ActBlue CA-SD-33)
by Ellinorianne on Sun Oct 12, 2008 at 05:25:27 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Thank you for reading (2.00 / 5)

I just want everyone to have a chance to share their lives with the one they love without fear, is that too much to ask?


Mr. Ellinorianne for CA State Senate! (Gary Pritchard ActBlue CA-SD-33)
by Ellinorianne on Sun Oct 12, 2008 at 04:15:42 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: For Coming Out Day, How I know homosexuality (2.00 / 5)

Beautiful story.


by Scope441 on Sun Oct 12, 2008 at 01:41:15 PM EST

wonderful diary, Ellinorianne (2.00 / 3)

A couple I know went to California this summer to get married. Next weekend they are having a commitment ceremony/wedding party here in Des Moines.

In lieu of gifts, they set up a "wedding registry" at Equality California and asked for donations to the No on Prop 8 campaign:

http://www.eqca.org/site/pp.asp?c=kuLRJ9 MRKrH&b=4026385

I gave $25 and wanted to let couples know that they can set up a registry and ask their friends for donations too.


See if Saxby Chambliss is helping you.
by desmoinesdem on Sun Oct 12, 2008 at 02:01:05 PM EST

Re: wonderful diary, Ellinorianne (2.00 / 2)

What a great idea!  I will pass that on to my friends who recently got married!  Thank you very much.


Mr. Ellinorianne for CA State Senate! (Gary Pritchard ActBlue CA-SD-33)
by Ellinorianne on Sun Oct 12, 2008 at 04:10:39 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Thanks for sharing (2.00 / 3)

I don't think you need to be afraid to share your story.  A lot of us have stories.

I am a single older woman.  Some people think I am gay.  I am not. If it was a choice, I would be. My best friend was a woman.  We did everything together.  We really did love each other. In fact we both wondered if we were supressing our gayness. We talked about it.  We loved being together.  But neither of us felt the kind of chemistry we felt with men.  Finally she ended up in a relationship with a guy  and married.  Funny thing is he asked me out first.  No chemistry but I liked him  and I knew he was meant for her. I introduced them.  
Head, heart and chemistry just don't always work together for some of us.  I am (or was) physically attractive to macho jocks (who often turned out to be jerks).  But the chemistry was there....

I don't believe any of us have a choice when it comes to chemistry, to physical attraction.  I envy those people who are truly bisexual because they get so many more choice.

My cousin, who happens to be a lesbian, believes it is between our ears.....and somewhat a choice because she is bisexual.  

In the end, we are all unique.
My dear friend had a relatively happy marriage albeit short (about ten years)....because she died young.  Her husband and I were with her almost daily at the end, and we comforted each other. I think she was hoping we would get together after she was gone.  But the chemistry was not there before and was not after....but we liked each other.  When he met another woman a year later, he basically asked my permission to go forward.  I let him know that she and I always would want him to be happy.  And he moved on.

I really believe there are some things we have no control over and one is our innate sexuality. If we had a choice, I think there would be a lot more lesbian couples in later life for women. 8)


by Jjc2008 on Sun Oct 12, 2008 at 02:13:25 PM EST

Re: Thanks for sharing (2.00 / 3)

Wow, I'm so sorry for your loss for one thing.  That is why I believe love comes in many different shapes and sizes.  Thank you for sharing your story.

The thing is, there was such a thing as a "Boston Marriage".


Boston marriage was a term used in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries for households where two women lived together, independent of any male support. These relationships were not necessarily sexual; the existence of platonic Boston marriages was used to quell fears of lesbianism following the loss of men in World War I.[1] Today, the term is sometimes used when referring to two women living together who are not in a sexual relationship. Such a relationship may have intimacy and commitment, without sexuality.

Wiki

I don't see why women can't start that practice up again.  It doesn't have to be about sex but friendship, companionship and security.


Mr. Ellinorianne for CA State Senate! (Gary Pritchard ActBlue CA-SD-33)
by Ellinorianne on Sun Oct 12, 2008 at 04:14:27 PM EST
[ Parent ]

I think you will see more of it (2.00 / 4)

as boomers start to age and especially with this economy.  Whether divorced or widowed, more older people are seeing the positives of cohabitation...
think GOLDEN GIRLS.
by Jjc2008 on Sun Oct 12, 2008 at 04:45:10 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Homosexuality is not a CHOICE (2.00 / 2)

The number of men who are not married living together is also increasing. Sometimes the men are gay, sometimes they aren't. Four guys live in the house next door and two are gay but not in a romantic relationship. People call it the Coach house because everyone in the house coaches some type of kids sports team. They definitely consider themselves a family as well.


by Jeter on Sun Oct 12, 2008 at 07:13:50 PM EST

Re: Homosexuality is not a CHOICE (2.00 / 2)

When my brother lived in a house with four other guys, we called it "The Snake Ranch."

;)


See how Saxby Chambliss is helping you!
by Spiffarino on Sun Oct 12, 2008 at 10:48:21 PM EST
[ Parent ]

What a cool post! (2.00 / 2)

If you ever needed something to help you understand why we need progressive leadership, even in a "blue state" like California, then just read this post.


by activatedbybush on Sun Oct 12, 2008 at 08:26:20 PM EST

Re: What a cool post! (2.00 / 2)

Thank you.  We need more progressives everywhere!


Mr. Ellinorianne for CA State Senate! (Gary Pritchard ActBlue CA-SD-33)
by Ellinorianne on Sun Oct 12, 2008 at 09:38:44 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: For Coming Out Day, How I know homosexuality (2.00 / 4)

Very moving and certainly not "sordid."  Thank you so much for sharing your story.

Today I filled out my California ballot and dropped it off at the Registrar's Drop-Off box.  I proudly marked a giant NO on Proposition 8 and trust that my fellow Californians will do the same.


by Radiowalla on Sun Oct 12, 2008 at 08:27:40 PM EST

I was excited (2.00 / 1)

that I got to vote for my husband.  I mean, how cool is that?  He's only the third box down after Presidential and Congressional candidates.  Crazy.


Mr. Ellinorianne for CA State Senate! (Gary Pritchard ActBlue CA-SD-33)
by Ellinorianne on Sun Oct 12, 2008 at 09:34:53 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Wow. (2.00 / 2)

As you know, this is a difficult topic for me.


Another Clintonista against John McCain
by psychodrew on Sun Oct 12, 2008 at 09:45:09 PM EST

I don't care if it's by choice. (none / 0)

Why do liberals have to say that homosexuality is not by choice?
What if someone did choose to be gay?
I think you have a right to be gay, whether by choice or by birth.
by rolnitzky on Mon Oct 13, 2008 at 09:14:07 AM EST


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