Pride, by Terry Dart

I don’t consider myself a proud person. “Pride goeth before a fall”, at least that was something I absorbed growing up. As a young person I was proud of being part of a championship women’s softball team. That feeling has lasted through to the present.

Pride in being gay? Just being gay was not enough, is not enough. I am proud of how people in the gay community came together when the horrific AIDS troubles began. I worked in the Colorado AIDS Project office a couple days a week, a few hours, answering calls from New Yorkers who’d seen our posters in the subway.

(For a short time Denver CAP was one of a few sources for information.) So much went on: a man called whose house had been burned down because he had AIDS.

I do not know whether the AIDS quilt is being expanded. It occurs to me that maybe it should be part of our parade, or maybe there could be a modern event celebrating GLBTQ history.

When I was a little girl in the late fifties there was a film at the movie theater in Minot, North Dakota, the town where I grew up. The police came and shut it down. I saw this as Mom and I were driving by. When I asked her what “The Killing of Sister George” was about, she did not answer. Out of fear and self protection Gay people most often tried to make themselves invisible, or at least inconspicuous.

There were a few, like writer Truman Capote later on who managed to be out during hostile times when pride in gayness could not be shared or demonstrated in public.

Gay people endured physical attack and endangerment at the hands of bullies, police, and homophobes. I remember Matthew Shepherd. He was often in the CAP office.

I was attending a Rainbow Camp for Gay people at Medicine Bow, near Laramie, Wyoming. My girlfriend and I encountered Matthew’s killers at the Taco Bell or Taco John’s. We had no idea what they would do. They worked there. I recall hearing them discuss “When he gets out of class.” Later my friend recognized the picture of the prisoner in the Denver post. I recalled the coldness in the eyes of the person who waited on us. The murder took place—a pistol whipping with Matthew tied to a fence post. They left him there to die of his wounds. I would like to think this part is over and that we are safe now. But we are not. Proud we may be, but “the price of freedom is eternal vigilance.”

© 25 June 2018

About the Author

I am an artist and writer after having spent the greater part of my career serving variously as a child care counselor, a special needs teacher, a mental health worker with teens and young adults, and a home health care giver for elderly and Alzheimer patients. Now that I am in my senior years I have returned to writing and art, which I have enjoyed throughout my life.

Anger, by Betsy

In my personal life there is
very little about which I feel anger. Oh there are the little irritations from
time to time, but when I take a good look inside I find I have very little
anger.  It could be that I have learned
that there is little–there is nothing really–to be gained from expressing
anger all the time or even once in a while. 
I find the expression of anger
directed at me personally very frightening. I really do not know how to deal
with it.  I guess maybe that is because I
am not used to seeing anger expressed.  I
do not recall either of my parents ever raising their voices or expressing
anger except in a rational way.  I, in
turn, learned to internalize my anger and not be expressive about it save to
talk to someone about it the next day in a calm way, of course.
It was only later in life that
I learned that feeling anger is one thing. Expressing it is another. Feeling
any emotion just IS.  We do not really
choose how we feel, do we?  Feeling angry
is no different from feeling happy in that it just IS. Most of us have probably
heard the words at some time in our childhood, “Don’t cry, don’t be mad.”
On the other hand have you
ever been told by an adult to not be happy or to not show joy.  Advise today seems to be much more sensible:
allow yourself to feel the feeling. Give yourself permission to feel
angry.  I think this is good advise. But
it should not end there.  It should be
followed with a word about the appropriate expression of one’s anger. 
It’s in
the same basket with being gay. “If you is, you is.” The behavior choice comes
with how you act on that state of being. 
The behavior choice comes with how you act on your anger. You can take
it out on a crowd of people with an Uzi or you can take some positive action to
try to change the situation, or do anything in between those two extremes.
One thing is for sure.  Anger is a powerful emotion.  Some people can carry it with them daily into
their lives from childhood to old age. Personally, I feel sorry for anyone who
lives this way.  What a waste of energy.
Anger does take a ton of energy.  And
then also, we have all seen someone who is already angry about something that
MIGHT, JUST MIGHT happen in the future. Also a waste.
Among my heroes are the many
people who have much to be angry about but can devote their lives to making
positive changes for the betterment of everyone, people who have historically
suffered abuse and are currently experiencing injustices that might certainly
generate unimaginable anger, yet they choose to take positive action sometimes
at great risk and try to make changes in the system.  Martin Luther King, Cesar Chavez, Rosa Parks
are some outstanding examples here, but there are hundreds of thousands less
known heroes who could go on that list.
 Another one of my heroes is Judy Shepherd,
mother of Matthew Shepherd, the young gay college student who was bullied to
death in Laramie, Wyoming several years ago. Matthew’s parents,Judy and her husband, first FORGAVE
the perpetrators of this heinous crime by asking the jury not to impose the
death penalty, and then (and I think because they were able to forgive) Judy
Shepherd became one of the nation’s most
effective advocates for gay rights.  I
have the greatest respect anyone in such a situation who knows the importance
of forgiveness and, does not carry the proverbial chip on the shoulder. 
 Unlike my personal life there is a lot of
dysfunction in our culture and our society today which does cause me to feel
anger.  The greed and ego-driven behavior
of some of our leaders makes me angry. 
Our gun culture makes me angry. 
Our war-driven politics and means of gaining and keeping power in the
world makes me angry. Inequality and voter suppression make me angry. Our
elected officials disregard and unwillingness to take care of our environment
for the sake of their own personal gain makes me angry. The so-called war on
women makes me angry. The list could go on and on.  However these are not the kind of issues that
generate immediate action.  These
problems are deeply embedded in our culture today and cannot be simply and
directly addressed except in the voting booth. For that reason I suspect a good
bit of frustration is mixed in with the anger.
But, as with personal issues,
I hope I can apply the teachings of my spiritual guru, Eckhart Tolle and not
waste energy on complaining and other 
fruitless mental activity.  Even
those small irritations need not be nurtured. 
Ideally I would choose to either take some positive action as an
expression of my forgiveness or express my personal point of view and take some
general action that would promote it.
© 9 June 2015 
About
the Author
 

Betsy has been active in the
GLBT community including PFLAG, the Denver women’s chorus, OLOC (Old Lesbians
Organizing for Change).  She has been
retired from the Human Services field for about 15 years.  Since her retirement, her major activities
include tennis, camping, traveling, teaching skiing as a volunteer instructor
with National Sports Center for the Disabled, and learning.  Betsy came out as a lesbian after 25 years of
marriage. She has a close relationship with her three children and enjoys
spending time with her four grandchildren. 
Betsy says her greatest and most meaningful enjoyment comes from sharing
her life with her partner of 25 years, Gillian Edwards.