Just as the U.S. Legalized Gay Marriage, I'm Getting a Divorce

Just as the U.S. Legalized Gay Marriage, I'm Getting a Divorce
The Good News:

I was sitting on my back porch, wrapped in a hoodie to ward off the early morning chill. A freelance writer and solo parent, this summer I’ve been avoiding childcare costs by waking up at 5:45 a.m. and cranking out a few uninterrupted hours’ work before my kids need me.

But on the morning of June 26, I was interrupted. At 7:17 a.m. my phone pinged. I ignored it. Then it pinged again. And again. A rush of anticipation charged through me: SCOTUS.

I grabbed my phone, read the string of messages:

“SCOTUS rules marriage bans unconstitutional!”

“Marriage Equality for All!”

“Happy day!”

“OMG! Just hear the Supreme Court Decision!”

“Yes!!!”

Sitting on my back porch, phone in hand, tears welling in my eyes, I experienced–physically–the sensation of my body pushing against a brick wall, and finally, brick by brick, feeling the wall crack, crumble, give way.

All. Fifty. States.

My Activist Family:

For ten of the past eleven years, my family stood on the front lines of the marriage equality movement. Starting with my marriage to Tracie–with our first-born attending in my belly–at San Francisco City Hall, during the Winter of Love 2004; through the ups and downs of California’s Proposition 8 campaign; to the celebration of our legal marriage, with our two children as witnesses, in 2008; to this final SCOTUS decision–we have marched, campaigned, donated, and spoken with media, domestic and international, radio, film, and print.

And now marriage equality is the law of the land.

And Tracie and I are starting divorce proceedings.

In the Shadows:

The need for legal relationship recognition among same-sex couples came to national attention during the height of the AIDS crisis. Gay men not only were losing their beloveds to a terrifying epidemic, they were barred from hospital rooms and treatment decisions by unsympathetic medical staff; they were banned from memorial services by homophobic family members; they were losing their shared homes and belongings because no laws protected their rights to community property, to pensions, to death benefits for grieving spouses.

These end-of-life protections held center stage in the SCOTUS decisions both to dismantle the Defense of Marriage Act in 2013 and to affirm marriage as a civil right this past June. SCOTUS has made it clear that all loving couples deserve access to the dignity and the legal protections of civil marriage, in life and after death.

But standing in the shadows next to happy couples celebrating their love and marriage benefits is something no one wants to talk about: in establishing a legal foundation for marriages that last, the marriage equality movement also has laid a safe, clear, and legal path for those people like Tracie and me, who have decided to divorce.

The “Failure” Stage:

As a media point person in the marriage equality movement, in the aftermath of major losses and wins, I got used to answering reporters’ most common question, “How do you feel?”

Today’s answer: It’s complicated.

When Tracie and I first decided to separate a year ago, I felt an acute sense of failure. This is a common “stage” in the divorce process. The “till death do us part” societal expectation, along with the individual hopes and dreams newlyweds carry into marriage–they can lead people to experience divorce as a deep, personal failure. A few months after Tracie and I separated, that feeling of failure faded to the background, but the SCOTUS announcement brought it back, front and center.

For some gay and lesbian couples, this failure stage is compounded by social circumstances. Whether we have chosen to participate in the LGBT rights movement in a public way or not, everywhere gay and lesbian families go, we become, de facto, representatives of all same-sex parents. At the taqueria, at the beach, at the public library, Tracie, our boys, and I were never just “the Dumesnil-Vickers family,” we were an in-person example of those gay families people were talking about on the news.

I didn’t mind that, really. If the presence of our family at the local park somehow contributed to a larger positive narrative about gay families, so be it. But now that Tracie and I are moving toward divorce, I feel not only as though I have failed to realize my own hopes for my marriage and family, but also that I’ve failed to uphold the “happy, healthy lesbian family” image that has helped open the hearts and minds of the American public to LGBT people.

Of course, I would never consider someone else a failure for choosing divorce; I do that only to myself. This sense of failure is nothing more than an ego-driven form of self-criticism. Intellectually, I understand that. I also understand that the mind’s logic does not heal the heart’s pain. So the best thing I can do right now is to acknowledge my emotional truth: at this moment in time, in the face of arguably the biggest win yet for gay rights, I feel like a failure. And that hurts.

Clearly, I still have some healing to do.

Marriage Equality Benefits All of Us:

In the weeks following the SCOTUS decision, I’ve noticed a distinct difference between the political wins of my married past–wins that were simultaneously “for our family” and “for all loving couples”–and this final marriage equality win. According to my pouting, petulant inner child, today’s win is for “loving couples who are still together,” who still have hope for “happily ever after.”

But the SCOTUS ruling is not just for same-sex couples who are still together. The impact of the decision extends far beyond the lives of the couples now queuing up for marriage licenses around the country. The marriage equality movement has created a significant, positive shift in public attitudes toward the LGBT community. The momentum from this win will fuel ongoing fights for federal non-discrimination legislation, for transgender rights, for safe schools, and ultimately for true equality for all LGBT people, including the divorced and solo parents among us.

As I see it, the power of the win extends even beyond the LGBT community. The success of the marriage equality movement has shown my children’s generation, unequivocally, that hard work, resilience, and an unrelenting belief in fairness really do lead to dramatic and lasting social change. How better to empower young people to continue bending the long arc of history toward justice? How better to empower our children to persist in the face of challenges?

Reason to Celebrate:

A couple years ago, when marriage equality states started springing up across the country, I printed out two blank United States maps and gave them to my boys. Together we marked all the marriage equality states: nine, at the time. Then we started a tradition: when a new state welcomed marriage equality, we would fill in that blank on the map and celebrate with ice cream.

This morning, when the boys woke up, I told them about the SCOTUS decision by handing them my phone, this image emblazoned on the screen:

2015-07-23-1437627434-4156658-ScreenShot20150714at8.19.22AM.jpg

“Really?” they asked. “All the states?”

I smiled and nodded. “You helped do this, you know. You helped make this happen.”

The looks on their faces–the wonder, the pride–those are reason enough to celebrate this win.

Image Credit: Movement Advancement Project

This post originally appeared on ESME: Empowering Solo Moms Everywhere.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.


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Boyfriend Experiment Ends In Violent Attack By Neo-Nazis

Boyfriend Experiment Ends In Violent Attack By Neo-Nazis

Screen Shot 2015-07-23 at 12.36.36 PMLast week we reported on a social experiment in Russia where two young men spent the day walking the streets of Moscow while holding hands. Things didn’t go so well.

A hidden camera captured an unyielding barrage of insults, slurs, skunk-eyed stares, and physical intimidation, culminating in one extremely tense confrontation.

To shed light on the reality of LGBT life in other hostile areas, Bird in Flight magazine decided to repeat the exercise in Kiev, Ukraine.

Things really didn’t go so well.

A group of neo-nazis or extreme-right men approaches the couple, asking them if they are patriots and getting aggressive.

Once police are out of sight, they pull out pepper spray and blind both men before hurling punches and kicks at them.

Luckily, the project team was at the ready to intervene and prevent serious injury.

Watch the disturbing video below:

Dan Tracer

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News: Jurassic World 2, Henry Cavill, Donald Trump, Earth 2.0, Barney Frank

News: Jurassic World 2, Henry Cavill, Donald Trump, Earth 2.0, Barney Frank

> Donald Trump threatens to mount a third-party run for the presidency if the Republican National Committee is mean to him.

> Jurassic World sequel pegged for 2018.

sanders> Barney Frank on why progressives shouldn’t support Bernie Sanders. “His very unwillingness to be confined by existing voter attitudes, as part of a long-term strategy to change them, is both a very valuable contribution to the democratic dialogue and an obvious bar to winning support from the majority of these very voters in the near term.”

> Rep. Mark Pocan trolls Republican-sponsored bill attacking so-called “sanctuary cities” by introducing amendment to enforce the Supreme Court’s marriage equality ruling.

Katy Perry and Ed Sheeran wade into the Taylor Swift vs Nicki Minaj Twitter fight.

> HRC co-founder Terry Bean’s ex-boyfriend sentenced for methamphetamine possession in a separate case from his and Bean’s upcoming trial in a sex abuse case.

> Kelly Clarkson perfectly covers *NSync’s “Bye, Bye, Bye”

earth2> NASA’s Kepler mission discovers Earth’s bigger, older cousin.

> Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito fear-mongers that Supreme Court marriage equality ruling could lead to the end of the minimum wage.

> Iconic Baltimore gay bar Club Hippo to close.

> Secretary of State John Kerry raises LGBT rights concerns with Nigerian president Muhammadu Buhari.

> Associated Press releases 1 million minutes of historical footage to YouTube.

> PhD student rails against being labeled “cisgendered” in HuffPost article. “By imposing the label “cisgendered” onto me, you do me psychological and intellectual violence. You are saying that I am the same as all the people who do accept and inhabit the normative roles attached to the social construct of “men,” “male,” or “masculine.” You are silencing my voice and rejecting my right to determine my own identity. You have put me into a binary that alienates me from gender discourse.”

> Alabama man fired for refusing to remove confederate flag on his truck.

spiderman> George R.R. Martin is bored with Marvel’s villain catalog. “I am tired of this Marvel movie trope where the bad guy has the same powers as the hero. The Hulk fought the Abomination, who is just a bad Hulk. Spider-Man fights Venom, who is just a bad Spider-Man. Iron Man fights Ironmonger, a bad Iron Man. Yawn. I want more films where the hero and the villain have wildly different powers. That makes the action much more interesting).”

> Rick Perry isn’t mincing words with Donald Trump. “He offers a barking carnival act that can be best described as Trumpism: a toxic mix of demagoguery, mean-spiritedness and nonsense that will lead the Republican Party to perdition if pursued.”

> Obama’s unique opportunity to be a voice for LGBT rights in Kenya. “Obama, whose father was born in Kenya, is possibly the only Western politician who can speak out against widespread, state-sanctioned discrimination on the African continent without being viewed as an imposing colonialist.”

> Is Henry Cavill joining the cast of Fifty Shades Darker?

The post News: Jurassic World 2, Henry Cavill, Donald Trump, Earth 2.0, Barney Frank appeared first on Towleroad.


Kyler Geoffroy

News: Jurassic World 2, Henry Cavill, Donald Trump, Earth 2.0, Barney Frank

Gay Bars Can Offer Entry to Community — But the Cover Charge Can Be Steep

Gay Bars Can Offer Entry to Community — But the Cover Charge Can Be Steep
Gay bars have played an outsized role in the lives of many gay men. They’re often our first introduction to the gay community, our entry to a Technicolor world after struggling to be true to ourselves in a black-and-white world. They’re where we meet others like ourselves and realize we’re not ‘the only one.’

But ‘the bars’ are also where far too many of us move from social drinker to alcoholic, a disease that plagues our community. Of course ‘the’ plague, HIV/AIDS, has been fueled in no small measure by the alcohol and substances — and casual liaisons — that fuel the bar scene.

For the book I’m writing about gay men’s resilience, I’m revisiting my own development as a gay man from the time I made the choice in 1981, at age 22 — just as AIDS began to kill gay men — to own my truth and ‘come out.’

I’m reading the journals I’ve kept since those young years, taking notes as I trace patterns and themes in my own behavior, emotions and mental health that shaped my life’s choices and led me toward my personal destiny at age 47 to be diagnosed with HIV — after reporting on HIV/AIDS as a journalist for 20 years at that point.

It’s painful at times to know how the story turns out as I read about a younger me doing his best to navigate the treacherous waters of shame over growing up poor and being a ‘starving writer’ living in a wealthy city. It’s startling to realize how many men I had sex with back then! It’s also discomfiting to realize how extremely I valued my appearance — and devalued my other assets and accomplishments. It makes all that sex seem a lot less like youthful hedonism and what we gay men like to call “play” — and a lot more like a desperate plea for validation.

I was 32 and living in Washington, D.C. in 1991 when I wrote about the bars and the ambivalence my regular patronage of them raised for me, 10 years after I decided that fateful first summer of AIDS, to embrace the fact of my homosexuality and begin figuring out what ‘gay’ would mean for me.

“How long have you been here?” I asked, approaching my friend Rich at JR’s, on Seventeenth Street NW.

“About a drink and a half,” he said.

I recalled Prufrock saying we “measure our lives in tablespoons,” and thought, “We measure our lives in cocktail glasses.”

“Is this funny?” I asked myself. A clever twist of wit. “Is it pathetic?”

I worried. Are we really nothing more than tragic masks, haunting the bars — always dimly lit and smoke-congealed, perhaps so we can’t see each other clearly for what we are or our situation for what it is?

Many of us live alone. Others have roommates yet still live alone. Our hustle-bustle city lives bounce us from place to place to place over the course of our days. From bed to work to the gym to a restaurant to a bar and maybe to bed with one who was a stranger but a moment ago.

The bars are our meeting places, our fraternity houses. But that’s what bars have always been, not just gay bars. They are places we go simply to be, refuges from the world where the macro instantly becomes micro and we can find connection to our little piece of the human race.

Yet in our subculture the bars take on a power, an allure and force all their own. We are drawn to them for we know we will find others like us. All thoughts of how little we have in common with most of these people, save for our sexual objects, disappear as we slide through the door and up to the bar for the first of what likely will be several rounds.

For days afterward, even, if we are given to reflection, after the hangover passes, we may lament our foolishness. We’ll say again to ourselves that we really want to be with others who share our interests — in books, in the theater, in opera or in collecting antiques.

Then, a few days later, we walk past the bar and the sight of glasses being lifted to grinning mouths entices us inside once more.

“How long have you been here?” you’ll ask.

“About a drink and a half,” your friend will reply.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.


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Rick Santorum now wishes he had never compared homosexuality to bestiality

Rick Santorum now wishes he had never compared homosexuality to bestiality

Former US Senator Rick Santorum now regrets ever making the slippery slope argument when it comes to homosexuality.

Back in 2003, Santorum infamously made the claim that if people were allowed legally to have any kind of consensual sex other than heterosexual sex, it could lead to a legal ruling allowing ‘man on child, man on dog, or whatever the case may be.’

‘I wish I had never said that,’ Santorum said Wednesday (22 July) in an interview with Rachel Maddow of MSNBC.

‘It was a flippant comment that should not have come out of my mouth,’ said Santorum who finished second to Mitt Romney in the race for the Republican Party presidential nomination in 2012.

He added: ‘But the substance of what I said – which is what I referred to – I stand by that. I don’t — I wish I had not said it in the flippant term that I did. And I know people were offended by it and I wish I hadn’t said it.’

Santorum has made many anti-gay comments in recent years from opposing same-sex marriage and allowing gays in the Boy Scouts of America, among other topics.

Maddow, who is an out lesbian, also asked Santorum if he believes homosexuality is a choice.

‘You know, I’ve never answered that question because I don’t really know the answer to that question,’ he said. ‘But I suspect that there’s all sorts of reasons that people end up the way they are. And I’ll sort of leave it at that.’

Then he added: ‘There are people alive who identified themselves as gay and lesbian and they no longer are.’

Santorum is finishing near the bottom of the polls in what is a crowded Republican field which is currently being led by Donald Trump.

The post Rick Santorum now wishes he had never compared homosexuality to bestiality appeared first on Gay Star News.

Greg Hernandez

www.gaystarnews.com/article/rick-santorum-now-wishes-he-had-never-compared-homosexuality-to-bestiality/

Nine Pastors Facing Trial For Attending Same-Sex Wedding Of Another Church Pastor

Nine Pastors Facing Trial For Attending Same-Sex Wedding Of Another Church Pastor

urlNine Methodist pastors in Michigan may face a church trial and for attending a same-sex wedding.

It all started when Benjamin Hutchison, Senior Pastor at Cassopolis United Methodist Church in Cassopolis, MI, married his long-time partner, Monty. He was forced to resign from his job for “violating church law,” which forbids pastors from marrying someone of the same gender.

Thirty pastors attended Hutchinson’s wedding with 15 joining together to officially pronounce Hutchison and his partner “husband and husband.” Of those 15, nine are now being threatened with disciplinary action by the district bishop.

Related: Pastor Single-Handedly Saves Church. Oh, He’s Gay? He’s Fired!

Michael Tupper was one of the pastors who officiated the wedding. He also signed the men’s marriage certificate. He said he did so to protest the church’s stance.

“I want to highlight the injustice, at the same time to witness to our inclusive God who does welcome all people and welcomes them whether they are gay or straight,” Tupper told the Kalamazoo Gazette/MLive.com. “It’s just another opportunity to celebrate and witness to our inclusive God.”

Related: Another Methodist Minister Facing Charges For Performing A Same-Sex Wedding

h/t: The New Civil Rights Movement

Graham Gremore

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