By D. Gregory Smith | Bozeman, Montana -- New York Pride? Check.
San Diego, Seattle, Vancouver, Chicago, Atlanta, Miami, San Francisco, Boston, Portland, Kansas City, Dallas, L.A., Denver, Philly?
Double check.
Oklahoma City, Bisbee, Anchorage, Bozeman, Wichita, Boise, Flagstaff?
Well, uh….
I know, not exactly the top of the list for most of you. Many of us actively fled rural life to get to urban safety. I get that- I was one of them. For a while, anyway. But I want you to consider going to a gay pride event in an out-of the-way place this summer.
Why? Because we need you.
LGBT people live in rural America. We work here, go to school, own property, pay taxes, raise families, attend churches, shop and donate to charity. We don’t have a lot of gay bars, LGBT sports clubs, drag shows and neighborhoods where we can hold hands with our partners. Nonetheless, we live here. We love here. We have friends and families here.
Sometimes we do it under a great deal of stress.
I work with a lot of LGBT persons who have really good reasons for living in rural America. We don’t get a lot of support. Far too often, the strongest reason to leave is to find a greater sense of community. Sometimes, that is the only reason- the driving reason, that makes them pack up the car and head to Denver or Seattle or Portland.
Creating community in a small town isn’t always easy. There are a lot of obstacles to overcome- fear, shame, stigma- all the old tapes. We don’t have a large pool of organizers, and often the same people are the ones organizing every event. Burnout is common. Sometimes we just need some encouragement.
And that’s where you come in.
The fight for LGBT Equality is not going to be won in the cities. It’s already mostly won there. It’s going to be won in small-town America, where people need to see gay people as human, normal and neighbors- not just some characters on television. It’s going to be won when the lady who runs the local Holiday Inn meets real-live lesbians and finds them to be just like any other guests. When the casual onlooker comes to the parade to see “freaks” and walks away disappointed, when he sees families and friends laughing and cheering. When a bi kid is accepted and loved instead of encouraged to “get off the fence”. When locals see their gay neighbors in the light of day, paying our own way, as deserving of love, respect and commitment as anyone else. When drag shows and AIDS charity events are just as normal and accepted as karaoke, rodeo and the county fair. When our rural and small-town legislators, see us simply as citizens with the same rights as every other constituent. When kids don’t say “gay” as an epithet of scorn and derision.
When we are seen as part of a larger community. That’s when full equality will happen.
We need your encouragement to continue the struggle for that equality. It can be pretty lonely out here, sometimes. And I’ve come to believe that, as important as the work in the cities is, those who work to improve the lives of LGBT persons in rural America are the real heroes. The drag queens in Butte or Bisby may not be as glamorous as the Key West queens, but they’re certainly just as brave- braver even. The HIV activist in Anchorage has just as many concerns as the activist in Atlanta. We want to know you have our backs when we’re working to educate legislators and local politicians and school boards and businesses. We want to know that it’s okay to stay here, even when it’s hard.
We need you.
So look up a rural Pride event this summer. Go to it. Let us know you support us. Clap at the little parade, dance in a barn, make out with a hot cowboy, cowgirl and/or farmer, encourage a teen, hug a drag queen, listen to an elder, give money to a PFLAG chapter. Just go- we need you.
Because you need us, too.
2 comments:
Excellent article. Rural communities are often isolated from exposure to LGBTQ people, but are really quite capable of acceptance when they learn that we are just as human as they are, with the same pursuits of love and happiness.
It is the small minded minority still entrapped in their indoctrinated fear and seeking to impose their values on the rights of others, who need to see that their fears are groundless; that their personal beliefs are not threatened by people who love each other, regardless of gender.
Greg is right, support your local rural Pride event.
"So look up a rural Pride event this summer. Go to it. Let us know you support us. Clap at the little parade, dance in a barn, make out with a hot cowboy, cowgirl and/or farmer, encourage a teen, hug a drag queen, listen to an elder, give money to a PFLAG chapter. Just go- we need you.
Because you need us, too."
True words were never spoken.
Rural anything needs us citified folk to survive, if for no other reason than our example shows them the certainty of their down home ways, which is not necessarily a bad thing in of itself.
40-years or more ago I lived in rural Canada for a spell, Ayr Ontario to be precise ... although it's long gone now in the then future amalgamation of the Galt Hespler Preston soon to be named "Regional Municipality of Cambridge" super community. It was quaint, precious even, and Lord knows they were not ready for me or my partner Jon ... no not one of them, all 349 including livestock and household pets if you cared to count them all; but, they were welcoming even if they didn't quite understand what we were about; and I like to think that they were changed even if only in the smallest of ways by their daily contact with us during our 5-years sojourn in their midst; and there's nothing quite like making out with a farmer ... I should know, having found mine direct from a corn field in north-western Iowa in the concrete canyons of Montréal where he was as much a fish out of water as I was on main street of "Bible-belt" middle America.
Warren C. E. Austin
The Gay Deceiver
Toronto, Canada
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