Tuesday, June 12, 2012

The straight people's unofficial guide to the 2012 TC Pride Festival

Update: I wrote this in 2010, updated it in 2011, and am now reposting for 2012! Happy Pride!

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The 2012 Twin Cities Pride Festival and Parade is this June 23-24. And it's a doozie of a celebration. The numbers alone hint at why:
  • The festival is huge -- the third largest in the nation.*
  • The Twin Cities GLBT community is vast, second only to San Francisco (by percentage of population).*
  • Minneapolis, as of 2000, had the third highest concentration of GLBT couples in the U.S. (Just imagine where we are now!)*
* Source: Demographics-Attendance, TC Pride 2008


Given that the Twin Cities is clearly swarming with we GLBT people and our allies, I find it hard to imagine that there are people with absolutely no reasonably close contact with anyone or anything gay. But just in case, I thought a guide for those ten straight people who live completely outside our world would be helpful.


So here is my Straight People's Unofficial Guide to the 2012 TC Pride Festival and Parade (and gay people in general):

  • Don't let all that flamboyance fool you, we can be as dull as the next person. At the same time, that seemingly achingly boring co-worker in the cube next to you just might be the most fabulous drag king or queen at the parade. You just don't know. 
  •  Our world is as diverse as yours. Given our hugeness, you can imagine there is a niche for everyone. We are hipsters, geeks, corporate types, suburbanites, city dwellers, rural folks, families, singles, couples, old people, young people, happy people, sad people. We are brown, black, tan, and white. We are rich, poor, and just getting by. You get my drift. And we will all be at the festival (or at least a representative sample will be there).
  • We claim many names to express our identities. The standards of course are gay, lesbian, bisexual. But we are also queer, dyke, boi, stud, femme, butch, bear, and on and on. The transgender community is fierce and strong here, complete with its own rhythms, language, and lifestyles. We are all in this together. I personally like to call myself "queer" because of its inclusiveness, but will use the more tame "lesbian" when needed. 
  • When I came out over 20 years ago in my mid-thirties and went to my first pride festival, it was somewhat daring to be a politician in the parade or a corporation with a tent hawking wares and showing support in the park. Times have changed! These days, the parade is way too long because so many politicians, churches, and businesses join in. In fact, some people don't like how "corporate" we've become. I think it's a wonderful sign of our normality, and of our political and buying clout. 
  • Lots and lots of straight people come to the festival and parade. In fact, it is impossible to tell who is gay, straight, bisexual, or something else all together. Don't worry about going to Loring Park and being labeled as gay. We won't be able to tell, and neither will your neighbors if you wind up on TV. Beside, being gay is great. If you get mistaken for one of us, enjoy!
But lest you think this is a commentary on how "we are just like you but gay," here are a few of the ways our similarities to you part, and why we fight so hard for simple things like the right to marry, to be parents, to worship, to be ourselves. 
    • Parenting/family. We are crawling with kids. Some of us (like me) had kids before we came out, and many others chose one of the many routes to becoming a parent while "in the life:" adoption, artificial insemination, fostering. My point is this. Most GLBT folks have to work really hard to become parents (it's pretty hard to get "knocked up" by accident in a same-gender relationship). Since that means we typically need to consciously choose to become parents, we are pretty committed to being good ones.
    • Worship. While many GLBT people can and do attend mostly straight places of worship, lots of us like to pray together, amongst ourselves. Religion is at the root of most good and much evil. It is used to raise up our common humanity and to create war. So, it's nice to pray where you know you are loved. I know of a church that is all African American, all gay and lesbian people. And they are holy rollers, living by "The Word," their way.  I love this, deeply.
    •  Marriage. You truly have to be living off the grid to have missed that GLBT people are fighting for our right to marry. Some people in the gay community are less enthused, wondering why we would want to engage in a practice that has failed so miserably in the straight world (the over 50% divorce rate being their proof point). But lots of us want to get married for all the reasons straight people want to tie the knot -- love, commitment, family, a nice party -- and legal protections. In Minnesota there is going to be a ballot this fall letting people vote on whether or not marriage can constitutionally be defined as only between a man and a woman. Now we have to spend all kinds of time fighting that idiotic piece of legislation instead of other more important social justice issues. Grrr.
    • Health care. This is actually connected to my marriage point. Those of us in committed relationships don't get access to family health care plans unless we happen to work for a company or organization that provides "domestic partner" benefits. This is expensive and dangerous as it results in many people going uninsured, including children. 
    Now that you are armed with more knowledge having read this guide, I invite you to come to our festival and parade and join in all the fun. I also invite you to join us in our fight for full equality and acceptance, in life and under the law. Happy Pride! 


    Freedom Band


    Dykes on bikes
     
    Welcoming Church
     
    We have political clout. And we vote
     
    Yes s/he does
     
    GLBTQ youth getting our support, supporting each other

    Pride is a family affair for parents with wee ones...

    ...and with teen ones

    Me, with random clown
     
    Friends being festive, having fun

    Photo source: My personal TC Pride photos 2007-2011

      4 comments:

      1. I just want to say I have enjoyed reading your blog. My partner and I are new to Minneapolis via Palm Springs CA, and we are looking forward to our first Twin Cities Pride! Thank you and all the GBLT that are out with pride and to those that are still afraid to come out.

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      2. Thank you, and enjoy Pride and getting to know the GLBTQ community here.

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      3. Thanks so much for this! Last year, some friends and I were hanging out in the cities for the day and accidentally ended up at the Pride festival. Seeing as we all go to a conservative Christian college, most of them found it really awkward. But man, it looked like a blast to me! I'll be honest, as a Christian, I've felt really conflicted as to what I "should" believe about GLBT issues in the past. But after seeing my former high school perform "The Laramie Project" this last February, my mind was made up. I could not be a part of the hate and condemnation anymore, even passively. So anyway, today I was looking up things going on in the cities over the summer, and found out that the Pride Festival is next weekend. But I wasn't quite sure if I would be welcome there as a straight person. Your blog answered my question, and as long as I don't have to work, I'm going to try to make it over to Loring Park next weekend! =D

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      4. That's fantastic. Have fun and Happy Pride! I am happy this post helped you feel more comfortable about attending and with Pride in general

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