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Letters from the Lesbeyond
by Jennifer Schumaker
“Pioneering My Daily Suburban Pride
Parade”
(“Letters from the Lesbeyond” is
a column I wrote (for 2-1/2 years) for Update, Southern California’s
oldest GLBT newspaper. This is one of the articles which chronicle
my lesbian suburban pioneer adventure and reflections in the northern
area of San Diego County, California. An earlier version of this
article appeared in Update Issue
#1131. August 28, 2003. Update closed
it's doors in April 2006.)
I am Out. Very, very out. And I live in Suburbia.
I was prepared for the two existences not to mesh. After all, I
see an average of one rainbow sticker every two weeks, and I sometimes
have to dash to Trader Joe’s whether I need groceries or
not, because I know I will probably be able to get an LGBT fix.
The last time I was there, we were out in force. For my neighborhood,
that means six “nearly positives” and one “maybe” in
spiked hair and leather wrist bands. I had my four-year-old with
me. I told him, “See, honey, there are other gay people up
here!”
Still, I do often feel like I am alone, a pioneer
in my gayness. Webster’s Dictionary defines a pioneer as “A
person or group that originates or helps open up a new line of
thought or activity,” and, “One of the first to settle
in a territory.” I cannot quote Oh! Pioneer!, but I do know
the words to The Gay and Lesbian Pride Parade Song, which I find
myself humming as I walk a kind of one-woman Pride Parade around
San Diego North County*. But I have other ways of staking my claim.
At the grocery store, in exchange for my change,
I often give the clerk a smile and say, “Remember, another
lesbian spent money here today.” The response is usually
a blank stare. I believe they are processing. That is what I want.
Sometimes I modify my greeting, as when I do a small kindness for
someone. As they say “thank you,” my “you’re
welcome” is followed quickly by a bright, “Remember,
a lesbian was kind to you today.”
Once, I addressed an apparently hard-of-hearing
man and I found myself shouting across the Von’s Grocery
store parking lot, “I said…Remember, a lesbian was
kind to you today!” By the looks from the other shoppers,
I gathered I had reached a few extra people that time. I blushed…I
really did. But I was proud.
At a Pier I in Carmel Mountain Ranch, a neighboring
suburbia, my gaydar went into “tilt” at a young man
shopping –off to college or something— with his mother.
As they took his plush pillows and scented candles to the register,
I completed my transaction and hit the saleswoman with my lesbian
greeting. I wanted that young man to hear something I could never
have imagined encountering in my suburban youth. If he didn’t
need it, fine. I needed to say it. Whatever we were all experiencing,
I certainly had their attention. The clerk started to reply, stammered,
started, stammered, while I waited patiently and the boy and his
mother unabashedly stared. Finally, she spit out happily, “Oh,
I think that happens every day.”
Good answer.
I have learned by living in North County* that
there are still many, many people here who do not know of even
one out gay person in their lives. Maybe those teenage boys at
the mall who were using “gay” as a way to insult each
other had never heard a mom-style lecture on their choice of language
from a lesbian coming out to them in a candy store. That day, as
with most days, it has felt right for me to be that out person
for someone, for some small moment. I hope it opens up something
for those with whom I interact. I know it expands my world.
It is not enough for us to be “everywhere,” we
need to be known. When the first Black families moved into suburbia,
it was known. It was something. As LGBT people, invisibility can
be invoked in favor of safety --something I acknowledge that other
minorities, for better and often for worse, cannot employ. At the
same time that I hate this, I grudgingly heed it, for myself and
my children. But when it is about shame or discomfort, mine or
the other party’s, I am out, a little loud, cheerful, and
proud.
I am grateful to the pioneers who came before
me –to all the others who have come out and stayed out in
their families and careers; those who have made our “gay
meccas” like Hillcrest and surrounding neighborhoods into
the beautiful home and source of Pride for others to carry into
what can be, as it often is for me, the “Lesbeyond.” You
are possibly one of them, and I thank you. I take you with me around
my suburban world, on the daily route of my personal Pioneer Pride
Parade.
(*In San Diego, locals call the different geographical
county areas here as South Bay, East County, Central San Diego
and North County. - Webmaster note.
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