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02 Nov 2008 12:54 pm
Why Marriage Matters
Four years' ago, before I ever dreamed it would happen to me, I wrote the following short essay for Time, trying to explain to people who might not fully understand why the m-word means so much to many of us gay men and lesbians. We may not be a majority of human beings - we are probably only 2 to 3 percent - but that doesn't make us any less human beings, and for us, access to marriage, to full membership in our own families, is the dream of our lives, and the struggle of my own life. Please, do what you can in California not to have this taken away from so many:
As a child, I had no idea what homosexuality was. I grew up in a
traditional home — Catholic, conservative, middle class. Life was
relatively simple: education, work, family. I was raised to aim high in
life, even though my parents hadn't gone to college. But one thing was
instilled in me. What mattered was not how far you went in life, how
much money you earned, how big a name you made for yourself. What
really mattered was family and the love you had for one another. The
most important day of your life was not graduation from college or your
first day at work or a raise or even your first house. The most
important day of your life was when you got married. It was on that day
that all your friends and all your family got together to celebrate the
most important thing in life: your happiness — your ability to make a
new home, to form a new but connected family, to find love that put
everything else into perspective.
But as I grew older, I found that this was somehow not available to me. I didn't feel the things for girls that my peers did. All the emotions
and social rituals and bonding of teenage heterosexual life eluded me.
I didn't know why. No one explained it. My emotional bonds to other
boys were one-sided; each time I felt myself falling in love, they
sensed it, pushed it away. I didn't and couldn't blame them. I got
along fine with my buds in a nonemotional context, but something was
awry, something not right. I came to know almost instinctively that I
would never be a part of my family the way my siblings might one day
be. The love I had inside me was unmentionable, anathema. I remember
writing in my teenage journal one day, "I'm a professional human being.
But what do I do in my private life?"
I never discussed my real life. I couldn't date girls and so immersed
myself in schoolwork, the debate team, school plays, anything to give
me an excuse not to confront reality. When I looked toward the years
ahead, I couldn't see a future. There was just a void. Was I going to
be alone my whole life? Would I ever have a most important day in my
life? It seemed impossible, a negation, an undoing. To be a full part
of my family, I had to somehow not be me. So, like many other gay
teens, I withdrew, became neurotic, depressed, at times close to
suicidal. I shut myself in my room with my books night after night
while my peers developed the skills needed to form real relationships
and loves. In wounded pride, I even voiced a rejection of family and
marriage. It was the only way I could explain my isolation.
It took years for me to realize that I was gay, years more to tell
others and more time yet to form any kind of stable emotional bond with
another man. Because my sexuality had emerged in solitude — and without
any link to the idea of an actual relationship — it was hard later to
reconnect sex to love and self-esteem. It still is. But I persevered,
each relationship slowly growing longer than the last, learning in my
20s and 30s what my straight friends had found out in their teens. But
even then my parents and friends never asked the question they would
have asked automatically if I were straight: So, when are you going to
get married? When will we be able to celebrate it and affirm it and
support it? In fact, no one — no one — has yet asked me that question.
When people talk about gay marriage, they miss the point. This isn't
about gay marriage. It's about marriage. It's about family. It's about
love. It isn't about religion. It's about civil marriage licenses.
Churches can and should have the right to say no to marriage for gays
in their congregations, just as Catholics say no to divorce, but
divorce is still a civil option. These family values are not options
for a happy and stable life. They are necessities. Putting gay
relationships in some other category — civil unions, domestic
partnerships, whatever — may alleviate real human needs, but by their
very euphemism, by their very separateness, they actually build a wall
between gay people and their families. They put back the barrier many
of us have spent a lifetime trying to erase.
It's too late for me to undo my past. But I want above everything else
to remember a young kid out there who may even be reading this now. I
want to let him know that he doesn't have to choose between himself and
his family anymore. I want him to know that his love has dignity, that
he does indeed have a future as a full and equal part of the human
race. Only marriage will do that. Only marriage can bring him home.
(Photo: Justin Sullivan/Getty.)
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