Today, at work, as we shared a long session of laughs and
gossip over coffee (which, mind you, doesn't happen too often in a college
staff room), the conversation steered towards sex-change operations. It felt
like I had to make a physical effort to not give my strong opinions an outlet. ‘Careful,
Resh’, I had to tell myself. ‘You really like these people and they seem to
adore you. You don’t want to mess it up.’ But thankfully, no one seemed to have
an opinion about the subject, it was a general discussion of facts, about
public figures, and people we knew in real life who underwent the procedure. And
then, one of my colleagues commented on how a sex-change operation was still an
accepted practice, but lesbians? Shee! I can never accept that!
Uh-oh. Now that awoke the dragon in my head to push my
tongue out and breathe fire. I smiled with all 32 teeth, a thinly-veiled
attempt to mask my indignation, and perhaps even trick my brain into thinking I wasn't annoyed. I took deep breaths the entire time, as out of four of my
colleagues, one stood silent, one was on the fence, two vehemently argued with
the whole ‘It’s not the natural order’, and ‘they cannot have kids’ and ‘the
future generation will grow up confused’ arguments, while I tirelessly gave my
much worn-out ‘Love has no gender, no race…’ speech, filled with examples of
homosexual relationships that are complete families, and productive, happy
individuals, and heterosexual marriages fucking it up.
I hope that the reader is not foolish enough to think for
even a second that this essay has a happy ending. No, I did not change the
minds of my colleagues by the end of our 90-minute debate. And although I did manage
to shut them up with a lot of valid points, I doubt whether they actually took
me seriously. I assume that they just didn’t argue further because they felt
sorry for me. Speaking of which, the one colleague who was on the fence because
she wasn’t against gay rights, she told me that she felt ‘sad' for ‘these people’.
Am I frustrated? Yes. Is it going to help? No.
Most people from my generation and older hold the same
notions as my work family. And it exasperates me sometimes that nothing can
probably change their mind, and they will always choose to be so narrow-minded about
this issue. But I shoot this negativity out of my mind as soon as it enters.
The simple reason being, I wasn't born with a mind-set
that stood up for gay rights either. I was born in a society that conditioned
me to believe that man-woman relationships are the natural order, and any other
kind of sexual association is not normal. Never mind that this is the same
society that once got their 13-year old girls married to 70-year old men, and still
continues to sanction marriages between uncles and nieces, and first cousins of
the opposite gender.
Until one of my best friends came out to me, I didn't even think this was an issue to think about. And six years ago, I wasn't open-minded enough to understand that. Of course, I was like the teacher on the
fence, I felt sad for my confused friend, not outraged that she had committed
an unnatural crime. And then I saw how happy she was, the way she had never
been in heterosexual relationships. How much emotional stability and maturity
she gained in those few years after she finally started being honest with
herself. I think that put a lot of things into perspective, and the process of
opening my mind was an easy one, albeit still gradual.
That’s what I realized today. I probably had it easy, with the added benefit that I was younger. People are set in their ways. They are not to going to
change their thoughts and opinions in a way that makes them uncomfortable. They
are not even willing to question why they persistently stand up against some
issues.
So how are we going to change that? That’s the question I
want to put out there by writing this. Because I am seriously stumped. I know
that you can change the attitude of people with time, but how? When they all
stand up against you together like this and you end up looking like the weirdo
who fights for strange things or the child who hasn't seen much of the world
and therefore talks in such idealistic terms.
Another thing that unnerves me is that people naturally
assume that since I stand up for gay rights, I must be gay. My sexual orientation should have nothing to do
with why I stand up for something I believe in. Do you have to be a wild animal
to be a member of the PETA? But for those who ask – I believe strongly that
people should be able to love whomever they want and share their lives with
them the way they want irrespective of their gender. So long as they’re not
encroaching upon your rights, what’s your problem?
A time will come, when there will be a chapter in the
history textbooks around the world about how homosexuals were oppressed in the 21st
century, the same way women and blacks were in earlier times. Then there will be records of a revolution that changed everything, a revolution that is still in the making. Children and adults will be bewildered by
the accounts of how gay individuals were treated, and be grateful that they
live in a time when all this has passed. I really, really wish I live long
enough to see that.

Irrespective of which side I am on, it is a well written piece.
ReplyDeleteI love the arguments you've made. and I especially love the title you chose to go with it. I also have no answer to the question you're actually asking. yes, changing older mindsets is the biggest challenge and I speak personally when I say that it only happens when you have a personal brush with alternative sexuality. until you see that attraction is a sexless thing... well yes.
ReplyDeleteAnd I can't take credit for the title. It was a really nice TV show on HBO about a group of lesbian friends and their relationships.
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