So now we’re beyond Marriage Equality, what next? The indicators of homophobia, biphobia and
transphobia are still all around us. Who
gets bullied at school? Who disproportionately
wrestles with mental health issues, depression, anxiety, self-harm and suicide? Who has hate graffiti on their walls? Who is targeted for violence on the streets,
in their workplaces, from their families?
Who is not able to look at any media, anytime, and see someone who looks
a bit like them, wrestling with some of the things they think about?
One of the very difficult issues for queer and trans* people
to navigate is connection with others.
What happens when you transition?
Can you keep relationships with people who have known you as one
gender? Will those people treat you with
respect? Will you be safe? Or do you have to build a completely
different social and support network from scratch?
For same and both-sex attracted people, the disconnect from
our families can be just as severe. I’ve
supported young people whose families have kicked them out when they learned
who their sons or daughters loved. I’ve
talked one parent down from trying to have their daughter institutionalized as
mentally unwell – simply because she was lesbian.
But it’s not just young people. I’ve been out for 24 years. When I first came out, the homophobia and
biphobia of my parents was so vicious I refused to see them for a year. They told me they could never respect me
again, that my sexuality was unnatural and a symptom of being parented poorly. They tried, at length, to work out if it was
my depressed mother’s lack of interest or my father’s fondness for playing
cricket with me that was the problem. They wanted me to be lesbian, because that would be easier for them.
No one in my family would even think of saying such things
now. Yet several years ago, when an aunt
was visiting London, my sister could tell me not to make such a big deal about
whether or not to come out to her.
“I’m not going to talk about my sexuality,” she said,
straightly. My sister was single. I’d been with my lover for ten years. We owned a house together, parented her
children together. To not come out meant
not being able to talk about my life with any honesty. To come out meant the risk of my aunt’s
reaction framing the entire night. We
were faced with quite different dilemmas.
Now, when I have a female partner there is no hostility, but
no one in my family can bring themselves to ask me anything about her. When a relationship ends, there is literally
nothing to say, because my family have no idea how much she has meant to me, what
we may have shared. These things had
shifted markedly with my mother before she died; in her absence, there is a
gaping hole where some of the sustaining relationships in my life are ignored
and minimised by my family.
I share stories of how my family treats me with other queer
people. Telling them in public, or to
straight friends, feels shaming in a way it’s difficult to name. I’m an out and proud bisexual woman. How can there still be such bruising
homophobia and biphobia in my life?
That’s the beyond marriage equality I’m interested in
talking about. Moving now into educating
our communities. Gathering information –
like say, by using the census – about the kinds of experiences queer and trans*
people have based on our sexuality and gender identity. Gathering information about victimisation –
like say, by recording sexuality and gender diversity – in crime stats about
street violence. Expanding the Human
Rights Act to protect trans* folk from cis-gender based discrimination.
A good starting point would be a national queer and trans*
resource centre, funded to identify exactly what beyond marriage equality might
mean. Able to develop queer and trans*
specific materials for schools and our national curriculum. Able to work with the Human Rights Commission
to ensure experiences of queer and trans* discrimination are named, understood,
responded to appropriately. Able to
intervene in social institutions which are responding to queer and trans*
people – New Zealand Police, mental health systems, healthcare more broadly –
and ensure processes are transparent and well-equipped. Able to develop completely new resources –
emergency housing for young queer and trans* people who need somewhere safe to
stay; social work and prevention resources around suicide and self-harm, intimate
partner and sexual violence which are specific to the queer community.
The kinds of difference Marriage Equality will make to queer
and trans* peoples lives are important.
This was a social change moment – and make no mistake, we won it. The people arguing against equality looked
like bigoted hate-mongers. But we still had to
listen to their vitriol, had to protect ourselves from its impact on our sense
of self in a world where those things sadly do not just sound ridiculous - which is how they should sound.
It’s time to celebrate – and to work out what else we need
to dismantle homophobia, biphobia and transphobia for good.
4 comments:
For a start we could include trans people / gender identity in the human rights act. It shouldn't be an allowable grounds for discrimination as it is currently.
me.
SO agree me, soooo agree.
Nicely put, My fear was/is the bill is meaningless if no other change happens around the treatment of the whole LGBT community. I live in hope, and the young don't see this as the final victory!
If someone does not like, approve of, support, (or any other negative), your sexuality/lifestyle/whatever, whether their opinion makes sense to you or not, that is their right.
We call it freedom of opinion. That is a fundamental human right.
If that affects their family relationships, it remains their right. Just because you don't like it does not mean that they are wrong. It merely means that you don't agree.
Instead of being bigoted against people who don't support you, or who just don't want talk about your sexuality, why don't you practice tolerance and allow them their opinion? Surely that would be the tolerant thing to do?
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