Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Baby Steps to Four O'Clock


In which I keep a friend.

So not so much with the telling my mom anything important. But! But a friend from my old job texted me the other day, and we were doing our usual jesting. Then I told her I’m gay. Her response: That’s cool. Then: Why are you telling me this? I could’ve cried. Not that I’m a crier. Unless I’m getting bits of myself “surgically” ripped away from me, apparently; still bitter about that one. But if I were. I know it’s not a big deal at all, but it was so good to be shown that it isn’t a big deal, to the point of her wondering why that was even relevant. I don’t know, I thought it was cool. Plus good practice for telling other people, because I know that it can be okay. Sure, a text is almost a complete cop-out, but progress is progress, that’s what I’ve always said. And by always I mean I just said it just now.

In other news, some snippets of conversations:

Me (reading last week’s Entertainment Weekly): Simon-from-Firefly’s actor is gay!*
Mom: Oh, I didn’t know that. I like him.

Mom: When I was a kid, you HAD to sign your name in cursive; you couldn’t just use regular letters for your signature.
Dad: They didn’t have gay marriage when you were a kid either.
Me: Yeah, and they also didn’t have gay people when you were a kid.
Dad: But the world changes and adopts (intending adapts).
Me: Because people are gay now and can’t have kids so they have to adopt.

Me (in response to a movie trailer sans Olivia Wilde, after talking about Cowboys And Aliens): Where’s Olivia Wilde?! This movie would be better with Olivia Wilde.
Dad: Yeah, I’d marry her.
Me: I would!
Dad: Well you can’t, because I’m already marrying her and if you marry her that would make us fellow, er, polygamists. Which would just be weird because I’m your dad.

*If you don’t know what this is, don’t even bother trying to be my friend because it just won’t work out. Sorry.

3 comments:

  1. I like your stories. And you're right about how telling people is good practice. In my experience, it got easier to say the words "I'm gay" every time I told someone. And it was validating. All of these people kept loving me even though I was (gasp!) gay. It wasn't a big deal to them. And with all that support and love, it became a not-so-big deal inside me, too. It's all a very beautiful process, really.

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  2. Had to comment just for firefly!!!!

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