For those who are close to me, you know I am a very open person and will talk to anyone about anything, assuming respect and good taste are present. Well, assuming makes an ass, as we all know. I thought that we, as a society, were beyond the slurs, terms of degradation, and judgement without reason. I thought that people were actually starting to accept people for who they are- nurture and nature. I thought that, as individualistic as this country is, it would be uncommon and unnatural to pigeonhole persons based on a lifestyle choice (or non-choice), ethnicity, body type, or any other non non-sequitur when it comes to knowing another human being. I thought that people could actually look at others and say, "This is who they are, I choose to love them". I thought wrong. I assumed. I'm an ass.
Why was I naive enough to let go of the notion that people have their own agendas? Better an ass than an asshole, I believe. I understand that I am not without fault, however I do pride myself on accepting people for who they are. My sister is a perfect example: she and I are very different people with different lifestyles and we do not always see eye-to-eye. However, I know who she is on the most basic level, and would not try and change her. On the more complicated levels, her choices may differ from mine, but I do not see them as wrong because we differ. I see them as hers, and as long as she is alive, happy & not wasting her life away doing something self-deprecating -or not doing anything at all- then I choose to support her. (For the record, she just landed a huge career opportunity and I am very proud of her.)
Enough walking on eggshells. I am proud of who I am, I was born this way, and I love me. Not like... LOVE. I am a product of nature and nurture. I can look at humans without a filter, and though I feel I was born with this ability, I have worked hard to hone this ability over the last ten years. I love people. Not men. Not women. People. I love to love people for who they are in their soul- regardless of their gender. I see people without judging them or judging myself for caring about them. You like what you like, you love who you love, & you are who you are... You can always better yourself, but you cannot change who you innately are. If I choose to bring a man to introduce to my loved ones, I am asked the following questions:
"How old is he?"
"What does he do for a living?"
"How'd you two meet?"
However, if I were to bring a woman, under the same circumstances, the questions & statements differ tremendously:
"Guess you've never had sex with a real man."
"How do you have sex?"
"Can I watch/join you?"
Seriously? I'd put some serious money on the notion that just reading those questions made some of my readers uncomfortable; now imagine hearing them out loud and in front of the person you brought, assuring them acceptance was just a click away. I see where people might be inquisitive, not being a part of that world, and that is absolutely fine, but it all comes down to respect. Ask if you can talk to me about it, don't just offer your penis up on a plate; I am pretty sure I can find one on my own, thanks. Also, just because a woman can be attracted to another woman, does not mean the following:
1. She is attracted to every single woman.
2. She has no standards in her selection process.
3. She will have sex with any man.
4. She is down to have sex with you and your girlfriend/friend/buddy/dog/homeless guy.
5. She is a toy, play thing, piece of meat, or non-human.
6. She has "Daddy Issues".
That being said, I have none of the above in my little black book: I'm a lady. Though I pride myself on not being like other girls in many ways, you still have to talk to me with the same respect you would a normal girl... Scratch that. I want more respect. I don't lie, cheat, steal, or play games, and I put it all on the table. If every conversation we have turns sexual or to my experience and dating history (usually focused on women, because men are simple creatures) then you will shortly find our conversations will dwindle quickly to non-existent. There is so much more to me than that, and if you cannot see that, or don't care to explore that side of me, you will never explore the side of me you are showing obsessive tendencies toward. Treating a woman- or anyone, for that matter- like a science experiment or social abnormality is uncharacteristically crude, even in this desensitized world we live in. We clear? Use your filter, have some respect & remember that people who live differently- be it sexuality, religion, or otherwise- does not make them subhuman and something for you to dissect at your own discretion. You cannot put me into a box, you cannot force me to label myself or my core feelings, nor can you force me to be anything but a happy, free individual.
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Proud to be me. No labels. |
The most painful of all the things I have experienced in my life- from high school horrors of being attacked in every way for being a published model to having my figure criticized by complete strangers to losing loved ones- the most excruciating is the rejection from someone you admire. I have had men I was being courted by drop me upon finding out I have been involved with women. I have had many, many men spout out the three aforementioned questions, and then ad-lib a myriad or other moronic statements. The day that stopped me in my tracks, was the day a close friend's mother informed me that I was the problem. This coming from a supposed 'Gay Rights Activist' and 'lover of the arts'. To this day, when our paths cross, she refuses to address me, even when I have shown her nothing but respect, mature demeanor, and given zero reasons for her to have any distaste. Obviously, I have lost a massive amount of respect for her, but it still kills me that she just doesn't understand me, my lifestyle (whatever that means), or anything about the variety of personalities encompassed within whatever community he thinks I am a part of. There are so many types of people out there: malicious, altruistic, artistic, selfish, brilliant- the same is true in every race, sexuality, gender, ethnicity, religion and so on. Like what you like, but keep an open mind and use your damn filter. All people have feelings, not just straight ones.
I'd like to introduce my audience to something called NOH8. The NOH8 Campaign is a photographic silent protest created by celebrity photographer Adam Bouska and partner Jeff Parshley. It initially was in direct response to Prop 8 in California, however it has become a wide-standing statement against hate in general, especially towards the LGBT (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender) community. Take a minute and check it out, if you haven't already.
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Courtesy NOH8 |
We can easily forgive a child who is afraid of the dark; the real tragedy of life is when people are afraid of the light. -Plato
Thanks to all of you who love me and the people in your life unconditionally. xx.a