22 Feb Just Plain Folks
My best friend from high school, David, got married to Les last weekend. Finally. We were wondering if they’d ever make it legal. Those boys. After all, they’ve been together for 35 years.
I suspected they might do “it.” I watched for signs on the Evening News. I was checking the newspaper daily for their photo. Even though we now live 3000 miles apart that’s how we’d reconnected after 28 years.
One winter morning seven years ago I was attending to my usual workday pre-dawn ritual: oatmeal and coffee with the morning paper. I turned the page of the Style section, quickly scanning the headlines from each article. Out of the corner of my eye I registered something vaguely familiar. My eyes darted back to the top of the page and there they were: David and Les. Older but, without a doubt my friends. I shouted in surprise. My wife came rushing from the bedroom to see if I was ok.
David and Les had posed for book by John Getting called Couples. Michael Sullivan, the Washington Post reporter writing about John’s book began:
There is nothing special about the plain and handsome pictures in “Couples…” The subjects are not models or celebrities… What is extraordinary is just how ordinary these portraits of togetherness are. Because for many of the gay men and lesbians in the book, even the smallest public expression of affection has so often been taboo.
With Michael’s and John’s help I was able to reconnect with David and Les after all these years. I hadn’t seen them since 1969.
The remarkable thing about them is that they’ve been together for so long. I don’t have any straight friends who’ve been in a committed relationship that has lasted three and a half decades. So this week I wrote them to see if they had made a trip to San Francisco’s City Hall. When I got their reply, once again I shouted. Now they had the chance to publicly and legally acknowledge their loving and stable union. It seemed so logical.
They wrote:
It is amazing to us that some in the United States are so afraid of us. We don’t feel like a threat to anyone or their married relationship… We may not have even gotten married (as we already considered ourselves married for a long time now), but the opponents to same sex marriage made a statement “It’s simply municipal anarchy.” Something about that statement had a nice ring to it!
You iconoclasts!
Personal faces and lives. Stereotyping and marginalizing “the other” is easy when we keep them distant, amorphous, and unknown. It makes the threat so much more convenient to hold. THEM verses US. So twentieth century.
I believe marriage is between a man and a woman, and I think we ought to codify that one way or another.
George W. Bush
George, let’s get our priorities straight. Leave the lawyers, the courts, and Constitutional amendments out of this. If you want to focus on family values, figure out a way of preventing our children from paying for your trillion dollar deficit.
My gay and lesbian friends are in strong and committed relationships. Many are parents who provide their children with loving and centered homes. These are the same family values the Right fights for –something all of us work hard at. Loving and stable families.
My friends David and Les are one hell of a stable family. And they are so ordinary. Extraordinarily so.
I raise a glass of champagne in a toast to you two. Say, where are you registered? A wedding gift is long overdue.
David and Les
Posted at 19:51h, 22 FebruaryJeff:
Thank you for your thoughtful comments. We now realize that our past is on sale for $4.69 and we are considered extraordinarily ordinary. You made our day!
The Gettings’ book was a surprise to us in many ways. First, let us add that the photo was taken during New York City�s Stonewall 25 and Gay Pride celebration in June 1994. John was in Central Park and took the photo after we had marched from one end of NYC to the other. (That�s why we look a wreck). At that time we had been together 25 years. (Maybe that�s actually why we look a wreck). We had no idea that the book would ever be published, let alone we would be one of the couples on the cover. We were quoted in the press release: � We have loved each other for all of these years and hope that being seen in this photograph as a gay couple living our lives for almost three decades, others will come to realize that today, despite stereotypes, bashings and lies told by the religious right, love is the bond of all that lasts.�
When the book hit the bookstores in San Francisco (some in front window displays), we had our 15 minutes of fame.
For us, our wedding in San Francisco�s City Hall on February 14, 2004 was not a commitment to one another, as we had made that commitment long ago. Our wedding was more for others. It was for others to see what same sex couples are missing; equality. For others to contemplate, to realize that our laws are unjust. For others to witness two loving people just living their lives. We wanted to go through this public ceremony mostly for young gay and lesbian people who will be following.
We have never considered ourselves rebels, although we have been. We consider ourselves more than lucky, in fact blessed that we have each other. It is true� we are indeed ordinary. Thank you for considering us extraordinary.
David and Les
Donna
Posted at 15:35h, 24 FebruaryCongrats to your friends, Jeff! Sometimes it’s hard to believe it took us so long.
But personally, I am happy about all this hoopla. It is just one more thing to make Bush look bad (that is to anyone but the far far right). As if he needed anything else. If he was smart he would have just left it up to the states.