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- Path: sparky!uunet!charon.amdahl.com!pacbell.com!ames!saimiri.primate.wisc.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!news.acns.nwu.edu!casbah.acns.nwu.edu!lunde
- From: Albert-Lunde@nwu.edu (Albert Lunde)
- Subject: Re: kudos
- Message-ID: <1992Nov18.052622.17267@news.acns.nwu.edu>
- Followup-To: soc.bi
- Originator: lunde@casbah.acns.nwu.edu
- Sender: lunde@casbah.acns.nwu.edu (Albert Lunde)
- Reply-To: Albert-Lunde@nwu.edu (Albert Lunde)
- Organization: Ministry of Silly Walks
- References: <Bxw1F2.J0L@news.udel.edu>
- Date: Wed, 18 Nov 1992 05:26:22 GMT
- Lines: 89
-
- In article <Bxw1F2.J0L@news.udel.edu> eowyn@brahms.udel.edu (Zoe Antonia Velonis) writes:
- >First of all, thanks to everyone who pounced on me...both on net (I
- >finally got to the end of those 400 odd articles that had stacked up)
- >and off net. You know who you are!
- >Although they made me feel nice and warm and fuzzy, and squeezed and
- >loved, etc. (& I'm not belittling this!), I've got some problems I'm
- >hoping you can help me with---hell, even typing it all down in verbal
- >format will help.
- >If you've read Jim (seamus)'s posts, you know that on UD we have the
- >LGBSU (less politically active) and Queer Campus (politically radical).
- >I finally admitted being bi to myself and a friend up in NYC over e-mail about
- >a month and a half ago, and three days later, proceeded to join QC to make
- >some sense out of things. It seemed to me like they were the only people
- >on campus doing a damn thing about homophobia, and I wanted to do something,
- >too. So far so good.
- >But, with typical alacrity and zeal, I jumped in both feet first. I'm now
- >the rep between QC , the LGBSU and our student govt., unofficial secretary
- >for the group, and (without boring you with all the politics that have
- >been shuffling back and forth for the past month or so), have volunteered
- >myself to the extent that I feel like I am a political animal. nothing
- >else. [...] But I feel like I haven't resolved my bisexuality
- >within my own personality, that I've been hiding behind politics and
- >creating this demarcation line within my life: Before Queer and After
- >Queer. [...] How have you all
- >integrated the non-queer parts of yourself with the queer parts of you?
- >It's proving to be a mammoth task that I am not really sure how to deal
- >with.
- >I can be Queer. I have no problem with that identity. It's being Queer+
- >Zoe, that's what I can't understand how to do.
- >Any suggestions? [...]
-
- When I came out as "gay/bisexual" a dozen or so years back, I'd been in
- touch with lesbian-feminism for a while and was concerned about not
- wanting my bisexuality to be seen as a political "cop-out", and also
- concerned about not wanting to be seen as a predatory straight man,
- so I was cautious about proclaiming my bisexuality loudly and I tended
- to identify my politics with gay-liberation (today read this as "queer")
- and lesbian-feminism. While I was saying that I didn't see a distinct
- bisexual politics, I was sort of under the surface accumulating data
- about what made the bisexual experience distinctive, so that more
- recently, I've become less shy about advertising either my sexuality
- or my bi politics (I may have gone too far in another direction, but that's
- another topic.)
-
- Now this may or may not be whats on your mind -- different readings of
- "Queer" are more and less explictly bi-inclusive. You also talk
- about integrating the other activities of your life with this identity.
-
- I've got less definite things to say, but here are some thoughts:
-
- - Don't accept artifical divisions between different parts of your
- life. Try to bring in your other interests into the Queer world
- and vis-versa; even at the risk of not quite fitting the image of
- a particular group. Try to reduce the gap between your "inside"
- and "outside" personas.
-
- - Look for groups of people supportive of unconventional behavior
- and spanning a range of sexual orientation, (in addition to mainly
- gay/lesbian or mainly bi groups).
-
- I've gotten a lot of support out of my (unusual) church which is
- lesbigay supportive. And I'm impressed with the cumulative effect
- of hanging out with a group of people that combines singles, couples,
- adults, children, het, homo and bi all in a social fabric.
- (What is sometimes remarkable is the ordinary everyday quality of
- it.)
-
- I get different things -- equally valuable -- from being with
- groups of all bisexuals or assorted queers.
-
- - Beware of the risks of becoming a "Professional Queer"/Super Activist.
- These include:
- - Not giving your self time to have a personal life
- - Supressing parts of oneself for ideological reasons
- - Trying to look perfect so as to support one's political image
- - Spending more time on a political persona than on sorting
- out your own emotional/sexual dynamics
-
- - Try to have a sense of yourself. Trust your knowledge of yourself
- over the opinion of outside "experts" or even over the opinion
- of a particular "peer group".
-
- - Be patient; lasting changes take time. Self-integration is more like
- a spiral than a straight line.
-
- --
- Albert Lunde | Interfaith | *Y*Y* "A branch on the
- Albert-Lunde@nwu.edu | Bisexual | *Y* tree of life"
- alunde@nuacvm.bitnet | Feminist |.......|.........................
-