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FAMILY: TO CHOOSE OR NOT TO CHOOSE


by caleb rainey Family has historically been an elastic term for


the LGBT community. Partially due to the fact that for many years, being LGBT was enough to get you expelled from your birth family. Indeed, for many, our most brutal confrontations with homophobia happened in the family setting. That often-universal experience of rejection from


our families of origin, created what has been referred to as a “family of choice” for many LGBT people. Histori- cally, we created a patchwork of love and support from friends, lovers and ex-lovers that served as a support system and source of love that theoretically, birth families were supposed to provide. There is even a representative saying in our community, “She/he is family.” Meaning that the individual is LGBT and there- fore belongs to our larger LGBT family. This ethic of inclusion and privileging of love not tied


to blood relations, has slowly been eroding in the LGBT community, particularly among people who fall under the moniker of “Generation Y.” This group, of which I am a member, is younger, typically early 20s to mid-30s and are the beneficiaries of the decades of struggle in which our LGBT elders engaged. Many of us came into a world in which LGBT people


were represented in elected office, on television, in books and in school curriculums. Many are young professionals who have become accustomed to serving openly in the military and to marrying our partners, husband and wife are terms we can now throw around casually. Many are able to return home


54 RAGE monthly | AUGUST 2014 RAGE monthly


for the holidays to our families of origin because our elders and organizations like PFLAG (Parents and Friends of Lesbians and Gays) fought hard for the love and support their LGBT family members deserved. Though this progress is amazing and we must


celebrate these steps toward freedom and inclusion, progress has not been felt by everyone. A fact that creates unevenness in how LGBT people experience these historic advances.


“We should certainly celebrate when families of origin love and support their


LGBT members, but we must also stay true to our beautiful tradition that allows family to be a radically inclusive term.”


I am a 25-year-old, who grew up in Colorado


Springs, CO, a place in which my father was a Baptist minister. Hate crimes were not uncommon, open hostility to LGBT people was typical and most of us were rejected by our families. I often find, given those circumstances, that I have more in common with 50 and 60-year-old gay men regarding such homopho- bia. When I sit with LGBT friends my age who grew up in certain parts of California, I am baffled when they say that they are going home for the holidays, or their parents or siblings are coming to Pride, or that they enjoy spending time with family. An experience that stands in stark contrast when I am with older gay men


whose remarks like, “family is overrated” and their commonplace feeling is, that friends are just as, if not more, important than birth family. Among LGBT people my age, there is a growing


portion who place a higher value on blood family than we do our friends. While this sentiment may not be expressed verbally, it is through our actions. There is nothing inherently wrong with being close to blood family, but as LGBT people we must be conscious of the fact, that this is not how many have experienced their families. For those individuals, friendship provides everything that family doesn’t. Indeed, for people like me, friends become family. For Genera- tion Y, the difference in how LGBT people experience family is more pronounced than it has been in previ- ous generations. There are a growing number who can experience family in similar ways to heterosexuals if they choose to do so. Yet, there is still a large portion of us who depend on our friends to be our family. The challenge for my generation will be to ensure


that there is space and support for both sets of expe- riences. We should certainly celebrate when families of origin love and support their LGBT members, but we must also stay true to our beautiful tradition that allows family to be a radically inclusive term. I encour- age my fellow Gen Y members to work hard to create a beautiful blend between families of origin and our chosen families. Be mindful of the importance of friendship, historically and presently, for many of us in the LGBT community.


DEFINING


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