I have thought a lot about a
constructive role for persons with disabilities within the Canadian urban gay
community. I have spastic quadriplegic cerebral palsy, which is about as sexy
for a gay man as it sounds. Just as gay people are constructed as outside
straight nature, I am somehow beyond gay nature. The tension within my
personality between my intellectual aspirations and bodily constraints creates
an interesting place from which to begin helpful critique and dialogue. And I
think my answer, partial though it may be, can act as a bridge to build
dialogue with HIV-positive people and trans individuals, both of which, though
in their different contexts, struggle with issues of legitimacy within the gay
community.
When communities function well,
every member within that community thinks about how to bring experiences he has
had to that community, even as he also learns from others. I was a member of a program for gay youth who want to be sexual health leaders
in the community. After the program had officially ended for the day — thereby releasing
the organization of any legal liability — we decided to go out for
drinks. Foolishly, I was paying attention to one of the group members more than
driving my wheelchair — among other
things — because we were talking about teen romance fiction; and so, I drove
off the sidewalk, overturning my chair, and getting a few scrapes. I was easily
righted, and while I was horrified at showing stupidity and vulnerability to a
group in which I had an uncertain place, they were equally horrified for my
well-being.
Characteristically, the two group
leaders embodied two necessary components of an effective reaction, and this is
not to say that either of them do not have the other part. While the first one
seemed to feel more pain than I did and hugged me, the other person immediately
and rationally cleaned the scrapes. And I took great pains to deny that there
was a problem, since I have a complex about being “an imposition” to begin
with. Despite my ridiculous protests, however, it did feel extraordinarily
good, perhaps even life-changing, for other gay men to recognize that I was
hurt; — the first one with more visible empathy, and the other, by calmly and
methodically fixing the problem. And I obviously extended the concept of “hurt”.
A few days later, I was having
drinks with another member, and I said, “I wasn’t even in that much pain… Okay…
I’m lying; it hurt like a… But he [the first group leader] was so upset… I made
him cry… That’s like kicking a puppy… I felt terrible… And you guys were
already walking slow!”
“GIRL I KNOW; it is like kicking a
puppy. And I understand how you feel about making people overtaxed, but you
have to let people know if you’re hurt. I know not all people want to help you
all of the time, but some do at least
some of the time. You have to trust people’s good intentions: otherwise
you’re not being honest with them or yourself!”!
This is really good advice, and,
like most good advice, it is extremely hard to follow. But I think we should.
Being gay, at least in part, means you learn to be tough, and being disabled
and gay, unfortunately, means you have to be even more tough… Sometimes. But
not all of the time. Prejudicial attitudes toward persons with disabilities,
particularly in the gay community, are alive and painful, but I’m not going to
dwell on the too much. Often, I am excluded just as much on what people think,
as I am by the barriers pose by what I think people are thinking. And I believe
that sometimes my experience as being an anomaly within the gay community
mirrors how many of us, myself included, sometimes relate to society as a
whole. Pain is very real, and so too is vulnerability. Perhaps the most
important interpersonal need human beings have, sadly lacking for many of us,
is to be seen as valuable people, not in spite of but because of our
differences. As I reflect on where I have been and where I want to go, as part
of the broader discussion of where the community has been and where we want to
go, it is important to think about pain as a possible source of strength, but
only if we see healing as an everyday and ongoing practice.
Every person, and especially every
gay man, has his own unique forms of trauma, which he deals with in his own way
at his own pace. We need sensitivity, rationality, caring, aesthetic
sensibilities, sexual expressiveness, resolve and many other qualities besides,
if “the movement” is going to continue to transform society, as it has done in
the past. Even as I myself repudiate what I have said by being a completely
cruel, especially to women, and self-obsessed sassy queen on the regular, I
think my disability combined with excessive pursuit of same-sex love, gives me a
glimpse, however incomplete and temporary, of what many of us know already: the
purpose of being gay — if one can even find one — is to explore the infinite ways one can relate to other men
as a man, emotionally, intellectually, erotically, physically, and to push
these relationships to their limit; such that, for brief moments, the world
becomes a bit more bearable than it was before.(Un)fortunately the relationships
I seem to be best at, because of happenstance, are ones involving dependency
and caring.
This is a simplistic generalization,
but many gay men — including most definitely myself — have a lot of difficulty
with this, in part, because of our trauma and gendered existence. I repeatedly
heard “boys don’t cry,” when that’s all I wanted to do. This is also the case
for the current generation of young gay men who didn’t have to face the
immediacy of the early HIV-AIDS crisis. I’m not saying that caring is the
supreme value; sometimes I hate it. But if my very limited experience as a gay
disabled man has taught me anything, it is that caring must and often does exist as an
important value alongside others which we cultivate, particularly as part of an
oppressed group.
Despite being constantly under
suspicion, in my heart of hearts I know that I belong in the gay community
because just as a sassy bitch exists inside of me, a disabled person is a big
part of every Homo and every human being. Gay men do get hurt; at some point gay
men do have performance issues and body image problems, and they do die. The
only way I think life is worthwhile, however, is if one is willing to fall from
time to time and have others, ideally, of course, young gay men, pick one up
when this happens. Perhaps this is one of the very many valuable lessons contemporary
gay culture can appropriate from Christianity. But, curse the gods again, not
all of us are attractive. We are perpetually working on this problem,
nonetheless, for better and for worse.!
what is truly extraordinary, is how much effort it takes just for you to write this. you go girl!
ReplyDeleteLove this! Re-posting on my blog, cuz you're brilliant.
ReplyDelete