Lavender Magazine 705

Page 201

OUR VOICES | SKIRTING THE ISSUES

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The Many Scales of Pride BY CHRIS HINZE

Ecology is frequently thought of in terms of scales, the biggest scale being at the Earth-level and the smallest scale being at the individuallevel. In between are regions, landscapes, ecosystems, communities, and populations. Through each lens of scale, different interactions, struggles, and cycles of change come to light. The bigger the scale, the more complicated things become; interactions become nuanced, mysterious, and infinite. Similarly, I think pride in LGBTQIA+ identity and allyship can be viewed through the lens of scales. On an individual level, we celebrate our queer identities as they intersect with all the other identities in our life. Pride for a Black queer person in Minneapolis will not look the same as pride for white queer person in rural Minnesota. Individual struggles lead to individual beauty, a nuance which is frequently lost when pride is scaled up. This is not necessarily a bad thing, for it allows for broader community affiliation, organization, and action. However, the community cannot just fold in, it also must expand out and make fertile ground for new narratives to grow. Pride month is perhaps the perfect time to reflect on what beauties are given the opportunity to thrive in our community, what beauties are withering in our community, and what beauties may not be as beautiful as once thought. As a white queer, transmasc/non-binary person with priviledge in many ways, I know that my eyes must put in the work to see the beauty and the struggle of other queer identities. My arms must put in the work to hold back branches that shield sunlight from undergrowth. My feet must be rooted enough to hear the diverse queer voices speaking their needs and truths. This all requires reflecting on what pride looks like for me on an individual level, for knowing what I celebrate within my own queerness also affects what can be celebrated in the larger community. For me, pride used to look like celebrating the fact I could finally live and “pass” as a man in this world. It meant celebrating that I had a family that supported my transition, that I could find partners who loved and desired me as trans, and that my mental health was good enough to get through college. Looking back, what I was celebrating was my ability to blend in and achieve American fantasies of success. As if my gender

was a performance for an audience I perceived as only capable of binary thinking. As I got older, I realized that people are good at their core, are capable of seeing nuance, are able to sit with discomfort, and are able to grow in any stage of life. I also realized that the transness and queerness I was celebrating was wholly based on my ability to perform gender well. I was unapologetically a transman, but I was not unapologetically myself. Thus, pride has come to mean a celebration of self that goes deeper than gender performance and sexuality. In fact, on an individual level, pride is much more of a question. What exactly am I proud of? Am I celebrating my ability to be masculine in this world? If so, does that also mean I am celebrating patriarchal ideals of what masculinity is? Can masculinity ever be separated from the patriarchy? I don’t think I can ever separate my transition of gender performance with the fact I have also had a transition of power. What I can celebrate is finding empowerment in expression and performance of self that balances my desires with collective good. I celebrate the shedding of shame and expectation in exchange for truth and curiosity. I celebrate partners, friends, and mentors who encourage me to go deeper than my transness and queerness can go, for those identities are also tethered to systems of oppression. I celebrate finding out what it means to be human and how we can connect with each other through our roots rather than shared beliefs. I celebrate being able to witness youth change this world. I celebrate elders who have already changed this world. I celebrate my own feeling of being able to make a small impact on this world. Pride is a time for many things – grief, celebration, reflection, growth, relational deepening, healing – all of which have narratives and stories that come from an individual level. Our community has the duty and honor of gathering and integrating all of these nuanced stories into a larger, ever-changing story that does not shy away from the truth of what we are hearing. Pride comes from an unabashed need to be our selves, and our selves are always changing. 

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Articles inside

How Connecting the Dots Change LGBTQ History

33min
pages 203-212

The Many Scales of Pride

3min
page 201

Community Connection

4min
page 198

A New Nissan Z For A New Generation

6min
pages 190-193

Fading To Black

4min
page 200

House Lift Remodeler

5min
pages 168-173

HOURCAR Adds EV Car Sharing To The Twin Cities

4min
pages 194-197

Books

2min
pages 160-161

State Of The Older LGBTQ Workplace

5min
pages 150-155

Rush Hospital Redefi ning LGBTQ Healthcare

4min
pages 148-149

Jerry Hughes in India

4min
pages 142-145

Naming Our Community

7min
pages 128-133

Living with Alopecia

3min
pages 146-147

MN National Guard Emphasizing Their Own

4min
pages 136-139

Captain Zack Thelen-Liebl

3min
pages 140-141

Captain Forrest Jennings

4min
pages 134-135

Gay Matchmaker Amari Ice

10min
pages 122-127

There is no 'I' in Pr_de

7min
pages 110-113

Leather Life

5min
pages 118-121

Trans Women in Sports

3min
pages 114-115

A Stitch In Time Saves Title IX

6min
pages 106-109

Pride Journey: Iceland

5min
pages 92-97

Luxjoy and Comfort

6min
pages 102-105

Kaftans For Everyone

6min
pages 98-101

Indiana Panorama

6min
pages 86-91

Ukrainian Alien: From Minneapolis with Love

5min
pages 82-85

Bias in MN Healthcare

4min
pages 80-81

2022 Pride What To Do

4min
pages 68-71

Twin Cities Gay Men's Chorus

5min
pages 62-63

Dot Belstler

4min
pages 72-73

Lavender Editorial Staff Favorite Dining Spots

6min
pages 50-53

Muslim Drag Queen Amrou Al-Kadhi

7min
pages 54-61

Dublin - Dining Destination

6min
pages 42-49

One Voice Mixed Chorus

4min
pages 32-33

A Day in the Life

4min
pages 26-27

Coming Attractions

3min
pages 28-31

Anthony Bidulka

15min
pages 36-41

Minneapolis Comedy Festival

2min
pages 34-35

From the Editor

2min
page 20

From A to Zee

3min
pages 22-23

Biz Buzz

2min
pages 24-25
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