Wednesday, January 7, 2009

How's your 2009, so far?

If you dare to answer this question, then good for you. It's too soon to tell how the year will be for anyone so it'll be awesome if you can foresee how this year will turn out for you.

I wonder how it'll be for other lesbians out there.

With barely a week into the new year, I'm still teeter-tottering on whether this will be a good or bad year. I remember 2007 starting off horribly -- and I mean horribly in the worst possible way -- but it ended marvelously. I'm not saying I'd want that this year (I don't think I can handle anything horrible anymore) but hey, with the teeniest ounce of positivity I have in me today, I sure would want this whole year to be marvelous.

It seems so easy to say "Let bygones be bygones..." but it really isn't as simple as spraying a can of bug spray on the bad stuff that comes your way. But yes, sometimes you really need to just leave the bad stuff behind.

That's what I just realized I liked about new years -- that you can leave stuff behind and say, "Oh, that's so last year!"

But it only works when everyone on the team thinks and feels the same way. You can't leave stuff behind and say, "Tata, bad stuff!" when other team players are still holding on to the bad.

So before I delve into the gruesome details of the "bad stuff," let me leave you with these thoughts:

How was your 2008?

What would you like to leave in 2008?

What are you bringing into 2009?

How would you want this year to be?


Hope you (and I) have a better day. Here's a little rainbow to guide your way.


Photo from http://ocean1025.files.wordpress.com

Thursday, December 11, 2008

On Newsweek's Cover Story for the Week, "Our Mutual Joy"

I'm in a committed relationship for 10 years, albeit on-and-off, and we would love to get married. I've met lesbians who are considering marriage in the future, when they find The One. I've met lesbians who are worthy of walking down the aisle with.

Yet, we are all stopped by one thing -- its legality.

There are many issues about gay marriage being raised lately, especially after Proposition 8 was passed in California. But the biggest debate seems to be fueled by religious and traditional beliefs.

I won't delve into the intricacies and complexities of this debate. Lisa Miller's article in Newsweek (15 December 2008) gives but a glimpse into the arguments against and for gay marriages and how the Scripture and religious scholars seem to interpret and take their stand on the issue.

I've chosen to highlight the passages from the article that I agree or disagree with, find liberating, and/or feel inspired with and empowered by. Overall, this article should stir us -- lesbian, gay, straight, bisexual, and others -- to vie for equality and justice.

"Opponents of gay marriage often cite Scripture. But what the Bible teaches about love argues for the other side."
Miller's article isn't so much about what the Scripture does say about gay marriage so don't be surprised when you don't find any direct references as to why gay marriages must be allowed. :)

"The argument goes something like this statement, which the Rev. Richard A. Hunter, a United Methodist minister, gave to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution in June: "The Bible and Jesus define marriage as between one man and one woman. The church cannot condone or bless same-sex marriages because this stands in opposition to Scripture and our tradition."

To which there are two obvious responses: First, while the Bible and Jesus say many important things about love and family, neither explicitly defines marriage as between one man and one woman. And second, as the examples above illustrate, no sensible modern person wants marriage—theirs or anyone else's —to look in its particulars anything like what the Bible describes. "Marriage" in America refers to two separate things, a religious institution and a civil one, though it is most often enacted as a messy conflation of the two. As a civil institution, marriage offers practical benefits to both partners: contractual rights having to do with taxes; insurance; the care and custody of children; visitation rights; and inheritance. As a religious institution, marriage offers something else: a commitment of both partners before God to love, honor and cherish each other—in sickness and in health, for richer and poorer—in accordance with God's will. In a religious marriage, two people promise to take care of each other, profoundly, the way they believe God cares for them. Biblical literalists will disagree, but the Bible is a living document, powerful for more than 2,000 years because its truths speak to us even as we change through history. In that light, Scripture gives us no good reason why gays and lesbians should not be (civilly and religiously) married—and a number of excellent reasons why they should."

It's quite simple, really. Gay people want the same civil rights as any non-gay person. Add to that, gay people also desire for commitment with their partner in front of God and their loved ones. To deny someone -- anyone! - of that is plain cruel.


Religious objections to gay marriage are rooted not in the Bible at all, then, but in custom and tradition
(and, to talk turkey for a minute, a personal discomfort with gay sex that transcends theological argument). Common prayers and rituals reflect our common practice: the Episcopal Book of Common Prayer describes the participants in a marriage as "the man and the woman." But common practice changes—and for the better, as the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. said, "The arc of history is long, but it bends toward justice."

Well, there ya go! Custom and tradition! Those can be forgotten, discontinued, and outgrown. But wait! Are we going to wait until such time that the current traditions are passe or forgotten? What about now?


We cannot look to the Bible as a marriage manual, but we can read it for universal truths as we struggle toward a more just future. The Bible offers inspiration and warning on the subjects of love, marriage, family and community. It speaks eloquently of the crucial role of families in a fair society and the risks we incur to ourselves and our children should we cease trying to bind ourselves together in loving pairs.

More than anything, isn't this what the Bible speaks of? With so many concerns and conflicts plaguing our society, we seem to have forgotten basic truths such as love and commitment, justice, fairness, and equality. Because of our own stringent beliefs, we have caused division amongst ourselves. It may be impossible to unite everyone, to get everyone to agree and adhere to the same beliefs, but is it hard, too, to simply respect what others believe in and stand for?


There is so much more to this debate than what the article can fully discuss. Nevertheless, this should be enough to instill an awareness, if not an awakening, in us, to truly understand that at the core of it all, gays and lesbians just want what everyone else wants -- love and commitment.


What Would King Solomon Do?

Below is an article from NEWSWEEK about a child custody battle between two women. It's sad that while we are fighting for the right to marry, the fact remains that there are couples who do break up and end their relationship. What makes it more complicated is when there are (a) a legal union that will be broken and (b) another life that will be greatly affected when this union is dissolved.

I'm sure the biological mother in this case has her own reasons for the change of heart (and preference and lifestyle). But what about the other mother, the one who shared as much of herself in the rearing of this child?

What about you, what would you do if you were the biological mother? How would you feel if you were the co-parent?

=================================

NEWSWEEK
From the magazine issue dated Dec 15, 2008
Mrs. Kramer Vs. Mrs. Kramer

Lorraine Ali

It's an old story—parents split and fight for custody. But when both are women, and one says she is no longer gay, it gets complicated.

Isabella prefers to skip rather than walk down the long halls of the Thomas Road Baptist Church in Lynchburg, Va. With each springy step, the first grader's butterfly-print dress puffs full of air, giving her the appearance of weightlessness. She swings a bag of gummy bears in one hand, and in the other, a Sunday-school coloring sheet that reads "Obey God." One particularly high ballerina leap sends gummy bears skidding across the polished floor of the church and stops Isabella dead in her tracks. The dress deflates. Her mother Lisa Miller senses an imminent meltdown and starts counting down: "Five, four, three …" and by one, the little girl has all the candy in her hand again. "You beat the five-second rule," says Miller, "so it's still good." And with that, Isabella smiles, revealing a gap where two front baby teeth used to be, and stuffs the candy back in the bag. Skipping resumes.

Isabella hardly knows that she's at the center of a much bigger drama, a landmark custody battle between two women—both of whom she calls Mommy. Her parents are Miller, 40, who's fighting for exclusive, sole custody, and Janet Jenkins, 44, who's arguing for parental and visitation rights. Their case is the first to tackle the recognition of same-sex unions, marriage and the rights of homosexual parents across ideological, biological and state lines. And, uniquely, across religious lines once Miller became a devout Baptist, renounced her homosexuality and said she was determined to protect her daughter from a "lifestyle that's fundamentally wrong." Miller is Isabella's biological mom and lives with her daughter in Virginia, a state that does not recognize gay unions or marriage. Jenkins lives in Vermont, where she and Miller were happily—and legally—joined in a civil union eight years ago, and where the couple raised Isabella until they split when the child was just 17 months old. Since then, Miller has argued that her former partner—who has no blood tie to Isabella—also has no parental rights. "It would be like handing my child over to the milkman," she says. Jenkins disagrees. She says that as Miller's former legal partner who was at the IVF clinic when her daughter was conceived, and in the delivery room to catch her when she arrived, she should have visitation rights "like any other parent."

For more of the article, click here.

Monday, December 8, 2008

Today is National Lesbian Day

Happy Lesbian Day to all women-loving-women out there! :)

Interestingly, today is also Immaculate Conception Day for Catholics. Don't you find that ironic -- that we celebrate being lesbian on the same day that the Virgin bore the Son of God? :D

I don't know about you people but with that, I think there's something awesome and highly spiritual about being a lesbian.

The day isn't over yet, my dear lezzies. Do something lesbian today. Go wear your pride on a shirt by Radar Pridewear. Wave around a rainbow flag. Come out of the closet. Better yet, go kiss a girl in public!

Happy Lesbian Day! :)

The Ultimate Women's Party of the Year Is The Ultimate Let Down

The Ultimate Women's Party of the Year Is The Ultimate Let Down

The One and I trooped over to Teatrino in Greenhills last Friday for the 3rd Dimension 10th Year Anniversary Reunion Party. After all the hype, the party turned out to be a dud.

First of all, the posters and invites said that the party starts at 9 p.m. Yeah right! Lesbians coming out early at night? Not a chance. People started coming in at around 11 p.m. The show? It started about an hour after.

Unlike the usual exclusive party where people mill and mingle and dance, the 3rd D party set up a pseudo talk show with Joed Serrano doing an Ellen act. Slightly amusing but the act got old soon after dancing a la Ellen -- complete with the table dance and all. We wondered who the guests would be as there was no announcement of any sort, not even a teaser. But when Aiza Seguerra walked in with her guitar, our interest was somehow piqued.

Only to be disappointed again. The first guest was GlutaMax endorser, Jinky Oda. I have nothing against her, it's just that the first guest should be someone interesting enough to catch the audience attention and hold their attention for the next few minutes. Her introduction was a video montage of her photos to the tune of Whitney Houston and Mariah Carey's "Believe." She entered the stage unceremoniously and sang a lame rendition of "Dance with Me" after which Joed interviewed her about (drumroll please) being endorser of GlutaMax.

Of course the night wouldn't be complete without the Pinay lesbian poster girl, Aiza Seguerra. She sang one song, exchanged pleasantries with Joed, and in less than a few minutes, she was off the stage.

Then came the supposed piece de resistance: bodyshots with an FHM model. I don't know why the organizers think this will be enticing to watch, but heck, I guess it is entertaining to a certain extent. I always find drunk women entertaining in a sadistic way. Nothing can elicit as much varied reaction as a drunk making a fool of herself.

Of course no 3rd Dimension event will be complete without crass humor and scantily-clad women gyrating on stage. Even the butchest of butches will find herself blushing when faced with these stripper-dancers. It wouldn't be fair, however, to not mention their choreography. It may not be synchronized and may even show an obvious lack of preparation and hours of rehearsal, but hey, any girl dressed in the shortest of shorts with high heels and a tight-fitting bra top must be given an A for effort.

Imagine shelling out your hard-earned pesos (Php 500 to be exact) for these. I was torn between pulling my hair out or slashing my wrists for having to endure this, but I remembered that I didn't exactly pay for my entrance fee. I had to stop myself from inflicting pain on myself (and on others) and instead be the gracious guest that I should be.

The only saving grace of the event is that you get to reminisce with old friends and meet new friends. If you are so inclined, you can also consider the crowd a source of fashion inspiration. Better yet, think of it as a source of socioantropologcial research.

So thank God for the company and the booze. If you missed the so-called ultimate women's party of the year, don't worry. You didn't miss anything at all.

Walk With Pride. March.

Last Saturday, gays, lesbians, transgendered, transexuals, bisexuals, bi-curious, and all other colors of the sexuality spectrum marched down the streets of Manila to celebrate their diversity. It's the 10th year anniversary of GLBT Pride and it's just as colorful as the past parades.

I missed the march, no thanks to traffic and an attack of allergies that left me groggy and Benadryl-drugged. My friends and I caught the program, however, and that was something. Participants, celebrants, curious uzis -- and even bigots, I'm sure -- were entertained and awed by svelte, graceful, and statuesque gay beauty queens.

It seemed like there were more participating groups this year than the past pride marches. I'm not sure though. I saw the following organizations and groups raise awareness and proudly wave the pride flag:

LeAP!
Yogyakarta
Lunduyan ng Sining
UP Babaylan
GALANG
UP Film Institute
Metropolitan Community Church
RH Bill Supporters
Womyn Supporting Womyn Center
Indigo Philippines
Ang LADLAD
Lagablab
Remedios AIDS Foundation
Pro-GAY

[My apologies to the ones I missed. Send me a message if your group is one of those I missed so I can add you to the list. :)]

Surprisingly, it is only now, fourteen years after its first celebrated walk down the public runway that the LGBT community faced a group of anti-gay protesters. They carried banners and placards that denounced homosexuality and condemned our lifestyle. Signs that screamed, "Only Jesus can save me from HELL," "GAY = Got Aids Yet?" and others clearly showed that the Filipino society is suffering from discrimination and bigotry.

According to Ging Cristobal of LeAP! "Actually, ngayon lang may ganyan. Dati wala namang ganyan eh." The said anti-gay protesters numbered enough to split up into two groups.

However (and it is very important to note this), despite the obvious show of disapproval and condemnation, there was not an ounce of violence that was expressed or inflicted on anyone that night. There was a scuffle sometime before the program started, but other than that, the anti-gay protesters didn't do much except scowl (and probably shout out the occasional, erm, insults and protests). Truthfully, any gay person in Malate last Saturday could have fought back or retaliated. We are, after all, being discriminated on. But no. There was just too much love and acceptance in the air. See! We are genteel creatures, full of gay and rainbow love!

I would love to see a Philippine chapter of Parents and Friends of Lesbians and Gays (PFLAG) march with the rest of us in the years to come. While there were several straight supporters (friends and family members, I think) who marched, there is no local group that I know of whose primary goal is to help and show support to family members and friends of gays, lesbians, and transexuals. [Please correct me if I am mistaken. :) ] I think when our heterosexual brothers and sisters finally march with us in unity, then we can say that we are indeed making progress as a gay- and lesbian-friendly society.

In other news, there were simultaneous marches happening around the country. I have no news as yet as to how those went but I suppose they were as successful as the one here in Manila.

Congratulations to Task Force Pride for again another job well done! :)

Photos courtesy of Libay Linsangan Cantor.

Friday, December 5, 2008

3rd Dimension: Ten Years After

In 1998, a bar along Gilmore in Greenhills opened its doors for the Filipino lesbian. First of its kind, 3rd Dimension, proved to be the hottest hangout for lesbians of different shapes and sizes.

3rd Dimension was a split-level structure with a bar at the ground floor and mezzanine that had a dance floor/performance area. Hosted by two good-looking mestizo gay men, 3rd Dimension opened the Pinoy lesbian's eyes to a stripshow. Yep! There was a stripper every Saturday night. It caught the ire of feminists, true, yet many flocked to this watering hole to check out the show, meet up with friends, and dance the night away.

The 3rd Dimension crowd consist mostly of chatters: IRC, Gay.com, etc. Most were college age or yuppies in their mid-20s or early 30s. There were professionals, creative artsy-fartsy kinds, and jocks. 3rd Dimension welcomed everyone -- lipstick lezzies, stone butches, soft butches, baby dykes, bi-curious, girl-next-door types, preppies, andros. It seemed as if every gay girl hung out in 3rd Dimension at least once in her whole lesbian existence. It was like one big, happy family yet there were still cliques and barkadas. It was a veritable Cheers bar, lesbian version. 

I bet a lot of love affairs had been formed in this bar; perhaps even more flings and hook ups that lasted barely weeks or months. And sadly, this place has seen a lot of heartaches and broken romances, too.

A few years back, 3rd Dimension moved to Libis, Quezon City. It was located on the second floor of one of the establishments bordering the affluent subdivisions. It had better parking, a bigger dance floor, and an improved bar. 

Yet, the crowd was different. Lesbians who frequented the Libis bar seemed to come from a differing generation and sub-culture. The Libis crowd seemed to follow the rainbow spectrum more stringently: some were girlier, some were more butch, some were more androgenous than what the Gilmore habitues were used to.  And definitely, they were all much, much younger than those who hung out at the Gilmore branch.

Still, I suppose it was just as fun and wild as it was. And I bet even more hook ups and heartbreaks were made and broken in Libis.

[At the same time that 3rd Dimension was in Libis, another lesbian bar opened in the gay central, Malate. Perhaps this is what defined the crowd from 3rd Dimension Gilmore.]

3rd Dimension Libis didn't last long. Perhaps its regulars from way back Libis grew up or grew tired of the stripshows and the crowd. Perhaps they simply outgrew the whole bar scene. Nevertheless, 3rd Dimension will always be 3rd Dimension.

----
ULTIMATE ALL GIRLS PARTY OF THE YEAR!!!
THIRD DIMENSION REUNION
>
Friday, December 5, 9:00 p.m.
Teatrino, Promenade, Greenhills

Contact Info
Phone: 09229712958
Email: third_dimension_ph@yahoo.com