红杏视频

Catherine Thomson

Pride beyond Pride

By Catherine Thomson, Head of Marketing & Communications - 23 June 2022

As Pride month 2022 draws to a close, Catherine shares an insight into her own experiences and reflects on how, in its 50th year, Pride continues to be an important beacon of visibility, unity, and progression.

鈥淐atherine, why have you written 鈥榠t鈥檚 coming home鈥 next to the rainbow flag painted on your arm?鈥  

鈥淏ecause England are playing Sweden in the World Cup quarter-finals this afternoon and I鈥檓 meeting friends to watch it after the march鈥擨 can鈥檛 wait!鈥 

鈥淏oring! You do know that today is not actually about football? It鈥檚 about having fun! Can you just put this glitter on your face and not mention the football? Think disco, okay?鈥 

Pride, London, 7 July 2018. A group of us were on our way to watch my partner Beth, a spoken word artist, perform on the Women鈥檚 Stage at Leicester Square before meeting colleagues at Regent鈥檚 Park for our march alongside thousands of others through the sun-drenched city. The person who was administering glitter and reprimands on the tube鈥攍et鈥檚 call her Jo鈥攊s a heterosexual woman with mostly gay male friends, and a devotion to watching re-runs of RuPaul鈥檚 Drag Race. She had brought us all rainbow garlands and spent most of the journey singing 鈥榃e Are Family鈥 and pep-talking us to 鈥済et ready to be fabulous, darlings!鈥  

Jo and Beth had studied Drama at university together, and I loved being around their extrovert energy. What I didn鈥檛 love that day was being given instructions about what Pride involved, and about how I should (or in this case shouldn鈥檛) show up for it. I also didn鈥檛 love that these instructions were being issued to me by a heterosexual woman, but I was very much aware that in her excitement she was calling up the most recognisable expressions of the Pride brand: sparkles, dance music, banners, extravagant costumes, singing, face paint and exuberant gestures. Being 鈥榝abulous, darlings!鈥. 

I鈥檇 been really looking forward to Pride that morning but wasn鈥檛 feeling especially 鈥榙isco鈥 in that moment. I was thinking about Beth, who had travelled into central London earlier for a rehearsal, and who was messaging me about her understandable pre-performance nerves. I was thinking about meeting my colleagues later that day, and about walking through central London holding a banner emblazoned with my employer鈥檚 logo in huge rainbow-treated letters. I was also thinking about what Pride meant to me as a gay woman. 

I鈥檇 been an undergraduate in the mid-1990s, and every other Tuesday evening I would take the bus onto campus from my hall of residence on the other side of the city. Making my way through the corridors of a dark and otherwise unfamiliar building. I would knock on the door of a discreetly located little room and spend a couple of hours with fellow members of my university鈥檚 LGB Soc, as it was called back then. 

"...the newly launched internet opened a world of stories, connections and insight"

Alongside our student peers in the lecture halls and seminar rooms of our degree studies, we in the LGB Soc were learning about ourselves through the newly acquired freedoms of university life as young gay and bisexual adults who鈥檇 just moved away from home for the first time. Many of us had little or no experience of sexuality being a common ground on which to establish friendships. One thing we did establish quickly was a collective sense of being in the margins. There were no rainbows in these rooms. No mobile phones. No Google. No social media. Most of us were still teenagers, many introverted, our social skills adapting from the familiar parameters of school to the apparent limitlessness of new networks and no curfews. In her recent ground-breaking show Nanette鈥攚atch it on Netflix鈥擧annah Gadsby asks, 鈥渨here are the quiet gays supposed to go?鈥. For me, at university in 1996, it was room B403, from 7-9pm every other Tuesday.  

Having moved away to university from a strict, religious, academically focused school, and a loving but conservative family, I was discovering a new abundance of social choices and visual cues that would enable me to connect at last with like-minded others. During Freshers鈥 Week, I cut my hair short, having previously considered it a provocative and exposing act. I joined the women鈥檚 football club. I got my upper left ear pierced. I wore a shirt and tie on nights out.  

I was studying English Literature, so spent a lot of time in libraries and bookshops. I鈥檇 always look for the 鈥楢lternative Fiction鈥 section, and for stories about others who I could relate to in the context of my sexuality. If these sections did exist, they were tucked away, and offered a small selection of titles, usually imported from the US, and mostly gay male oriented. During that period, I read a lot of Jeanette Winterson, author of Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit. The only other lesbian fiction I could find seemed to presume a fixation with crime, ghosts, and generally having a pretty introspective, miserable time. And, not one disco scene. 

Within the three years of my undergraduate degree, the 鈥楢lternative Fiction鈥 section in Waterstones tripled in size, and the newly launched internet opened a world of stories, connections and insight. I stayed on at university to study for a master's degree and had enough material (just about) to write my final dissertation on lesbian identities in Western fiction. There were more 鈥榞ay friendly鈥 bars and clubs opening; more positive representation in the media and on television; more of a palpable sense of freedom for LGB Soc in room B403. It was an exhilarating period of change, challenge, increasing confidence, discovery and fun.  

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But throughout this time, one supposedly pivotal part of my growth as a gay woman never happened. I never 鈥榗ame out鈥.  

When I was younger, I鈥檇 heard that you were 鈥榥ot really gay鈥 until you鈥檇 鈥榗ome out鈥 via 鈥榯he talk鈥 to family, friends, and other networks. In truth, I鈥檇 never really understood what I was supposed to be coming out from, or where I was coming out into. I have always understood that ours is a heteropatriarchal society, and that heterosexuality is presumed. Right-handedness is presumed. Eating meat is presumed. Lots of things are presumed. But why is it anyone鈥檚 responsibility to accept and perpetuate a presumption about something that isn鈥檛 true or doesn鈥檛 work for them, by asking someone else to accept their right to make different choices? To quote Hannah Gadsby again, 鈥淭his tension is yours. I am not helping you anymore. You need to learn what this feels like, because this tension is what not-normals carry inside of them all of the time.鈥 

I鈥檓 left-handed and have always just got on with my writing. Any smudging of the ink is my issue to deal with. It doesn鈥檛 affect anyone else, and it doesn鈥檛 define me. I don鈥檛 eat meat, but I鈥檝e always made sure I鈥檓 getting the nutrition I need from the food I like. It鈥檚 a part of my life. My sexuality is also part of my life, but like writing and the way I eat, it doesn鈥檛 define me. Have I ever felt compelled to make a point of telling someone that I happen to be left-handed, that I choose not to eat meat, or that I happen to be dating a woman? No. Have I ever felt the need to brace myself for 鈥榯he talk鈥, to announce my sexuality to someone, and hope they鈥檒l accept or love me regardless? No. Do I expect anyone to do that with me? Absolutely not. How can I do my part to really challenge presumptions unless I鈥檓 demonstrating my right and capacity to live happily in the world like everyone else, regardless of who I choose to do that with? 

"Pride month will also continue to be a vital demonstration of solidarity..."

I know and respect that, for many people, coming out is still incredibly important. For reasons there鈥檚 not room to share in this piece, I had decided at a fairly young age that I would never do this; that I would never ask anyone to 鈥榓ccept鈥 me for having a sexuality that was different to the majority, and that I would certainly never seek permission to have the private life of my choosing. That decision is the root of my personal pride: the one I carry with me 365 days a year.  

Pride, Aberdeen, 28 May 2022. My first Pride in Scotland. It was so much fun to meet up with colleagues and students from across the vibrant and diverse LGBTQIA+ community at 红杏视频, and to walk together down Union Street as part of a bustling, colourful and joyous parade. One of the reasons I relocated over 500 miles from London to join RGU last year was the opportunity to join a university with such a strong values-oriented culture, and I was delighted to discover our rainbow steps on campus as one expression of that.

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It will always be a privilege to engage with Pride month as a public acknowledgement of our personal journeys as 鈥榥ot-normals鈥. Pride month enables us to keep reflecting on our individual and collective pasts, to celebrate how far we鈥檝e come, and to take up space with joy and confidence. Pride month will also continue to be a vital demonstration of solidarity: of fighting for and amplifying the voices of those who continue to be vilified, marginalised, attacked, or killed for simply wanting to live and love authentically. Pride month is also鈥攁nd will always be鈥攁bout honouring those who鈥檝e walked in fear through the streets and cities in which I am now lucky enough to rarely think twice about holding my partner鈥檚 hand. 

As Pride month wraps up, organisations will revert to their non-rainbow-treated logos, the colourful window displays in shops will be dismantled, and the rainbow flags will be put away till next summer. For so many of us though, the experience of Pride never stops. It鈥檚 in our everyday choices, our words, our actions, and our relationships. It鈥檚 in our hearts. We will, individually and together, keep stepping towards a future where living authentically with love anywhere in the world no longer feels like a privilege. We鈥檝e got a way to go still, but we鈥檒l get there鈥攃overed in glitter or not鈥攂ecause love wins. Love always wins. 

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