Posts filed under 'Lesbian'

Lesbians On The March

I have noticed that you rarely publish letters by lesbian or bisexual women in your column. What’s up with that?
–Represent

Excellent question, grasshopper. It’s absolutely true, I don’t print very many questions from lesbian and bisexual women, primarily because I don’t get very many questions from lesbian and bisexual women. A good ninety percent of the e-mails I get are from men. I’ve wondered about this for a while, and my feeling is that despite the fact that I promise anonymity for all letter-writers, most women are simply too uncomfortable to send even a confidential letter to my column. And with good reason—if a woman sends me a letter about her sex life, she’s taking much more of a risk than a man. The consequences for a woman admitting to not always having pure, heterosexual thoughts and desires are far graver than for men, and I think the fear of being judged and punished is so ingrained in women that very little can make us feel safe.

So let me put this out there for all you women readers, particularly the lesbian and bisexual ones: your letters are safe with me. I do not reveal names, I usually try to remove all identifying markers from letters, and I will never show your letter or share your contact information with anyone else. I invite your letters and I will do everything I can to represent your concerns in the column. Also, I invite all my women readers to weigh in: why do you think that women don’t send in questions as frequently as men? Send in your responses and I’ll print them in next week’s column.

1 comment January 5, 2009

Suckas Get Exposed

Do gays and lesbians really exist?
–Just Askin’

Yes, they do. Next, please.

Add comment January 5, 2009

“Hot Girl-On-Girl Action”

I’m really confused about whether I might be a lesbian. I’m attracted to guys and I have a boyfriend, but I get really turned on by watching lesbian porn. I use it to masturbate all the time. However, I’m not attracted to any of my girlfriends or any of the girls I know. Am I a lesbian or bisexual, or is all of this just a normal part of growing up? Please help me, I’m so confused.
–It’s Hard Not Knowing

I feel you, girl. I know a lot of straight women who dig lesbian porn, and the whole thing can be very confusing, both personally and politically. I’ve thought about this issue a lot (as have many other feminist thinkers far more learned than yours truly), and my feeling about the “lesbian” porn you find on the Internet is that it’s not really about lesbianism or same-sex desire at all. That particular brand of porn is all about women performing a simulacrum of lesbian desire for an assumed-to-be heterosexual male audience. (Of course, a lot of the audience is actually female—in much the same way that the real audience of the now-defunct Playgirl magazine was not straight women, but gay men. But I digress.) The point is, I think a lot of the directors and producers of porn assume that straight men want nothing more than to see lots and lots of naked girls prancing around—if one is good, then two (or more) is even better. And if those two girls happen to be making out, well, that’s just part of the game, too. The implicit assumption is that they’re not kissing because they’re really attracted to each other (‘cause that would be, you know, too gay), but because they’re both so into sex that they’d do it with anything that moves, even someone of the same gender. “Girl-on-girl” porn is such a crazy mix of homophobia and queer performance that it’s hard to know what to think.

But for what it’s worth, here’s what I think: while there’s something disturbing about the way lesbian desire has been defanged and commodified for straight consumption, there’s also no reason why anyone should have to apologize for what turns them on. Provided that a person’s taste in smut doesn’t include incest, pedophilia, or bestiality, I don’t think it’s at all productive to ask an individual to account for what turns their crank. If you like lesbian porn, then you like it. It’s really as simple as that. I wouldn’t worry too much about whether that makes you bisexual—and even if it did, there’s nothing wrong with that, either. Just one thing: if you find yourself becoming attracted to women in real life, don’t beat yourself up about it. Just go with it.

Add comment January 5, 2009

Mo Problems

I wrote to you earlier—I’m the 15-year old lesbian girl in Delhi. I have more problems now than before. One of my friends has told me she doesn’t want to be friends with me and another one is blackmailing me and threatening to tell my teachers that I’m a lesbian. I’m really worried about this. The other thing is that I’m in love with a girl who is a class senior to me and I want to tell her. Should I send her and anonymous love letter or is there some other process. Please help me. I feel like dying. I cry all day.
–Goody Dash

I remember your previous letter. It was published on April 26th. Honestly, your problems sound much bigger than what I can address in the scope of this column. You are dealing with shmucks for friends, falling in love, and the pressure to keep your sexual desires secret. That’s a lot for a 15-year-old kid and you have my fullest sympathy. Seriously, I my heart goes out to you.  My advice: call the TARSHI (that’s Talking About Reproductive and Sexual Health Issues, a non-profit in Delhi). They have a hotline for people who need to work through address issues of gender and sexuality in their lives. They’re very non-judgmental and caring, and they protect your privacy and confidentiality all the way. The helpline phone number is (011)-2437 2229 and the hours are 10 AM to 4 PM, Monday through Wednesday. Give them a call and see how they can help. And keep me posted about how you’re doing. You’ve got a definite supporter way down south in Chennai.

1 comment October 9, 2008

Naturally

Why do people become gays or lesbians? I mean, people are naturally attracted to the opposite sex, so what influences some people to be attracted towards to their own sex?
–What’s Natural?

Well, there’s your problem in a nutshell. People are not “naturally” attracted to the opposite sex. There’s nothing natural, inherent, or inevitable about sexual attraction or gender identity. These things are fabulously variable and fluid. I’ll give you a great example: just last week I attended a conference in Kathmandu about strategies for defending queer rights in South Asia (organized by the Blue Diamond Society of Nepal and LLH Norway), and there I met a lovely transgender woman who spoke at the conference about identifying as a heterosexual. Now, here’s an individual who was born as a biological male, but identifies and lives her life as a straight woman. Is that “natural”?  Who cares? And there are so many more varieties: trans individuals who desire with same-sex desires, trans individuals who desire other trans people, same-sex desiring individuals, bisexuals, pan-sexuals, straight people who don’t want kids (procreation, of course, being the usual rock with which heterosexists bludgeon others with the “unnaturalness” of same-sex desire), you name it. Just going by the sheer variety of ways that people express sexual desire and experience pleasure, I don’t think it’s possible to talk about what’s natural. Some people are born with their desires hardwired into their brains and others are not. Asking the question of why some people become gay or lesbian does not make any more sense than asking why some people become straight. A better question would be, “how do we, as a society, protect and celebrate the diversity of sexual and gender identities in our communities?” That’s not the question you asked, of course, but it’s a much more productive and inclusive one.

Add comment September 16, 2008

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