Finally, Someone Else Who’s Angry
Great letter sent along to me by Cal-pal Cathy DeBuono:
The Best Thing I’ve Read All Year
Published on May 04, 2000Sunday, April 30, 2000By SHARON UNDERWOODFor the Valley News (White River Junction, VT)Many letters have been sent to the Valley News concerning the homosexual menace in Vermont. I am the mother of a gay son and I’ve taken enough from you good people.I’m tired of your foolish rhetoric about the “homosexual agenda” and your allegations that accepting homosexuality is the same thing as advocating sex with children. You are cruel and ignorant. You have been robbing me of the joys of motherhood ever since my children were tiny.My firstborn son started suffering at the hands of the moral little thugs from your moral, upright families from the time he was in the first grade. He was physically and verbally abused from first grade straight through high school because he was perceived to be gay.He never professed to be gay or had any association with anything gay, but he had the misfortune not to walk or have gestures like the other boys. He was called “fag” incessantly, starting when he was 6.In high school, while your children were doing what kids that age should be doing, mine labored over a suicide note, drafting and redrafting it to be sure his family knew how much he loved them. My sobbing 17-year-old tore the heart out of me as he choked out that he just couldn’t bear to continue living any longer, that he didn’t want to be gay and that he couldn’t face a life without dignity.You have the audacity to talk about protecting families and children from the homosexual menace, while you yourselves tear apart families and drive children to despair. I don’t know why my son is gay, but I do know that God didn’t put him, and millions like him, on this Earth to give you someone to abuse. God gave you brains so that you could think, and it’s about time you started doing that.At the core of all your misguided beliefs is the belief that this could never happen to you, that there is some kind of subculture out there that people have chosen to join. The fact is that if it can happen to my family, it can happen to yours, and you won’t get to choose. Whether it is genetic or whether something occurs during a critical time of fetal development, I don’t know. I can only tell you with an absolute certainty that it is inborn.If you want to tout your own morality, you’d best come up with something more substantive than your heterosexuality. You did nothing to earn it; it was given to you. If you disagree, I would be interested in hearing your story, because my own heterosexuality was a blessing I received with no effort whatsoever on my part. It is so woven into the very soul of me that nothing could ever change it. For those of you who reduce sexual orientation to a simple choice, a character issue, a bad habit or something that can be changed by a 10-step program, I’m puzzled. Are you saying that your own sexual orientation is nothing more than something you have chosen, that you could change it at will? If that’s not the case, then why would you suggest that someone else can?A popular theme in your letters is that Vermont has been infiltrated by outsiders. Both sides of my family have lived in Vermont for generations. I am heart and soul a Vermonter, so I’ll thank you to stop saying that you are speaking for “true Vermonters.”You invoke the memory of the brave people who have fought on the battlefield for this great country, saying that they didn’t give their lives so that the “homosexual agenda” could tear down the principles they died defending. My 83-year-old father fought in some of the most horrific battles of World War II, was wounded and awarded the Purple Heart.He shakes his head in sadness at the life his grandson has had to live. He says he fought alongside homosexuals in those battles, that they did their part and bothered no one. One of his best friends in the service was gay, and he never knew it until the end, and when he did find out, it mattered not at all. That wasn’t the measure of the man.You religious folk just can’t bear the thought that as my son emerges from the hell that was his childhood he might like to find a lifelong companion and have a measure of happiness. It offends your sensibilities that he should request the right to visit that companion in the hospital, to make medical decisions for him or to benefit from tax laws governing inheritance.How dare he? you say. These outrageous requests would threaten the very existence of your family, would undermine the sanctity of marriage.You use religion to abdicate your responsibility to be thinking human beings. There are vast numbers of religious people who find your attitudes repugnant. God is not for the privileged majority, and God knows my son has committed no sin.The deep-thinking author of a letter to the April 12 Valley News who lectures about homosexual sin and tells us about “those of us who have been blessed with the benefits of a religious upbringing” asks: “What ever happened to the idea of striving . . . to be better human beings than we are?”Indeed, sir, what ever happened to that?
Sharon Underwood’s e-mail is: [email protected] I had the chance to speak with her yesterday. Her son is doing fine now, the first in his family to graduate from college.
If you have friends who think Jesus would have been a Republican — on the side of billionaire Pat Robertson, et al, in opposing Hate Crimes Legislation, opposing the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, and, yes, opposing Vermont’s extension of economic benefits to same-sex couples — please feel free to forward this column to as many of them as you like. Can’t you just see it? Jesus arm-in-arm with the NRA trying to maintain the gun-show loophole? Stumping the Holy Land in favor of a massive tax cut for the rich, while opposing a hike in the minimum wage?
Somehow, I think not.
| Print article | This entry was posted by Calpernia Addams on January 22, 2010 at 5:29 pm, and is filed under Diary. Follow any responses to this post through RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback from your own site. |






about 2 years ago
What a good post. Sharon's letter needs the widest publicity.
Unthinking, hidebound bigotry exists all over the world. I live in a fairly tolerant patch in south-east England, but I do sometimes wonder whether all that is restraining some of the people I meet is that British loathing of making a fuss. Brits are certainly not above mindless prejudice and it's so very easy to commit 'thought crime'. It's a tragedy that homosexuality is still seen by so many as a mental disease, or as a perverse and punishable lifestyle choice; ditto transsexuality.
I suggested in one of my own recent posts, that passing as a transsexual person (read gay person too, I say) depends not so much on physical appearance or how you sound, but on whether your presentation is such that other people can feel comfortable in your company, whether they can find it easy to be cool and nonchalant when inside they might be thinking how weird you are. In other words, you do fine and 'pass' so long as your embarrassment factor is low. The people who are so friendly towards you are not, accepting you for what you are, and giving you the same appreciation, dignity and respect they would give to 'ordinary' persons. They are holding you at arm's length, assessing you, hoping you do not slip up, and giving you a positive audience just so long as they themselves are not vulnerable to criticism and ridicule.
This must apply to homosexuals just as much. It's probably worse because of the more overt sex issues which make you a threat, and, in places where traditional religion and 'family values' dominate everyday human contact, living a gay life (or a supposedly gay life) is a life-destroying experience. But people should come first, not beliefs.
Lucy Melford
about 2 years ago
Fabulous………………..bless you for all you do!
about 1 year ago
I loved that article,thank you for posting that, it needs to be published in every newspaper and magazine in this country