Poetry competition CLOSED 4th July 2023 4:25pm
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lepperochan (Craic-Dealer)
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RUNNERS-UP: wallyroo92 and Kinkpoet

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PRIDE MONTH

wallyroo92
Tyrant of Words
United States 154awards
Joined 11th July 2012
Forum Posts: 1871

Happy Pride Month

 
It’s Happy Pride Month bitches!
It’s my birthday month so I’m celebrating that too
So be ready because I may have you in stitches
From laughter, but I can shank a skank if you want me to

I done told y’all, remove the W from Wally because I’m an ally
I pronounce my pronouns as he/him and that crazy fucker there
I’m all about equality and inclusion that’s why I keep a close eye
On any intolerant political shenanigans so haters beware

So you wanna be pro-life while there are kids who take their own lives?
Many are too scared to share how they feel or be who they are
It’s important to accept people, remove barriers and besides…
You may already know some, you just don’t have good gaydar

Be happy for people who want to be free, who want to express themselves
They are your neighbors, your friends, you co-workers, your loved ones too
Don’t be ignorant and get to know folks but you gotta do it for yourselves
Otherwise hate erodes the soul leaving you with a narrow point of view

Pride is about awareness, knowing the troubles and struggles of others
About earning respect and understanding and showing propriety
They are our cousins, our sisters, our fathers, our brothers and mothers
Pride is about learning so that we can work toward a better society

Written by wallyroo92
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Ahavati
Tams
Tyrant of Words
United States 123awards
Joined 11th Apr 2015
Forum Posts: 16923

Thanks for your entry, Wally! They are our family indeed! Thank you for recognizing such. And Happy Birthday to you!

Ahavati
Tams
Tyrant of Words
United States 123awards
Joined 11th Apr 2015
Forum Posts: 16923


The Importance of Pride Month: LGBTQI+ rights are human rights, but unfortunately, that still isn't status quo.

KEY POINTS

• The first recorded march for LGBTQI+ rights in the United States was in 1969 in New York City. Now, 150 cities host Pride events.

• In the U.S., LBTQI+ youth are almost five times more likely to have attempted suicide compared to heterosexual, cisgender youth.

• Pride Month and pride parades continue to be important for the solidarity, fight for human rights, and visibility of the LGBTQI+ community.

This month is LGBTQI+ Pride Month. In the US and other countries, many places display rainbow flags, companies have promotions, events, or products “in honor of LGBTQI+ Pride,” and there are cities around the world that have a parade sometime in the month of June.

That said, many people don’t know or understand why Pride Month exists and/or the purpose of the parade. Some react with fear and prejudice, some are puzzled as to why it’s necessary, while others think of it as just a big excuse to dress up and party.

But LGBTQI+ Pride Month actually has a very specific history and purpose. For many, if not most, in the LGBTQI+ community, it’s a deeply meaningful and moving day that has great significance.

Understanding the history of Pride

In order to understand Pride Month and why there are pride parades, it’s important to understand the history. The first recorded march for the rights of LGBTQI+ folks in the United States was in 1969 in New York City. The regular, systematic, and violent oppression of people in that community reached a boiling point, at a time when other social movements — the Civil Rights movement, Women’s Liberation movement, Disability Rights movement — were gaining momentum and fighting for oppressed groups to have a voice and demand for equal human treatment.

At that time, the police, and individuals felt it well within their rights to oppress and cause bodily harm to people within the LGBTQI+ community. The march was a response to that treatment — it was a demand that people within the community be treated with the basic rights, respect, and dignity afforded other human beings in the country.

Those first marchers were courageous. They risked their lives by exposing themselves to the public as part of the community and in doing so, they made the community visible and empowered. After this first march, it became an annual event. The next year there were also marches in Los Angeles and San Francisco. Today, there are 150 cities around the world that host Pride events during the summer.

So why are these events still happening?

Prejudice, oppression, violence, and death are still, unfortunately, common for people in the LBTQI+ community in the United States and across the globe. Many states in the US are continuing to pass legislation to deny the rights of people in this community. In the US, LBTQI+ youth are almost five times as likely to have attempted suicide compared to heterosexual, cis youth because of the continued deep prejudice, hatred, and lack of acceptance they perceive around them.

Around the world, there are laws specifically being passed to deny the rights of LBTQI+ people to live, love, work, receive medical care, go to the bathroom, exercise, and even simply exist. People in this community continue to be subjected to rejection, prejudice, violence, and death.

For this reason, Pride Month — and the pride parades — continue to be deeply important in the continued solidarity, fight for human rights, and visibility of the LGBTQI+ community. Additionally, and equally important, is the label “pride.” For a group of people who are told continuously — through laws, religions, media, bullying, and directly — that LBTQI+ people are less-than or should not exist, it is deeply psychologically important that there be counter-messaging. Shame is debilitating and can lead to mental illness, addiction, isolation, and death.

It is deeply important that there be a visible, supported, and joyous event telling people of the LBTQI+ community that it is a beautiful, diverse, supported, and welcome community, and one to be proud to be a member of, and one that deserves the rights and dignities of every human.

~ Samantha Stein Psy.D.
Originally published in Phsycology Today, June 2021

Ahavati
Tams
Tyrant of Words
United States 123awards
Joined 11th Apr 2015
Forum Posts: 16923


If you need support or are seeking ways to support our LGBTQ brothers and sisters, consider The Youth Pride Association.

The Youth Pride Association is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization with the mission to promote and foster the acceptance of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer (LGBTQ) people in educational institutions.

We work to address the alarming and substantial adversities LGBTQ youth face in schools.

Together we strive to...

• Educate LGBTQ youth through positive examples

• Support an environment where LGBTQ youth feel represented and safe

• Advocate for LGBTQ youth to their peers

• Ensure the acceptance of LGBTQ youth in their communities

During the 2021-2022 academic year, YPA provided programs services to:

2,131 students through the Acceptance Week program and 6,437 students through the Model School Policy Initiative.

https://www.ypapride.org/

Image: BIG Youth Pride 20th Anniversary at Dupont Circle

Ahavati
Tams
Tyrant of Words
United States 123awards
Joined 11th Apr 2015
Forum Posts: 16923


Hay House is hosting a Facebook live event with Ari Wisner, artist, graphic designer, illustrator, and creator of Transient Light Tarot tonight! Celebrate the divine rainbow and its symbolism of diversity, the spectrum of human expression, and how it’s inherent in nature.

This is a public event for anyone on or off facebook.

Monday, June 19 at 1 PM PT | 4 PM ET | 9 PM BST

copingwithwords__
Twisted Dreamer
Germany
Joined 3rd Feb 2023
Forum Posts: 1

our flag

we‘re laying here
under my pride flag
and the stars, my dear
arm in arm, entangled
now i‘m laying in my bed
thoughts racing through my head
am addicted to how your skin feels on mine
is this already a sign?
or do i just belong with you
and in your heart too?

Written by copingwithwords__
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Ahavati
Tams
Tyrant of Words
United States 123awards
Joined 11th Apr 2015
Forum Posts: 16923

Lovely imagery, copingwithwords__ . Thank you for sharing with us.

lepperochan
Craic-Dealer
Guardian of Shadows
Palestine 67awards
Joined 1st Apr 2011
Forum Posts: 14570

His name is Dillon, my son


Took him some time
to lose the closet
and suffered alone
because of it

still hurts a little
when I think of his pain
and wonder what he thought
I would do to him, or say

but, no matter

with the closet gone
when he knew full sure
his home was his sanctuary
he grew to who he was born to be
been to New York, Chicago twice
but knows like me he was kinda lucky
we are we the family




......

(Thanks for the opportunity)


Ahavati
Tams
Tyrant of Words
United States 123awards
Joined 11th Apr 2015
Forum Posts: 16923

Thank you for your entry, Craic. It's exactly the sort of thing I am looking for.

Ahavati
Tams
Tyrant of Words
United States 123awards
Joined 11th Apr 2015
Forum Posts: 16923


Still so much hatred and anger we need to combat.

LGBTQ+ pride flags vandalized at Stonewall National Monument 3 times during Pride month

NEW YORK (AP) — Dozens of LGBTQ+ pride flags were damaged and ripped down at the Stonewall National Monument over the weekend, the third such bout of vandalism at the LGBTQ+ landmark during this Pride month, police said.

The latest occurrence happened Sunday, after others on June 9 and last Thursday. No arrests have been made in any of the incidents, and it’s unclear whether they were connected. The New York Police Department’s Hate Crimes Task Force is investigating.

On Sunday, officers were called around 8 a.m. and found about 33 pride flags broken and tossed to the ground, police said.

Park volunteer Steven Menendez told New York’s Fox 5 News that, in all, 68 flags — nearly a quarter of those displayed — were damaged in some way.

“We have so much hatred and anger in the air right now,” Menendez told the station. “We really need to reverse that and replace it with love compassion and acceptance.”

The Stonewall National Monument, the first U.S. national monument dedicated to LGBTQ+ history, was dedicated in 2016. It encompasses a park across the street from the Stonewall Inn, a bar where patrons fought back against a police raid on June 28, 1969, and helped spark the contemporary LGBTQ+ rights movement.

The Stonewall Rebellion is commemorated every year with pride marches in cities across the U.S. and the world.

More on how Stonewall became a national monument.

https://globalcocktails.com/how-the-stonewall-area-became-a-national-monument/

Ahavati
Tams
Tyrant of Words
United States 123awards
Joined 11th Apr 2015
Forum Posts: 16923

Not all straight people have white picket fences

We’ve also faced discrimination  
from indignant condemnation  
 
Labels are a funny thing  
as though others can’t understand  
the ingredients of injustice  
toward those who are different  
 
You see, hate works both ways  
 
Just because I’ve never back-flipped  
off an experience doesn’t mean shit  
I’ve swallowed the pain of prejudice  
so deep it took decades to mend  
 
It’s all born of blatant ignorance  
 
It’s like telling an adoptive mother  
that she can’t understand how to love  
a child she didn’t birth from her own womb  
or accusing someone of not knowing God  
because they don’t go to church  
 
Love is love, and hate is hate  
especially when one becomes  
the judgmental prejudice  
they wish to erase  
 
Let’s get it Straight—  
 
true hell is a prison  
where pain drowns reason  
within a closed-closet of silence  
or open-door of persecution  
that’s been felt by every human  
being on this earth  
despite the reason  
 
No one has priority on suffering  
because they speak different languages  
 
Those who have truly cast out demons  
and survived a personal holocaust  
strive to ease the suffering
of others through awareness  
 
Those who have felt the edge  
of a bridge  
bottle of pills  
or loaded gun  
because they were so violated  
by sorrow even their language failed  
often succumb to suicide  
because no one cared  
 
Compassion is as universal as pain  
we must be careful not to alienate  
any ally willing to foster the cause
 
Must we be starving to feed  
someone who is?  
 
Not all straights  
live in a white picket fence  
of religion or apathetic ignorance  
 
~
Written by Ahavati (Tams)
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Not an entry.

Oohloulala
Loulou
Twisted Dreamer
United Kingdom
Joined 25th Feb 2018
Forum Posts: 3

Related submission no longer exists.

MidnightSonneteer
Dangerous Mind
United States 6awards
Joined 13th May 2022
Forum Posts: 478

Solidarity!

Why would you hide your head in the sand
About the colors that nature provides
When eyes are a spectrum sensitive gland
Serving so well as technicolor guides?

Sight is a sense that's meant to be used
So that apes, like gods, have infinite scope
To avoid having their futures abused
Via spectral sensitivity hope!

This is not wrong, unnatural, or bad,
But the way in which we all are wired
In the tradition of every comrade
Who was ever by a love inspired...

And what spectrum is more magnetic,
Than the rainbow coalition aesthetic!  
Written by MidnightSonneteer
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Ahavati
Tams
Tyrant of Words
United States 123awards
Joined 11th Apr 2015
Forum Posts: 16923

MidnightSonneteer said:. . .

Thank you, J! Stellar entry!

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