happy pride month, Beehaw! what queer stuff will you be up to this month?

alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgmod to LGBTQ+@beehaw.org – 20 points –
34

I painted my nails for the first time, in pursuit of understanding my gender.

How have you liked it? I felt like I couldn’t pick anything up when I first tried it. What color did you choose?

I love it! The color variety was certainly overwhelming, but i settled on a dark blue.

I’m playing bass for a production of Kinky Boots if that’s anything. I’m also working up the courage to come out to my close friends.

I'm trying to do this too, I'm already out to some friends, but I want to come out to my best friend and that's going to be huge for me.

I'm working mostly from home, but when I'm in the office I will always wear some kind of pride shirt this month. Otherwise there is not that much happening, at least in RL. We do not have Pride here, "only" Christopher Street Day but that's in July. But I plan to attend there (it's more like a demo, not a parade). Maybe I will finally get in contact with the local queer community. I'm not very social, so I don't like to attend events alone. But pride month might give me a little push :)

I've been thinking a lot about how polyamory plays into my queerness - I'm lucky enough to have significantly expanded my local chosen family since Pride in 2021, and over the last year our housing situation has gotten much more stable.

I think that I'm almost more committed to polyamory than I am to bisexuality, as a label. I certainly face more problems as a polyamorous person than as a bi one.

I've always found it weird the push back against looping polyamory under the queer umbrella. Yes, there are some cis straight poly folks out there, but if you've ever been poly you'd realize that they too get a lot of identity erasure, face stigma from talking about having multiple partners, etc. Obviously everyone is entitled to their own opinion, but if queer is supposed to represent non cisheteronormative behavior, I think its fair to call monogamy another kind of normative behavior and celebrate diversity in human attraction and relationships.

I'm hoping to attend a pride event in-person (I've never been to one!) but I'll have to travel because my city does pride in the fall. Not sure if that will work out :/

You live in GA? :P Atlanta pride is some fun, but it is very busy. If you're looking for something a bit more intimate, Savannah pride has been wonderful when I've gone.

If anyone has any queer nonfiction books to suggest, give me all the suggestions. I'm stuck in bed, and also barely any amount of queer anyway, so that's the only queer thing I'd be able to do.

Edit: I should add that I can only do audiobooks, so apologies in advance if I don't have access to your suggestion.

Orlando is objectively a queer friendly city, but they don't have any pride events in June.

There's an unofficial event each June called "Disney World Gay Days" (not affiliated with Disney themselves, who just treat it like any other summer day), so Orlando moved their pride celebration to October instead. I think it's understandable, but it always sucks to feel left out from the rest of the queer community.

I've actually have never been to Pride, since other things tend to conflict, and social anxiety in general. This year, I will definitely participate (motivated by the phrase: "Pride is a Protest"). I've been "openly queer" for the last 5ish years, but I haven't been "openly trans", but I'm taking steps to own that identity, at least more openly. Perhaps people can clock me as trans, but no one ever says anything, so i think I might currently qualify as "stealth", but I feel like I don't pass. Just in that weird superposition.

I have at least one symbolic gesture I want to make this June. I play Women's Flat Track Roller Derby, and I want to fly the trans flag during my player intro. It's a very small thing to do, but trans athletics has been under attack, so I feel like choosing to be a visible trans athlete is something i need to do

I kind of want to check out my cities local pride events, but I also REALLY get overwhelmed by crowds, noise, and such. Also I don't really have anyone to go with. So I might just celebrate and online. I'll probably just buy a really trashy wlw book or two and read? I'll be open to reading suggestions lol.

You might like hanging out on the sidelines of the staging area for the parade? You get to see everything and everyone excited and getting ready, but music isn’t playing yet and there isn’t a crowd watching until outside the staging area.

I went to Pride with my girlfriend, and am now spending the month making as much LGBT+ art that I can.

Got nonbinary laces for the boots I wear, and a couple of rainbow bracelets to wear. Painted my nails red, orange, green, blue and purple, (one colour on each nail). Joined an LGBT+ forum.

Going to a pride parade in the city soon, and going to drive some of the more inebriated LGBTQ friends of mine home that day too.

Sadly not a lot, well I have to coming out to my employers this month because of my name change (because anyway they will see that my name is now Lily on the pay), they are probably the last people I want to say it. I also bought a pin to put on my shirts with my name and my pronouns, so that's also a plus!

I would love to go to pride, but in my city, there's no pride. But next year i'm going in a bigger city and I will always celebrate pride there

Probably nothing this year... I'm going to have my hands full between work and moving apartments. Next year, however, my girlfriend should be moved in with me and we'll try to make up for lost time!

going to my first Pride march this weekend.

hell yea I expect pictures 😤

I'm sure someone out there is going to take some

it's not a Pride parade or even a Pride march, actually. it's called The March of Equality, and I doubt there's going to be, to use the right-wingers' favourite phrase, "naked men running around with feathers in their arses".

Maybe watch some queer-positive TV shows (I don't know of many, anyone got suggestions?) and buy some new pride gear from LGBTQ+ businesses.

Perhaps you've heard of them already, but here are a few I've enjoyed over the past couple of years:

  • Our Flag Means Death (gay pirates, very cozy vibes)
  • A League of Their Own (the formation of the first all-female baseball league during WW2, excellent lesbian representation, strong writing and themes)
  • Pose (a look into 80s ballroom culture, strong trans representation, but I'd only recommend the first season bc the writing quality sharply drops in the next two imo)
  • What We Do in the Shadows (queer vampire roommates and their queer human servant get into various antics, really funny)