Archive for the ‘Signs & Symbols’ Category

How to Talk to Homosexuals

July 6, 2011

How many times have you found yourself at the florist, Dear Breeder, or the fabric store or off-track betting parlour, and wished you could communicate more effectively with the obvious homosexual working behind the counter? You’ve seen him give vigorous, award-winning customer service to other floral enthusiasts/stay-at-home seamstresses/gambling addicts. What’s so wrong with you?

You and millions of clueless heterosexuals just like you are not alone, Dear Breeder. That’s why I’ve drawn up a few handy tips, to help you get the service you’ve come to expect from the minority group you’ve come to despise. Once you’ve got the hang of these basic guidelines, I guarantee you’ll be thinking, talking, and acting like a homosexual in no time!

Without any of that sinful wriggling around in feces your religious leaders and congresswomen can’t help but picture us engaged in, of course…


“Wait a minute, you mean most nights you guys just
make dinner and argue about what’s on tv?”

First, take a deep breath and picture yourself in the homosexual’s shoes, platform boots, or gardening clogs, as the case may be. To demonstrate your newly-feigned sense of empathy, you should begin the conversation with a simple, yet heartfelt apology. It doesn’t matter what for, just make something up. Remember, it’s not a lie if you yourself don’t believe it. This may seem counterintuitive, Dear Breeder, but once you too have spent an entire shared cultural history diminishing and making amends for your very existence, I think you’ll find that the words “I’m sorry” roll right off the tongue.

Next up, try lightening the mood with a joke. We gays spend a lot of time brooding about all the many ways we’ve been wronged, and love nothing more than a hearty chuckle at the end of a long, humiliating day of public visibility. And don’t worry about bringing your A game! We gays will laugh at almost anything, even if your material is as tired as Dan Choi’s Grindr profile.

Pushy activist seeks same for steamy equal rights fantasy play.

Finally, take every opportunity to pepper your language with what little gay slang you’ve managed to cobble together over the years. I’m not asking you to become fluent in Polari overnight, simply suggesting that, under the right circumstances, a well-timed “Queen, please!” will go a very long way toward getting what you want. (As may a casual reference to hot yoga and butternut squash, depending on the gender aspect of the listener.) Best case scenario, you’ve cracked the code and made yourself a new friend! Worst case scenario, you’ll come across as the incoherent, babbling member of the general public we’ve already pegged you to be. Either way, it’s another victory for modern gay rights!

If, after several attempts, none of these techniques has proven effective, Dear Breeder—take heart. It’s not your fault. Like Navajo, ours is a language impossible to master unless you were born into it. We gay people communicate through a finely-woven tapestry of verbal and nonverbal cues: elaborate series of low-frequency throttles and rumblings, high-pitched buzzings and hisses, pheremonal signals and glandular secretions. And of course, our patented Ojos Brillanticos™ Technology.

Our eyes are the windows to the closed doors of our parents’ souls.

When all else fails, just keep on grumbling, pointing at things, and sweating all over the counter. The gay-in-charge will eventually figure out what you want—most likely by rolling his eyes and deciding for you. And when you get home and find you have to explain to your wife why the minivan is stuffed with lemon yellow crinoline or silk magnolias or losing pull-tabs, I strongly suggest you take a reflective moment, look into her eyes, and tell her you’re sorry.

Just like I taught you.

Lost and Found at the Michigan Womyn’s Music Festival

August 16, 2009

A week ago I alighted within the rural countryside of Hart, Michigan to attend my first Michigan Womyn’s Music Festival. There, I promptly found my inner lesbian sister-spirit, and lost the following items: my wallet, my hand-woven goddess stick, and—on the last night—my “All who wander are not lost” girlfriend, who’s since been returned.

Where lesbians and lawn chairs finally belong.
Anyone up for a game of “Where’s Carla”?

The MWMF was born in 1976 in the heyday of lesbian separatism, a reality born from the dream of an empowering womyn-only, womyn-built space packed with folk music, all-day consciousness-raising workshops, and tofu nutloaf for thousands. Today, not much has changed, making it one of few places in existence where we can actually experience (and in the case of the lentil stew, nearly taste) a part of our lesbian herstory.

Not much is lost on the land (which is how lesbians refer to the 650 acres that house the festival). When my “wallet” fell out of my “pants,” a sister (which is how lesbians refer to each other on the land) picked it up and visited surrounding campsites until she found a friend of mine who could return it to me. Isn’t sisterhood powerful?

There’s always time for a gay parade!
National Womyn’s Wyg March and Sew-In

Not all of my sisters were as lucky as I. Or as quick to leave personal belongings on mulched pathways that would be compassionately trampled by hundreds of Tevas, Birkenstocks, and patent leather stiletto boots in a matter of days. In fact, the festival’s Lost & Found safe space tells a different story altogether, one in which numerous lesbian-feminist heirlooms were lost to the moonlit skies and absent-minded disposition that comes from living in a dream-world where neither shirts nor shoes are required for service.

Official MWMF Lost & Found Inventory, 2009
Cedar n’ Sage dog brush
Hemp afghan, for cool nights
A dusty copy of A Woman’s Guide to Animal-Whispering
Hand-blown glass bong (with “Our Bodies, Ourselves” inlay etching)
One mystical feather, one pot of gold
Satchels
Hers-and-hers rainbow muumuus with “dancing goddess” batik pattern
One sealed box of latex gloves
One empty box of latex gloves
A fleeting vision of dolphin equality
At least fifteen appropriations of Native American culture
Four unique “Pstyle” models
1,235 leathermans
A quiver of arrows
Melissa Ferrick

Portrait of the artist as a young goddess.

Don’t worry, my sisters. Your secrets are sacred with me.

Emma

The Da-Kinsey Code

July 27, 2009

In 1948, celebrated pervert Alfred Kinsey proposed that every person’s sexuality falls somewhere on a scale between zero and six, zero being exclusively heterosexual, and six being outrageously ga-ga-ga-GAY!

"Set an extra plate for supper tonight, Aunt Bea."
“And how long have you had these thoughts about seahorses?”

To help you better understand your own place on the sexual spectrum, Dear Breeder, and that of your closest friends, potential lovers, and clergymen, we at Breeder’s Digest have assembled this handy, free-association guide to the infamous Kinsey Scale. By the time we call your number, you’ll find that human sexuality is so easy, even a child could do it!

While you’re at it, feel free to jot down some of your own associations! And don’t forget to name names!

KINSEY 0: Absolutely Straight
Ryan’s Steakhouse, gang violence, coupons, Esther Rolle, Oil of Olay

KINSEY 1: Straight n’ Hard
Neckerchiefs, “Painter of Light” Thomas Kinkade, public bathrooms, 30 Minute Meals with Rachael Ray, animals with blowholes

KINSEY 2: Bisexual, Mostly Straight
Missy Elliott, the Baldwins, prison sex

KINSEY 3: Truly Bisexual
Unicorns, dragons, El Chupacabra, Susan Lucci, rainbow trout

KINSEY 4: Bisexual, Mostly Gay
Queen Latifah, the Cusacks, prison sex

KINSEY 5: Gay n’ Easy
Felicity Huffman, jockstraps, secret eating, Bare Minerals foundation, North Carolina

KINSEY 6: KA-BOOM!
Snagglepuss, the MoMA gift shop, Barbara Hershey, shrimp or cock rings, Europe

Pencils down, Dear Breeder! Time to tally up our points! Whether you scored in the gay, straight, or creepy, in-between area, what a weight off your shoulders it must be, to finally recognize your position on the Kinsey Scale—not to mention the corresponding set of human rights society is thereby willing to afford you! When it comes to Kinsey, we’re all winners!

Did anyone else get an 8.6666666667? OMG, me too!

John

What Wouldn’t Sappho Do?

March 31, 2009

Like me, the inverted pink triangle has been a symbol of gay pride since the 1970s. I’m sure you already know this, Dear Breeder, as you loudly assert every time you’re within earshot of my cubicle that you saw Milk in the theater (before the Oscars). But are you aware of the pink triangle’s more sinister historical origins? During the Holocaust, gay male prisoners in Nazi death camps were forced to wear them to indicate their supposed crimes. Queer culture’s valiant attempt to reclaim this symbol makes us one of only two populations keeping Nazi imagery alive: gay activists and white supremacists. Ouch!

Despite the pink triangle’s earliest association with gay male persecution, the pinkest triangles have to do exclusively with lesbian freedom. Lesbians have been tied up with triangles since the days of Sappho (see Fragment 31), and today’s modern lesbian undoubtedly finds herself in at least a few erotic triangulations over the course of her gay & lesbian lifetime.

sappho2
Fragment 31 begins, quoth, “Get your hands off my woman, you she-beast!”

Case in point: This week, I fielded an emergency call from my Platonic Sapphic friend with Nicomachean ethics. Having recently moved to a new city, she promptly slept her way into a corner. Unlike your typical “fresh meat” scenario, lesbian-sexual-passions-corresponding-with-a-move are not merely random hook-ups but intricate geometrical patterns most often resembling triangles. Orderly promiscuity is the name of the game in the lesbian community, Dear Breeder, and it’s time you face facts and realize just how much you wish you were a lesbian.

bizzare_love_triangle_by_hamkahatta1
Meta-play on spectatorial triangulation, or Jordache ad?

It seems my friend has single-handedly, or possibly both-handedly, amassed a triangle of girly admirers to call her own and has watched in whorror as her own erotic loyalties have shifted over the course of several monthly cycles. Alas, she has unintentionally become, as strict Hallandoatesian ethicists would have it, a Woman-Eater. Thanks to my Classical education and upbringing, I easily walked my friend through her problems over the course of a grueling, seventeen hour phone call, using this basic lesbian formula: What Wouldn’t Sappho Do? In no time, she was off the streets and back in the sheets!

Can you imagine captivating the attention of three people simultaneously, Dear Breeder (not counting your children and childlike husband)? Can you envision fluttering between three lovers without anyone’s feelings getting hurt? Well, lesbians not only imagine it, we do it. And then we do it with two other people. Next time you see a lesbian, think of the pink triangle (no, the other one–up higher!) that no doubt erotically links her to two other lesbians. And then think of those pink triangles tying her to eight more pink triangles ad infinitum. For then and only then will you finally see the Escheresque kaleidoscope that is lesbian promiscuity.

Don’t even get me started on the HRC symbol…

Emma

Official Breeder’s Digest Hanky Code™

March 26, 2009

You may have noticed when shopping at your local corporate megastore, Dear Breeder, that pocket handkerchiefs come in many assorted colors. Obviously, blue and red are used to indicate streetgang affiliations; but what are such nondescript colors as purple, yellow, and periwinkle good for? Once again, your well-meaning, albeit naive, curiosity has opened up a disgusting can of filthy, gay worms. For years, big city gays and lesbians have used multicolored handkerchiefs to indicate various sexual preferences and practices. Come slither in the dirt with us, Dear Breeder, as we explain the myriad, intricate meanings of our emblematic accessories with this easy-to-use reference guide.

official-bd-hanky-code

Next time you blow your nose, Dear Breeder, we urge you to pay attention to what color hanky you use, and into which pocket you stuff it. As always, we’ve got our beady little eyes trained directly at your rear end, and are awaiting the slightest sign, suggestion, or color-coded invitation to strike! What color are we currently flagging? Why, sandalwood beige, as always…

You do the math.

Emma John


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