Welcome to Blogging for LGBT Families Day! Below is the master list of contributed posts. Please enjoy!
To submit a post, complete the form at the end of this post, after the jump. If you don’t have a blog of your own (but only then), please leave your contribution in a comment.
[It’s not too late: I’m lax about the end time, anyway—I’m a parent and know what it means to be running late. Thanks to all who have already submitted posts!]
A special thanks to the Family Equality Council for sponsoring the event and donating a free registration to Family Week in Provincetown for the drawing. Thanks also to author Sarah Brannen, who contributed a signed copy of her book, Uncle Bobby’s Wedding. (See end of post for details of drawing.)
Thanks as well to The Bilerico Project, COLAGE, HRC, PageOneQ, and the many others who went the extra mile in encouraging participation.
I hope you take the time to read other people’s posts and enjoy the diversity of the LGBT community and our allies. Over the next few weeks, I’ll be writing up some posts that pull together various themes that emerge.
Posts are included in submission order.
- Lavendertales.com I Want A Daddy
- EveryFamily (celebrating all kinds) A Boy I Loved in Red High Heels
- 10-Foot Poet Blogging for LGBT Families
- LegalOut Blog The Importance of Legal Planning for LGBT Individuals and Couples
- En Busca de lo Naranja y Verde Un dÃa todos los dÃas
- How to Bring Your Kids Up Queer Genderqueer Mommy
- HRC Back Story MN Gov Fails Kids, But We Won’t Stop Fighting For Them
- JosieHenley’s Weblog Busy Half Term With The Boy (blogging for LGBT families)
- Burning or Building Bridges in the Community Who’s Got Your Back?
- Fly My Pretty Crossdressing toddlers
- 8thdayplanner Raising Kids in Love
- We Love Children’s Books Blogging for LGBT Families
- May the Beauty Blogging for GLBT families
- Mamis por dos. Madres lesbianas. 1º de junio: DÃa anual de bloquear por las familias LGBT. Nosotros.
- Familias Homoparentales Integradas Argentinas DÃa de los blogs de Familias LGBT
- Doorknobs That Lock Things our son has learned over the past year
- Bitacora (Chile) Estudio Familias Lesbicas Chile
- The Bilerico Project (Jillian Weiss) My Impossible Father
- tin, steel and rust Sunday mornings at Church
- El Blog de Luli Bloggeando por familias LGTB!!
- We Love Children’s Books Blogging for LGBT Families Day
- Related Topics Lesbian and Gay Families: Living on a Patchwork Quilt
- The Other Mother Blogging for LGBT Families on our 12th Anniversary
- Up Popped A Fox Of Produce and Lesbians
- Artificially Sweetened Proud to be a family
- Moms and Bombs I love my lesbian moms
- Damn Straight Standing Up as the Baby
- Truth and Love After 40 Meet The Boys: From a late in life family
- Adamant Sun How Prop 8 Changed Our Little Gay Family
- Notebooks of Daily Life Straight Guys for Equality
- LasDosMamis Mi familia LGBT
- LasDosMamis Blogueando por las familias LGBT
- COMALES Blogueando sobre las familias LGBT
- LOweetzieLIbatTA’s Deviant Art Gratitude and Optimism
- Green Dads A Place For Different Beliefs, A Place For Our Family
- One Lazy Liberal Blogging for LGBT Families
- The Mama Too Blog for LGBT Families Day
- enough grows changing tides
- Jesus has Two Daddies Blogging for LGBT Families Day
- Vince’s View Still, Too Many Ophelias
- Aberration Nation Two Dad Deal: An Aberration Story
- Pittsburgh Lesbian Correspondents Blogging for LGBT Families
- Strollerderby Not Every Kid with a Mother has a Mommy
- DC PoppyCock Flying the Flag
- 2 mommies and a shmoo Finding our Peace
- Random Musings Blogging for LGBT Families Day
- Queercents Blogging for LGBT Families Day: Working Mommies
- Lotus Opening An Open Letter to Senator Dianne Feinstein from a Homo West Virginian
- jaysays.com LGBT Lessons for Straight People: So Simple a Child “Gets” It
- Sarah Brannen LGBT Families
- Thoughts From A Lezzymom Blogging for LGBT Families – Typical Family
- Dancing on the Edge Happy Blogging Day!
- Books, Yarn, Ink and Other Pursuits What Makes a Family?
- Diana’s Little Corner in the Nutmeg State Blogging for LGBT Families Day 2009
- Own It. Love It. Live It. If You Fight, I’ll Fight
- Not the Mama Take Me Out to the Ball Game
- ENC blog Happy 4th Annual Blogging for LGBT Families!
- Crossroads and Beyond Blogging for GBLT Families 2009
- Snailbird Blogging for LGBT Families Day!
- EyeJunkie The One Where I Come Out… And Say It
- figboiler community from family.
- related topics Lesbian and Gay Families: Another Part of the Patchwork–ART Rules
- Susanica Truth and Reality
- Humpty Dumpty House Coming Out to the Birth Family
- No Designation My Two Moms <3 Their Trans Daughter
- KJ and the Kids It’s personal to me
- Maternidades L Familia somos: Blogging for LGBT Families Day 2009
- Queercents (Serena Freewomyn) Love and Money: Lessons Learned From My Queer Wedding
- Tenorissimo What is family?
- Calliopes_Muse Why I Fight On
- Brenda’s Banter LGBT Family
- Center Blog (Terry Boggis) Blogging for LGBT Families: In gratitude and grief: thoughts on the death of Dr. Tiller and what it means for LGBT families
- T-Equality Blog Working Together for Transgender Children
- Operación Botones Blogging for LGBT Families 2009: a rant
- Lezziemama Blogging for LGBT Families
- Traipsing about Granby Blogging for GLBT Families Day 2009
- Encantada Blog ¡Blogueando por nuestras familias!
- Notebooks of Daily Life The Ballad of John and Marco
- 4/5/2008 Blogging for GLBT Families, Weddings and….
- Labels are for Jars Blogging for LBGT Families Day: Elbowing at the Boundaries
- (Comment at Mombian) (Blogging without a Blog for LGBT Families Day
- Miss Rants Ad familiares
- Butt to Chair: Thoughts on the Writing Life Writing About LGBT Issues
- Fairymere Queerspawn Toast
- Retro-Food We are THAT LGBT Family
- (en)gender Blogging for LGBT Families Day!
- Were Those Wrinkles There Yesterday? Waving My Rainbow Pompoms!
- The Bilerico Project (Waymon Hudson) My “Non-Traditional” Family: Blogging for LGBT Families
- EveryFamily Lily at Thirteen
- Diary of a Modern Matriarch A Future World
- Louise’s Snack Bar Blogging For LGBT Families Day 2009
- All For the Love of You Unexpected Gifts
- Thalamus Center – Early Childhood Psychological Development Growing up Gay “Gay Marriage” – Marriage Equality – Opponents Based on Facts or Personal Fears of Antigay Religious Norms – afraid to love and to be loved?
- LizaWasHere 2009: Blogging for LGBT Families Day
- Embrace Your Age Cause You Livin’ Blogging for LGBT Families — Filling With Joy
- Transsexual Transition In Prog Blogging for LGBT Families Day!
- My Field of Paper Flowers Blogging for LGBT Families Day 2009
- Life Coaching for Women How Well Do You Handle Difficult Situations?
- The Family Ties That Bind Blogging for a Human Rights Cause
- Affine Financial Services What can kids learn from their LGBT parents about money?
- The Mouse’s Nest The radical act of being ourselves
- narrating kayoz Two mums *and* two dads – how cool is that?
- The Daddy Diaries Random Thoughts
- The Ever-Changing View Blogging for LGBT Families Day 2009
- Playa Minded Blogging for Equality
- InterstateQ.com Family is really all that counts
- Philadelphia Gay Parenting Examiner Summer camp for kids of LGBTQ families
- Notebooks of Daily Life I Hate Prop 8 (Guest Post by Jared, Age 7)
- Forever Reaching A Dream Still Deferred
- Life Is Messy Daily lesson
- (Comment at Mombian) Our Non-traditional Traditional Family
- A girl walks into a blog…Blogging for LGBT Families Day 2009
- Are You Kidding Blogging for LGBT Families Day 2009
- Come What May A Lesbian Family Weekend
- thetotalfemme Mom’s Base
- Abiekt Zapracowany
- Lesbian Dad Pas de deux
- Bent Alaska Pride Chorus keeps on Singing
- Religious Action Center Same-Sex Family Values
- Mommy With a Penis Thing-in-Hand
I will do the drawing this Friday, June 5. You must leave a valid e-mail to be eligible. It will not be shared or sold. Family Equality Council employees and paying advertisers on Mombian are not eligible.
Mine’s coming! I swear! I just have to juggle the childcare and other work stuff tomorrow! Hope the floodgates will stay open ’til up to midnight Pacific!
PS: Spiffy, spacious new design format here, Dana! Brava!
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Thanks for doing this!
I gave you the wrong link for my bilerico.com post: “My Impossible Father,” written by a teen of my acquaintance who’s written a really moving post. The link should be
http://www.bilerico.com/2009/06/my_impossible_father.php
Thanks again.
Jillian
A great resource for the LGBT community. Thanks for organizing!
Yes, absolutely! I’m always a little lax about the end time so that we catch folks in every time zone. (And for you, I’d save a spot in any case!)
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Thanks–glad you like it! Sort of a spring cleaning.
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My wife (yes, we are one of the 18,000 in CA who can legally say that — how ridiculous is that?) went to LA this past weekend to play with some friends, leaving me and our 2.5 year old son and our 5.5 year old daughter to play with each other for three days.
When Kyler was an infant with colic, the thought of being alone with him for two hours terrified me. At almost-3, he is such a curious, funny, loving playful joy that I can hardly remember what that fear felt like. And Teah, our beautiful brilliant 5 year old — being around her is like watching the world being born. Everything is a source of amazement to her. Currently, she is really into telling jokes, and recounting what happened in her new-favorite Scooby Doo movie.
Over the weekend, we went to Teah’s Girl Scout troop meeting (a mostly LGBT family troop) and made fresh orange juice, visited my sister Lisa’s student art exhibit at the Urban Promise Academy, visited my sister Chris and her teenage sons, and went to a Giants game with our friend Cynthia, during which the kids sat still for approximately 15 minutes before wanting to run around. We quieted down a bit Sunday night by watching a nature show about this amazing place off the coast of South Africa where gannets and dolphins and sharks and whales come together to feast on sardines. In other words, it was a pretty typical weekend — full of family and fun and lots of time for the kids to play together and apart.
Kyler and I picked up Daph at the Oakland Airport with “That’s What I Like About You” blaring on the car stereo. Three days away and she looked cuter than ever. Ten years in, and I am continually shocked by how lucky I am to have found a love that is so capable and smart and kind and funny AND knock out gorgeous.
Underneath the details of everyday life in our little family is a new undercurrent of sorrow for me. My parents are in their 80s and are quickly approaching the point where they will no longer be able to live independently as they have for so long. My mother, in particular, is resisting change and offers of help. The push and pull with her — the closeness informed by listening to her in our daily calls, and the distance created by her refusal to accept help and my insistence that she needs some — illuminates The Gap We Do Not Discuss, the decade or so after I came out as a lesbian during which my mother and I barely talked. My mother and I love each other deeply. But with other siblings, she has an ease that is painfully lacking with me. Since Daph and I have had kids, she can find some common ground, and my willingness to come to NY defrosts things a bit. But in listening to her struggle, and in having to witness a huge and unwanted change in her ilfe, I feel a current growing in my heart — that we lost any time at all with each other. that we will never get that back. And that we will probably never totally cross the bridges that divide us again. I feel that loss keenly, as her daughter, and as the mother of children I hope I will be always able to accept unconditionally.
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[My blog picked today to crash, so I am posting this here]
Our Non-traditional Traditional Family
How ironic it is that my family would be called “non-traditional”, when the truth is that we the embodiment of a typical middle class small-town family; except for the fact that our kids have two moms, we are so traditional that it is almost funny. Granted, we are more politically active than most families, but in my family that is a tradition in itself, handed down for three generations.
My wife is the most traditional woman I know–a fact that I tease her about endlessly. Like most moms these days, my wife has to work, but somehow she gets up with the kids and sees them off to school; helps with homework, teaches our son to play the guitar and teaches our daughter to sing, bakes cookies and tries in vain to get the kids to keep their rooms clean. (on more occasions than I can count, I have found myself trying desperately to stifle a laugh while she is reprimanding the kids because she has sounded exactly like my mother, right down to the inflection). To me, my wife is my soul mate and the light of my life; I know I am a better person, because of her. To our children, she is simply Mama and to my mother-in-law, she is a loving daughter.
Our children are wonderful, intelligent human beings; our babies blossoming into teenagers before our eyes, noticeably more mature with every passing day. Old enough now to speak up on social issues and animal welfare, but young enough not to be able to sleep without a good-night hug. Our mischievous son with his goofy sense of humor and our daughter with her acerbic wit and biting commentary, one foot in childhood and one foot in adolescence–one minute giving my mother-in-law great amusement by doing to us exactly what my wife did to her, the next minute giving our elderly neighbor a card for Mother’s Day, because they know her daughter passed away several years ago and they don’t want her to be sad. Wise beyond their years, yet young enough to be totally confident: Our daughter, wise enough to see a reference to “ex-gays” and declare that a person could no more be “ex-gay” than “ex-brown-eyed” because “you can’t change how you are born” and our son, who at the age of seven marched with PFLAG in our LGBT Pride parade, carrying a sign that was taller than he was, because “The sign was too heavy for the for the “grandma ladies to carry”.
This then is our “non-traditional” family. I would not have us any other way.
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This is an amazing movement, Dana!!! Gorgeous collection.
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