A friend sent this to me. For some reason it really resonnates with what I'm feeling about the issue. What if folks just stopped using all the terms of heterosexual marriage with heterosexuals to make the point about how it feels for gay folks. I'd like to think it might make some folks think. It may not change their minds, but who knows. Anyway, I think I'm adopting this as a personal policy. Think about trying for yourself; all the cool kids are.
Stuff below is from: http://www.religiondispatches.org/blog/sexandgender/755/
A Marriage Manifesto... Of Sorts By Tom Ackerman
November 17, 2008
I no longer recognize marriage. It's a new thing I'm trying.
Turns out it's fun.
Yesterday I called a woman's spouse her boyfriend.
She says, correcting me, "He's my husband,"
"Oh," I say, "I no longer recognize marriage."
The impact is obvious. I tried it on a man who has been in a relationship for years,
"How's your longtime companion, Jill?"
"She's my wife!"
"Yeah, well, my beliefs don't recognize marriage."
Fun. And instant, eyebrow-raising recognition. Suddenly the majority gets to feel what the minority feels. In a moment they feel what it's like to have their relationship downgraded, and to have a much taken-for-granted right called into question because of another's beliefs.
Just replace the words husband, wife, spouse, or fiancé with boyfriend, girlfriend, special friend, or longtime companion. There is a reason we needed stronger words for more serious relationships. We know it; now they can see it.
A marriage is a lot of things. Culturally, it's a declaration to the community that two people are now a unit, and that unity should be respected. Legally, it's a set of rights and responsibilities. And spiritually, it's whatever your beliefs think it is.
That's what's so great about America. As a Constitutionally secular nation, or at least in reality a vaguely pluralistic nation, we can all have our own spiritual take on what marriage is. What's troublesome is when one group's spiritual beliefs deny the cultural and legal rights of another.
But, back to the point. They say their beliefs don't recognize my marriage, I say my beliefs don't recognize theirs. Simple. It may seem petty, and obviously the legal part of the cultural/legal/spiritual trilogy is flip-floppy, but it may be the cultural part that really matters.
People get married to be recognized as a permanent couple. To be acknowledged by friends, family, and strangers as being off the market, in a relationship, totally hooked up, yikes... it's impossible to say without saying 'married.' We wear rings to declare this!
So, we can take this away. We can refuse to recognize marriage in the cultural sense. It is totally within our rights, as Americans, to follow our beliefs and recognize or not recognize what we like.
I guess this is a call out to all Americans with beliefs similar to mine.
If you believe that all people should have equal rights, and if you believe that marriage is one of the greatest destinations of a relationship, then perhaps you believe that nobody should have marriage until everybody does.
That's what I believe.


Comments: 19
Blessings and best wishes - S.
Very well put.
Have you noticed on the site Tagged, how many men list "married" and then click on "interested in dating"? Not everyone takes their marriage vows so seriously. I put on my Tagged home page that I was happily married and a man wrote to me and asked "Do you date?" Of course I don't date, what do they think MARRIED means?
No sh*t. What about the permanent couples that are not allowed to get married?
Q: Why does marriage matter?
A: There are over 1,138 reasons that marriage matters
See, this is EXACTLY what the right-wing-nuts WANT you to do. They WANT a reason to say that allowing gay marriage will discount heterosexual marriage. In doing this, it's giving them what they want.
I say "NO WAY!"
I will NOT submit
I will NOT go a way quietly
I wll NOT smack the face of what I desire just because it's not mine.
I shall continue to recognize those who are married, their commitment and gently remind them I wish my partner and I could join their ranks.