November 22nd, 2009
 

365Gay Agenda Blog

Daigle: Blue Jeans and Blue Eyeshadow

By Cody Daigle, The Times of Acadiana 05.15.2009 12:39pm EDT

blog-blue-jeans-top
When you grow up gay in a small town, you inevitably face this choice: get the hell out of that small town the second you’re able or stay where you are and see what you can make of it.

I chose to stay, for reasons both professional and personal. And in the ten years since I made that choice, I’ve been able to make a life I’m both happy with and proud of. I’ve gotten to do some very cool things, and some pretty amazing people have crossed my path.

And I’m in Cajun Country, so I can guarantee you I’ve eaten well.

Staying also changes the way you experience “being gay” (whatever that is, really. There are so many ways to “be gay,” aren’t there?). When you’re living in the small town South, you don’t have the benefit of an organized, visible gay community to guide you. The connections you make to other gay people are personal ones, and while those connections are nurturing, they don’t carry much power or weight in the larger community. In the larger community, you’re basically alone – if you want to “fight the power,” you’re going to have to do it with an army of one.

That reality breaks some of us. It keeps us in the closet. It leads us to think the best solution is to marry and have kids. It makes us feel ashamed, inferior, purposeless. And I think for most people who don’t live here (or for that matter, those who left here as soon as they could) that experience is assumed to be prevailing one.

But it isn’t. I’ve lived here all my life, and sure, 15 years ago when I first came out, that was the most common story. But today, things are changing. Today, gay people in small towns like mine are starting to figure out that being an army of one isn’t such a bad thing.

Every day, out gay people in small towns like mine change the South. The changes are small – minuscule, even – but there are changes. Those changes aren’t happening in legislatures or city councils (although we small town gays need to get that ball rolling faster). Those changes are taking place in coffee houses, classrooms, neighborhood parks, living rooms and even churches.

We’re working from the other end of change. One on one. By unapologetically being who we are.

Yesterday, my partner Nathan and I grabbed a quick bite at a local fast food place (Raising Cane’s, a mostly southern franchise, famous for their chicken fingers). Behind the counter was this fabulous young gay man – early twenties, clearly in college – decked out in his work uniform, jeans, baseball cap, French manicured press-on nails, fake eyelashes and a shock of glittery blue eyeshadow.

Not the best application, mind you, but he’s young. He’ll learn.

He wasn’t waiting on us. He was waiting on a pair of standard-issue Louisiana jock boys, and they made no attempt to hide their snickering or rolled eyes. One of them even said in full voice to the other, “Dude, you know that’s a dude, yo?”

Did it rattle our fabulous friend behind the counter? No. In fact, I even think he straightened his spine a little. There wasn’t an ounce of apology in his face or his voice. He was who he was, and a pair of bubbas wanting chicken fingers weren’t going to change that for a second.

That’s who I think we are here. Jeans, a baseball cap and blue eyeshadow. Fighting the good fight, one bubba at a time.

Cody Daigle is the entertainment writer for the Times of Acadiana and a blogger on gay issues for theadertiser.com.


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  • Julia Said: May 17th, 2009 at 9:35 pm
    • I’ll let you decide GayCajun, whether I’m a friend or not — I am a member of MCC-KC church, I have published one gay novel, and am in the process of looking for an agent to publish my second one. In November, at the young age of 65, I participated in my first ever demonstration when I helped my pastor hold up our church flag across the street from members of the Westboro Baptist Church.

      It bothers me when so many people on this site complain about being stereotyped and then lump all straights and Christians together.

      I am straight, I am Christian, and I believe in civil rights for everyone.

  • Jay Said: May 17th, 2009 at 12:31 pm
    • If we soon read that the young man behind the counter has been bashed or murdered by the snickering bubbas, I won’t be surprised.

  • Tom Said: May 17th, 2009 at 9:30 am
    • Indeed, GayCajun2, with “friends” like Mr. Straight Keith, who needs enemies?

      Reminds me of a toast I once heard – “Champagne to my real friends and real pain to my sham friends.”

  • GayCujun2 Said: May 17th, 2009 at 1:35 am
    • Julia,

      he is no friend of mine or my community. he does not believe (he has stated this in other posts) LGBT should have marriage equality and probably any other rights. he seems to be one who thinks because he reads a gay person’s blog and makes a smirky comment then he is “the friend of the gays” i suppose. LOL

      i can work with black folks, pass them by in the grocery, say hello, etc, but not believe they are my equal, so becaue i am “civil” or no the “lingo” would that make me feel otherwise about them?

      so anyone who thinks he/she is a “Friend” of mine simple because they work with a “gay” or they like to read “gay” blogs, but truly don’t support our cause is REALLY no friend of mine.

      We (LGBT) aren’t asking for “friends” that say, “we wont try to beat you up in the school yard anymore” We need people who can get past their prejudices and ignorance and give us our EQUAL RIGHTS. period.

      So, if you are a “straight” female that Genuinely Supports Equality, I WELCOME YOU WITH OPEN ARMS AND OPEN HEART, otherwise I have enough FAKE friends. peace.

  • LOrion Said: May 16th, 2009 at 3:08 pm
    • Yeah, Myke, noticed too how popular Cody is. You mean there really are readers to 365 not from Wash, Boston or New York?

      Re: Make-up. I don’t watch, but saw piece on Adam Lambert, calling his make-up ‘guyliner’ I like that. Course on camera everyone wears make up…but still.

 
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