Those of us now referred to as boomers share a common history. We cut our teeth in a tumultuous era of love and war, protest and upheaval. The
freedom riders fighting and dying to fight racial segregation and restore
voting rights paved the way. The outcry against the draft and the Vietnam War
galvanized massive numbers of young people.
Then the Women’s Liberation Movement descended with a vengeance and split organizations such as Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) wide open. When women stopped taking notes and fetching coffee the patriarchal left began to crumble.
Then the Women’s Liberation Movement descended with a vengeance and split organizations such as Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) wide open. When women stopped taking notes and fetching coffee the patriarchal left began to crumble.
It was a time of relative prosperity. Drugs were widely
available. The birth control pill had hit the market. Taboos were being
exploded. Free love and sexual experimentation was everywhere. The rules of the
old order were no longer applicable.
In 1970, at Ohio State
University, I joined a
consciousness-raising (CR) group. There was one lesbian among us when the group
began. Two years later, when it ended, there was only one woman left who still
considered herself straight.
It was as if a wall of shame and fear had fallen. All our
wildest fantasies, sexual and otherwise, were suddenly okay. I made new friends
in a group that called itself, Radicalesbians. These women were fearless. With proud names like Debbie Dyke and Lisa Lesbian and none of them looked scary or
predatory like the old British “bulldaggers” in the movie, “The Killing of
Sister George,”or suicidal like Martha in “The Children’s Hour.” Young and hip
and angry about oppression, they looked a lot like me. Groups like the Lavender
Menace and the Lesbian Avengers and became the persistent thorn in the side of the mainstream women’s movement,
the specter of what heterosexual women feared most.
Today, we lesbians seem to be making grand leaps in LGBT civil
rights. When folks claim it is all happening so fast, I want to smack them.
Fast? The Stonewall riots were in 1969 so 45 years is not exactly the blink of
an eye. But it’s relatively rapid when you consider the duration of slavery or
how long it took women to get the vote.
Political change always feel geologic in its pace because we
are sacrificing our very lives when we are denied full human status. Living to
see some of the new dwellings rise over the foundations we laid is gratifying
but no excuse to lay back and rest before the job is completed.