Sunday, March 14, 2010

My Daddy Didn’t Raise No Fools

Oct 13th, 20092009-10-13T04:01:59ZM jS, Y | By Margo Moon | Read more in: GLBTQ

When my sisters and I were little, my dad sometimes worked three jobs at once. He was off about one Saturday a month, and instead of spending that day napping or at his beloved racetrack, he’d come home late Friday night and load up our Buick station wagon with fishing gear, a huge cooler full of my mom’s picnic food, and a valise packed with swimsuits, shorts, and extra shoes. Around one or two in the morning he’d carry us, sleeping and still in our pajamas, to the car for a two-hour-long drive to the lake, where we’d fish, swim, and run wild all day.fishing

Our favorite place to fish was back in this little finger of water that was only about a hundred feet across. We’d drop our cane pole lines in not far from the bank and wait for some action. One time, a bunch of people came and unloaded their stuff directly across the water from us. They had these fancy rods and reels and cast their lines all the way over to our side, where their bobbers mingled with ours.

I remember asking my dad why they did that, since they could just as easily have fished close to their own bank with less trouble.

He said, “Because there are some simple-minded sons-of-bitches in this world.”

I swear, I was only five, but I understood him completely. And I knew that he knew that I understood. Know what I mean?

That day came echoing back to me on two distinct occasions this week. The first was when I was trying to come up with something interesting to say with regard to my coming out story. I was having a hard time, because mine seems so anticlimactic compared with other stories I’ve been reading. Basically, I fell in love with a woman and realized I am lesbian. Easy. I was in the Air Force, but surrounded by a very supportive squadron of friends who made sure I never had a moment of trouble for being gay. The most difficult part was when I told my mom over the phone all the way from South Carolina. She and my dad were in Kentucky, and when I spilled my news, things got quiet on the other end. I asked my mom what they were thinking and she just said, “Your daddy’s crying.” It wasn’t until later that he told me he was crying over the fact that being gay put me in danger from the “simple-minded sons-of-bitches in this world.”

President Obama’s so-called Big Gay Rights Speech was the second time I had to kind of smile at my dad’s famous words, words he and I joked about many times over the years. I have no doubt Obama’s intentions are better than those of the previous administration. I have no doubt Obama doesn’t want to lose my vote. I have no doubt Obama thinks he’s being pragmatic. I have no doubt Obama was real proud of the part in his speech where he said, “while some may wish to define you solely by your sexual orientation or gender identity alone, you know and I know that none of us wants to be defined by just one part of what makes us whole.” I also have no doubt that if my dad were still here he’d like Obama a lot, but would truly have to shake his head and tell the man that there may be some “simple-minded sons-of-bitches in this world” but his daughter sure isn’t one of them. In other words, Mr. President, we are no longer dazzled by your ability to cast a beautiful line. You need to land some actual fish.

Margo Moon
AWOP contributing author
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2 comments
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  1. I have read a lot of things about this speech and what it means or doesn’t mean but that was the keeper. Thanks, Margo, for bringing your Dad’s wisdom to bear on this topic. And thanks for sharing it here at AWOP, I sure do appreciate that.

    kim g.

    [Reply]

  2. That’s just too perfect, there Margo. The time for showmanship and fancy equipment is over, way over.

    But there was one thing in Obama’s speech that nobody’s actually brought up, and it’s something that is just a little bit significnat. Not only that, but he did it twice — twice our first African American president likened our struggle to that of African Americans for civil rights. The first time it was fairly vague.

    That’s the story of the movement for fairness and equality, and not just for those who are gay, but for all those in our history who’ve been denied the rights and responsibilities of citizenship for all who’ve been told that the full blessings and opportunities of this country were closed to them. It’s the story of progress sought by those with little influence or power; by men and women who brought about change through quiet, personal acts of compassion — and defiance — wherever and whenever they could.

    But the second time, not so much.

    It’s not for me to tell you to be patient, any more than it was for others to counsel patience to African Americans petitioning for equal rights half a century ago.

    I’m very impatient. I think this president could be doing so much more on so many more levels, not just for the GLBTQ community but elsewhere. But he’s timid. He doesn’t know the real support for true progressive change that exists in this country. And it shows. And frankly, it pisses me off.

    But at least he sees us as human beings deserving of civil rights, and sees the correlations between our struggle and other, similar struggles in our nation’s past.

    [Reply]

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