In the next few weeks, I am planning on reaching out to some local groups (gay-straight alliances, PFLAG, etc.) about my book.
The people I contacted in November and December said to try back in the new year.
In this in-between time, I am worrying that my story isn’t relevant in this day and age.
Mine is a story about growing up feeling different. It is a story about being a tomboy and not understanding why that me — the one who wore boys’ clothes and could throw a baseball farther than anyone on our block — was so offensive. It is a story about having feelings for other girls and then squashing them out of fear of what other people would think. It is a story about marrying a man, because isn’t that what I was supposed to do and wouldn’t that make my parents proud. And then coming out in my late 30’s, radically altering the trajectory of my life plans.
![images[1]](https://middleagebutch.files.wordpress.com/2016/02/images1.jpg?w=500)
A lesbian with a talk show. Gasp.
So, does anyone need to hear my story? Will anyone care? Will it make a difference?
I was reading Curve magazine the other day and Editor-in-Chief Merryn Johns had this to say:
“We lesbians, especially older lesbians, must record our histories so that the younger generations have a point of reference for their own lives, and have something to build upon.”
That’s what I’m trying to remember. That my story is a Lego block. And that others — this generation of young people who have so many more freedoms than I did — will use it to build upon, brick after brick after brick.
Until it forms a tower so tall it pokes into the clouds.
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What do you think? Are our old-timey stories still relevant?