Transforming Marriage
Houston Voice Blog
by Erwin de Leon
October 22, 2009
“I don’t know about this marriage
business,” Dick Leitsch muttered half-jokingly. “I
don’t feel so special anymore.” The former
Mattachine chief and Stonewall activist was
expressing a concern some in our community have
about how marriage is beginning to change us - how
we are losing our edge and identity, and becoming “heteronormative.”
How we are selling out.
Actor Rupert Everett was far less gracious.
“Marriage? Babies? Please. I want to be illegal. I
want to live outside the mainstream … These awful
middle-class queens - which is what the gay movement
has become - are so tiresome.”
The fact of the matter is, whether opponents of
equality and some of us don’t like it, lesbians and
gays are getting married and the time will come when
all Americans can marry if they so choose. But how
the act and institution will change us is an
interesting question.
In her recently published book, "When Gay People
Get Married: What Happens When Societies Legalize
Same-Sex Marriage," economist and LGBT researcher
M.V. Lee Badgett asks, “Will marriage change gay
people?”
She writes that “Some hope so, arguing that gay
men will be more monogamous and gay relationships
more stable if same-sex couples can marry, and gays
and lesbians will be better assimilated into the
larger culture. Opponents of marriage equality
believe that gay and lesbian people will not be able
to gain from marriage, though. Others in the gay,
lesbian, and bisexual communities fear that
distinctive features of gay life will be transformed
in negative ways.”
At a book reading last week, she added that there
are those who fear that the relationships of
lesbians and gays who opt to stay in domestic
partnerships or in alternative arrangements (such as
polyamory) will be deemed inferior to those of
married couples.
Notwithstanding, those of us who choose to marry
will gain the stability and security that come from
the over 1,100 federal privileges and protections
different-sex couples enjoy and will feel that our
families are just as valid and valued like any
other.
A study by the Williams Institute, also
coauthored by Badgett, finds that as a result of
being able to marry in Massachusetts, individuals
feel more committed to their partners and more
accepted by their families and communities and are
more likely to be out. Nearly 90 percent of those
surveyed reported that all or most of their family
members supported their marriage.
Our children will likewise be better off if we
were to wed. Nearly all of the survey respondents
claimed that their children are happier. Many said
their children felt more secure and protected,
having gained a sense of stability and seeing their
families validated by society. Only 5 percent
admitted to their children being teased as a result
of their marriages.
Patrick James argues in GOOD Magazine that often
lost in the debate over marriage equality is the
beneficial effects on children. He maintains that
“in a world that celebrates the institution, the
perceptive distance between being gay and virtuous
collapses, and a young person can look forward to a
life of commitment, father or motherhood, and
inclusion in the shared experience that binds us as
a people.”
The sense of stability and security we and our
families will feel upon winning the right of
marriage becomes crucial as we age. In researching
lesbian and gay baby boomers, Brian deVries, a
professor of gerontology, discovered that those who
live in states that do not legally recognize
same-sex couples are more likely to have prepared
for the end of life by completing such documents as
living wills than those who live in states that do
recognize their relationships. At the same time,
these folks are more likely to have greater fears
and anxieties about end of life and later life
issues.
Dr. deVries explains, "The bottom line is that
those who reside in states that do not recognize
relationships or sanctioned marriages between
same-sex couples feel less cared for and less cared
about and must take extra legal steps to prepare for
their later years. The absence of recognition of
same-sex relationships conveys a sense of
second-class citizenship and a stress associated
with such unwelcome status."
Perhaps it’s not too bad after all to no longer
feel so special. In “selling out,” we stand to gain
a whole lot more. Equality, for one.