Wedding Bells Wistful
Denver Post
By Mark Thrun
June 20, 2008PrideFest weekend a vivid reminder that much of the
nation still does not recognize gay relationships.
You can tell how in love they are by the pictures.
You can see it in their smiles, how they touch each other, or the way
their eyes are so brilliant. Each one is radiant.
I have gone entire relationships without photos like that.
As California became the second state in the country to allow gay
marriage this week, choruses sang on courthouse stairs and throngs of
supporters — gay and straight — tossed rice over the newly married couples
who emerged hand in hand.
I must admit, I felt more than a tinge of envy. My partner, Geoffrey,
asked if we should fly out to join the party. Over breakfast, our son
wondered aloud when we would get married and get our photo in the paper.
While I'd be thrilled to attend this celebration of life and love and
relationships, what I would really like is for that party to be here in
Colorado — our home. Unfortunately, though we certainly honor our
relationship on our own, it might be some time before we can do so
officially.
This weekend, during the Pridefest celebrations, I can't help but feel
the sting of rejection by the state I love, at the same time I give thanks
for my partner.
Two years ago, Coloradans refused to support civil unions and, in fact,
codified discrimination in our constitution by defining marriage as being
between one man and one woman. This has left me unable to accurately
describe my relationship.
I fell in love the first night I met him. He accidentally spit on me as
he talked, and it was clear that we had much to talk about. Three years
later, I proposed. Not thinking Geoff a huge bauble ring sort of guy, I
opted for matching classic wristwatches. We were in Paris. I told him that
there was no other, and if he would have me, I wanted nothing more than to
spend my life with him.
We have been together for 7 years and are raising two kids. We work
jointly to support our household. Yet, there is no room for me on the
forms I fill out listing only married, single, divorced, and widowed.
And there are no forms in Colorado that would allow us to celebrate
like they have this week in California.
In that state's Supreme Court decision, the justices declared "that an
individual's sexual orientation — like a person's race or gender — does
not constitute a legitimate basis upon which to deny or withhold legal
rights." They maintained that a separate designation for same-sex couples
distinct from marriage perpetuates "that gay individuals and same-sex
couples are in some respects 'second-class citizens' who may, under the
law, be treated differently from, and less favorably than, heterosexual
individuals or opposite-sex couples."
In Colorado, where the Williams Institute estimates there are over
13,000 same-sex couples, gay families still do not have access to all the
rights afforded our straight friends, rights central to a stable home,
such as full health-care coverage, mutual medical decision-making, and
shared retirement benefits.
Yes, we could go and fill out all the forms, protest to our employers
and insurers, and pay all the lawyers — but why should we have to when our
straight friends do not?
Last year, Geoff and I returned to Paris. We decided we would wait no
longer to forever commit ourselves to each other. We paused briefly at a
fountain outside the Centre de George Pompidou and slipped rings onto each
other's fingers as we professed our love.
No pomp, no circumstance. Just a simple promise to each other.
Marriage, after all, is less about the ceremony itself and more about the
relationship. It is about two people who have chosen to intimately
entangle themselves in each other's lives. Two people stepping into the
unknown, secure that the other will keep them safe. Two people willing to
work hard (relationships are anything but easy) to make each other, and
their kids, happy.
Our laws should encourage, not discourage, committed relationships.
Someday our neighbors in Colorado will choose to make our commitment
official. When that happens, we will take time to celebrate our love in
front of our kids, our friends, our families and our community, and make
legitimate in our neighbors' eyes what already is in ours.
On that day, someone will take our picture, and we will look radiant.
But until that day occurs, I remain steadfastly wed — but not married — to
the man I fell in love with the first night we met.
Mark Thrun (mthrun@comcast.net) is a public health physician and a
member of the Denver GLBT Commission. |