You and Me, Kids

Ruth Adar

Ruth Adar
Location
San Leandro, California, USA
Birthday
March 10
Title
CoffeeShopRabbi on Twitter
Bio
Ruth Adar is a rabbi who teaches in the East Bay Area of California. She shares two grown sons and two rescue poodles with her partner, Linda.

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SEPTEMBER 29, 2010 4:20PM

Collateral Damage: When Queer Moms Come Out

Rate: 29 Flag

  http://www.flickr.com/photos/the_taste_of_rain/664339662/sizes/m/in/photostream/

photo taken at the Dyke March by Chris Ng http://www.flickr.com/photos/the_taste_of_rain/664339662/

I came out in 1988, just after a rancorous divorce became final.  A very nice woman asked if I'd ever tried kissing another woman, and a few minutes later it was clear to me that I'd been barking up the wrong tree all my life.  It was a moment of great joy, followed by sheer panic.

I had two little boys, ages 4 and 6, and nothing, absolutely nothing, was more important to me than the two of them.

Was I going to mess them up for life?   Was I going to lose them?  Should I just declare celibacy and give it up?  I wrote to  an acquaintence who had been "out" many years, with two daughters from a previous marriage, and poured out my fears.  She wrote me back, with the phone number for the National Center for Lesbian Rights, saying, "Call them.  Do whatever they tell you."  Then she said my kids were going to be fine.

I did, and they are.  But there's much, much more to it than that.  

The attorney to whom NCLR referred me informed me that for the umpteenth time in my life, I was the Queen of Dumb Luck.  My divorce became final in one of the very few counties in the United States where my orientation alone was not grounds for taking my kids from me in 1988.  My best bet was to come out of the closet completely, so I did.  On March 17, 1988, I phoned my ex and told him.  To his credit, it has never been an issue, despite the fundamentalist Christians on that side of the family. 

I told the boys that I had fallen in love with a girl.  They liked her.  Unlike their boring mom, she was good at catch and knew everything about baseball.  Sure, fine, and what's for dinner? 

The kids were in kindergarten and first grade, and there I wavered.  Surely this was my private business.   Surely it wasn't appropriate to phone up the principal and say, "Hi, I'm a lesbian."  So I waffled along for a while, hoping for the best.  And that's where I went wrong.

Aaron began getting into fights at school.  The teacher called.  I went in to chat, and it turned out that he was out there defending my honor.  The words "gay" and "fag" were favorite schoolyard epithets (in first grade!) and whenever someone used them, he took it personally on my behalf.  He told them to take it back, and then two little boys would roll on the ground, fighting.

I outed myself immediately to the teacher, explained that this was a young man defending his mother -- and please, could we just ban those words on the playground?  

"You are what?" she gasped,  and when I repeated it, she said she'd have to take it up with the principal.  Over the next few weeks it became clear that the words "fag" and "gay" were a lot more acceptable than a lesbian mom and her spawn, and we needed to find a new school if my kids were going to feel remotely safe in class.

Finding a new school where we could be out as a queer family turned out to be quite the project in 1988, even in the liberal East Bay of the liberal San Francisco Bay Area.  I went from school to school, asking directly if "diversity" included "lesbian parented children."  I was privileged to have the means to check out every private school in town, and I was hurried out of most of their admissions offices.  [All those places now trumpet the fact that they looove queer families, and all I can say is, hallelujah.  I am not naming names, because the guilty parties have mended their ways.]

God bless St. Paul's Episcopal School.  When I asked the admissions director, Ms. Davis, if a lesbian family would be welcome at St. Paul's, she said, "It's time we included a family like yours."    In the years to come, the administration there had our backs:  individuals might find our presence distasteful, but there was never any question that we belonged.

But the damage was done.  My children spent far too long in a situation where they knew we were a second-class family, where we were the objects of fear and disgust.  I am well aware that my younger son is a social worker partly because he has a special affinity for children who don't feel safe.   His brother will still offer to punch you out if you use the word "fag."

And as for me, I am torn between gratitude for being the Queen of Dumb Luck, who came out in the most liberal area in the country, who had the means to seek out a safe place for her children, who had legal support and moral support and two courageous sons -- and fury that any of that was necessary. 

Yes, things are better now than they were in 1988.  They need to be better still.  Our opponents don't seem to understand that anti-gay policies are not just against gay people:  the collateral damage is horrendous.  The lack of same sex marriage rights means that the children of queer families  grow up knowing that they, the children, are less in the eyes of the law.  The fact of DADT means that our military is weaker, not stronger, because we chase off some of the best and the brightest.

When we discriminate against any group of people, we are all the less for it.  When are we going to figure that simple fact out?

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You rock sister. Amen and then some. I 've never felt second class but many I serve have. I always knew I was special. But to me special was my ticket...I guess it's all in the light. Bless your boys they got a great mom.; D r for RIGHT ON with a dash of r e s p e c t.
I agree. A family is a family is a family and there is no such thing as a normal family. To define the family unit by ideals from the 1950s is short-sighted and leaving many people out of the equation. I am glad you found a supportive school environment and I am hopeful for the day when this happens to every family! R
We had the opposite experience. Our girls knew from "birth" that their Mommy and Poppi were women. As soon as they hit kindergarten, their "mom" joined the PTA and made DAMN sure that everyone knew we were a couple of queers and that she would be right in their faces if they had an issue with that.

BECAUSE she was so damn protective of our girls that carried over to being protective of ALL the kids in that school. She was always the one who confronted the school administrators when they felt the need to dump on the teachers or kids and had NO problems telling the local school board members to "get their heads out of their butts or she would personally kick their asses" (you had to see that to believe it because she stood all of 4'11" and weighted 105 lbs. ;~) ). It eventually got to the point where she was unanimously elected as VP of our local PTA (she refused to run for president).

The best example of the "repercussions" of this was kind of funny. I took our daughters to the schools Father / Daughters Benefit Dance. One of the "new" dads that was there was mumbling about a "lesbian" being present. That lasted right until his son said really loudly, "Oh that's Tina's Poppi! She's queer and REALLY cool". He then preceded to get completely ostracized by the rest of the "dad's" for being, as one of them said, "a world class "dumb-ass".
Great Post.. So worthy of an EP>
and a rabbi to boot!!
HUGGGGGGGGGGGG
Sorry to be a little late, just got home.
Rated with hugs.
YAY!!!! Congrats on the EP and the Cover!
You've walked a road for many who now benefit.
echoing Mypsyche- Thank you.
One of the best essays I've read on the subject . . . thank you for this.
Mazel Tov, Ruth!

When we fight back against discrimination we Truly Live.
Great story! 88 was a rough time to come out, especially with little ones in tow. msp
Ruth, thanks for sharing your story with us. This was really well written, and your kids are lucky to have such a great mom.
BTW, you sound like a very cool rabbi :) Rated.
Ruth you were totally awesome in highschool and still are I am proud to say . Thank you for being such an interesting and accomplished individual. xx Laura
I am so happy you got this well-deserved EP!
I love the math on the sign in the picture.
many kids are far more resilient and accepting than we give them credit for...it sounds like your children are flourishing, and while I am certain they are extraordinary individuals, I am as equally certain that part of credit goes to having loving and accepting parents like you and your life partner. Keep up the good work, and teach them well.
This is a great piece, with both the gratitude AND the fury needing to be addressed. I just hope that those with less dumb luck will read it and find some inspiration in your experiences.
Amazing post, Ruth. Your last paragraph says it all. Congrats on the EP!
Great post... I want to have children of my own someday... maybe it will happen who knows---- maybe when the time is right and world is right for my children... so far---- this world is not worth the try to bring more special people to it....
Rated for amazing love----
Hugs
When we say family this is the most basic component of the community. Family is really a family the most or shall we say the strongest bonding exist on it. Having a family is the greatest gift, so why keep it strong in relation and keep it bonded.

barking dog alarms
Loved this post and I honor your journey and your family. Our tiny Episcopalean midwestern church includes and embraces gays, lesbians and their families. We are richer for their presence every day. Yes...bless you and yours always. r
Congrats on the EP-very well deserved.
Thank you for writing this and helping others that have come after you.
Blessings to you and your family.
Thanks for being you and telling us your story. I totally agree with your conclusion.
I am really enjoying reading you blog!! You are a really awesome mom!
I wish I would have seen your blog earlier. Your life closely paralleled mine. My daughter was raised by two mothers and consequently has a succesful life of her own. And she lives in the Castro.

I was euphorically happy..and unaware.

I would like to think I would have done things differently, but in the end, I am proud to say that I refused to closet myself.
My blog has become a bone of contention among my friends and family. But it is not about my lifestyle, but about my life.
Because we still lack the backbone of the "straight" community, when our relationships fail we are starkley alone. In everyway.
And yes, our relationships are as sorted and exciting as any.

At least we have this avenue to share and seek others commited as you.