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Kathleen McCook's avatar

When you take care of something else--a child, a pet, a garden--you don't feel valid so much as connected to more than yourself. I never worried about my validity while changing a diaper. I never worried about my validity when caring for an old dog. I never worried about my validity when planting flowers. When these thoughts--about my validity-- arise in my brain I try to do a task for someone/something else. That said, I walk my dogs a lot.

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Carina's avatar

Validity discourse is rampant in the queer community. It’s toxic and pointless, and only seems to escalate each year.

For example, “Lesbian Visibility Day” was this week. That’s the cherished holiday where we all fight about who counts as a lesbian. People post things like “bi lesbians are valid!” and “he/him lesbians are valid!” and “nonbinary lesbians are valid!” (etc… there are infinite variations*) – and then people bicker in the replies about whether they agree.

It’s an awful combination of the mentality Freddie observes (“validity can only come from communal decree”), the fact that gender and sexuality are contested concepts right now, plus the youth’s tendancy to adopt a lengthy list of micro-labels that most people can’t even parse let alone validate. But they demand, argue, call out, block—everyone MUST agree that “x is valid” because a single dissenter can send them into a spiral. It's not healthy behavior, to say the least.

I’m not interested in policing the boundaries of who counts as a lesbian, mostly because I recognize that the days of a coherently defined gay community are over. This is mostly for good reasons (acceptance, assimilation) and while I miss the old days sometimes, there’s no point in trying to get it back. But I feel for the kids who invest so much in their labels and affiliations, when the big terms (gay, trans) have lost meaning and the new terms are incomprehensible to most adults.

For various reasons, they’ve imagined they can locate their sense of self-worth in being a member of an oppressed community, and they want their chosen affiliations and their unique identities to be validated all at once… and it’s just not going to happen. Most people will not see you as a “bisexual lesbian” because that’s not how they understand those words. Pounding the keyboard and insisting that you’re “valid” won’t change this—and even if everyone genuinely came to see you as a bi lesbian, it wouldn’t make you feel any better.

Same goes for the gatekeepers. The kids have new terms, and they’ve twisted the old ones, and it’s not like it was in 1995. But we have to let go of all that and live our lives. Dress how you want, date who you want, and just be glad that we have that freedom in 2022.

* Proof that I’m not making this up: https://twitter.com/search?q=%22bi%20lesbians%20are%20valid%22&src=typed_query&f=live

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