Month: October 2014

Chamomile Delivered; Pumpkin Carving; Secret Elevators

10. I ❤️ starting my morning cuddling in bed with tea.
9. I 💛 Ted Vogt for not just humoring me over lunch but treating as well.
8. I 💚 impromptu coffee talk with congressmen-elect.
7. I 💙 my jack-o-lantern.

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6. I 💜 my newfound impulse control.
5. I ❤️ Judge Harrington for hearing me out.
4. I 💛 the Casey Foundation for all their work on behalf of children.
3. I 💚 Judge McNally for inviting me to be a member of her task force.
2. I 💙 the secret elevator at work.
1. I 💜 Judge Swann for donating his time and talent this afternoon to marry two of the loveliest humans I know.

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State Scale; Spiced Chai; Giving Back

Hard to believe two years have passed since I wrote my first gratitude list but it’s true…Thanksgiving is only 30 days away! I recently showed a friend my favorite Ted Talk of all time on happiness and was reminded of the power of this exercise in ensuring we don’t move the goalpost of success beyond our cognitive reach. Although my writing skills are rusty and my brain is currently impaired by a slight fever and a healthy dose of NyQuil, I’ve nonetheless committed myself to once again spending the month preceding my favorite holiday expressing thanks for the countless ways I’m fortunate.
10. I ❤️ the schedule I just got for the conference I’m attending on alternatives to juvenile detention…I’m thrilled to be surrounded by so many people affecting real change in our justice system.
9. I 💛 Persian Garden Cafe and heart to heart conversations over lunch.
8. I 💚 watching Corbin give Lelu a bath before curling up next to her.
7. I 💙 hot tea, Vicks, and my netti pot for getting me on the road to normal.
6. I 💜 resetting my internal clocks through lots of rest…I’m so glad falling and staying asleep has rarely been an issue for me because I love to do it. Naps rule.
5. I ❤️ emails from my mama thanking me for helping her with her charity work. It makes me beyond happy that she has found a community of women who not only accept her but appreciate the contributions she has to make. We all want to feel needed but it’s so much healthier when we focus those efforts on people who are asking for help. Hearing about her positive experiences inspires me to volunteer again.
4. I 💛 how much getting sick helps me appreciate my regular good health.
3. I 💚 encouraging words from friends when I need them most.
2. I 💙 intern selection season because seeing the students and hearing their stories reinvigorates my own passion for civil service.
1. I 💜 the promise of live music in my future.

Missed exits; free love; coffee talk

1. I ❤️ longer than normal commutes that allow me a chance to listen to my new favorite album.
2. I 💛 that Beth left my sign and took this picture, even if she did turn down the crystal he offered in exchange for some love.

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3. I 💚 watching Gracie and Couscous explore the apartment on our first field trip there.

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4. I 💙 being surrounded by so many colleagues who believe in doing the right thing even when it’s unpopular.
5. I 💜 conversations in the living room with Tom Jenkins III

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Can I Get a Witness?

Today my brother and I went down to the Clerk of Court’s office to celebrate those couples who were lining up to get marriage certificates.

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We even got to be witnesses for one couple who were my age and had been together 13 years!

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People often are curious why I care so much about marriage equality…some so much so they feel it appropriate to come right out and ask if I’m gay as if that’s the only legitimate reason to care.

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In light of today’s historical significance, I thought it an appropriate time to share my story and explain why I chose and will continue to choose this fight.

It begins with the fact that both my parents were adopted. Even though they’ve long since divorced and each remarried, that shared history helped bring them together some 40-ish years ago. My dad was taken in by family members when his parents died too young; my mama was born to an unmarried teenager who left her in an orphanage until my grandparents took her home when she was six months old. Like many people who are adopted she struggled to understand abandonment; as such, she went out of her way to make it clear to my brother, sister and me how much we were loved. She never wanted us to doubt for a second how much we were wanted on this planet because that was a pain she knew all too well.

One day when I was still pretty young I overheard her saying to a girlfriend that she didn’t understand parents who disowned their children for being gay because to think any mom or dad would voluntarily sever ties with their offspring was unfathomable to her. Her biggest fear in the world was losing one of us to some freak disease, random kidnapping, or drowning after a fall down a well (thank you very much, Patty Hearst and Baby Jessica). Regardless, I remember being horrified and asking her what gay meant and why it was so bad that people would stop loving their kids over it. More importantly, I asked if I was gay would she stop loving me?!

The answer was a resounding and emphatic ‘NO.’ And because I adored her (and still do), if she didn’t understand why being gay was bad then dammit, neither did I. So all I really took away from that day was being ‘gay’ meant you were really, really happy and/or you love someone who looks more like you in a bathing suit than not.

She continued over the years to stress how much she would love us no matter what and would even gently remind us as we approached those awkward teenage years that it was safe to ‘come out’ if we needed to. I’ll never forget my senior year of college her telling me the only reason she had ever feared any of us being gay was because she knew how cruel society could be to those who are different. Growing up when she did, race was still very much an issue and kids were mean if you were adopted because it meant your heritage was unknown.

At work I see and hear about kids whose parents don’t love them…in fact, some kids have no parents at all and others have parents who hurt them…a lot. I’ve seen the ripple effect that has on families and society. Pain and shame are powerful forces which is why I’m so grateful I was raised in a house full of love and it kills me that ANYONE thinks they aren’t wanted or don’t belong on this planet.

When you think about it, not much has changed because kids today can still be mean if you’re different…and so can adults. The only way that ever changes is if more of us make a conscious decision to set a better example. That means choosing love over hate. Tolerance over mockery. Radical acceptance over xenophobia.

Three decades later I still don’t quite get why LOVE is ever a bad thing. But I do know that today more than ever I am really, really happy. So Mama, maybe I am a little gay after all.