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OPINION: “It doesn’t matter who you love, as long as you keep it to yourself” – the paradox of Pride

Mie Astrup Jensen is sick of being told to keep it to herself

BY MIE ASTRUP JENSEN

Summer is the season of celebration for LGBTQI people. However, it’s also a time when some experience derogatory comments about positive discrimination, enforcing an agenda without understanding straight privilege.

I’ve often encountered the phrase, “It doesn’t matter who you love, as long as you keep it to yourself.” Of course it matters! If it didn’t matter, you wouldn’t need to ask me to keep it to myself. If it didn’t matter, you wouldn’t be reluctant to be more inclusive and representative.

If it didn’t matter, you wouldn’t give me that extra look and a subtle, “Huh?”, if I correct a pronoun when speaking of a crush.

METRO (2014) argues that 80% of LGBQ, and 66.6% of trans people, know before they turn 16. Moreover, Cambridge University and Stonewall (2017) found that 45% of UK LGBTQI people get bullied in school for their sexual orientation and/or gender expression. 

Additionally, they found that 40% of students never learn about LGBTQ+ issues in school. METRO (2014) elaborates that LGBTQI people are 13% more likely to seek medical assistance for depression and anxiety, 17% more likely to self-harm, and 18% more likely to consider suicide.

When I asked for representation in school I was told, “Reading LGBTQ+ books will turn others gay,” which made me feel alienated. All my books in school were about straight people. Is that then enforcing a heterosexual agenda? Nevertheless, those books did not turn me straight.

Therefore: “It doesn’t matter who you love, as long as you keep it to yourself” – check your privilege.

Hence, it matters! When minorities are told to “keep it to themselves” it dehumanises them, which can lead to serious mental health problems. The Pride season is supposed to be when LGBTQI people can express themselves. However, they’re continuously told to “keep it to themselves”. LGBTQI people should never feel belittled, wrong or different because of their sexuality and gender identity.

Pride isn’t just a celebration, it’s a socio-political movement. LGBTQI people don’t want special treatment, they seek what many heterosexuals take for granted. LGBTQI people don’t want to be “others”, they want to be.

Be as in our mere existence. Be as in rejoicing in who we are. 

Nonetheless, there’s still a great deal of direct, structural, and cultural violence targeting us. And it’s historically embedded in many societies and cultures. So, it’s a social responsibility. It’s not just down to the 5-7% of the population who are LGBTQI (according to Stonewall), it is down to the 100%. Point being, arguments of “positive discrimination” are invalid.

We, as a society, ought to stop attitudes about “tolerance”, because LGBTQI people are not people to be tolerated. They are people. Period.

Discrimination happens on a global scale, and LGBTQI people experience harassment and assault on the very basis of the thing that makes us human: love. Love isn’t something that should be kept to oneself. Love isn’t something to be tolerated. Love is love.

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