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- <text id=90TT2976>
- <title>
- Nov. 08, 1990: The Lesbians Next Door
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Nov. 08, 1990 Special Issue - Women:The Road Ahead
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE CHANGING FAMILY, Page 78
- COUPLES
- The Lesbians Next Door
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>They are probably as numerous as gay men, but they don't get
- the press. They are America's invisible women.
- </p>
- <p>By William A. Henry III--Reported by Scott Brown/Los Angeles
- and Leslie Whitaker/New York
- </p>
- <p> When Samantha, a consultant to a California nonprofit
- corporation, is invited to company events in which spouses are
- welcome, she brings her housemate, Jill, a college professor.
- The two women are rarely explicit about their relationship. They
- just assume that co-workers will infer, correctly, that they are
- lovers. "I never came out and told people at work I was a
- lesbian," Samantha says. "You don't come out and tell people
- you're straight. I felt it was up to them to figure it out."
- </p>
- <p> By the standards of the homosexual world, Samantha and Jill
- are more than usually open, or "out." Their bond is no secret
- to their families or neighbors--in fact, they discovered after
- moving into a suburban-style home that four other lesbian
- couples live on the same block. Their friends know too: one year
- the couple sent out a tongue-in-cheek Christmas card depicting
- them entwined in a romantic cliffside embrace. Yet they are
- still wary enough, with Jill's tenure on the line, that they
- refused to have their real names included in this article.
- </p>
- <p> This relative invisibility, and their middle-class
- life-style, make Samantha and Jill typical of the estimated 6
- million to 13 million lesbians in the U.S. If the higher number
- is right, about as many women are lesbian as are black and many
- more than are Hispanic. While a small, strident minority reject
- men altogether and advocate feminist separatism, most lesbians
- are fully integrated into mainstream American life. They can be
- found in locales ranging from Chicago and San Francisco to the
- rural enclaves of Northampton, Mass., and Brattleboro, Vt. In
- Finding the Lesbians, author Janelle Lavelle claims she and her
- friends have "managed to find other dykes in such alien places
- as: a Liberty Bible College rally (the campus Jerry Falwell
- calls home); a Jesse Helms-owned radio station; a Garden Club
- meeting...and working in the ladies' wear section of a
- K-mart store."
- </p>
- <p> Yet unless they proclaim themselves vehemently, lesbians
- generally remain overlooked. While two men living together
- typically occasion comment, women living together don't. Simply
- being unmarried and of mature years can subject a man to
- scrutiny about his sexual preference--it happened to David
- Souter after his nomination to the Supreme Court--but an "old
- maid" more often faces just pity or condescension. Although most
- social scientists have rejected the view that homosexuality is
- far less common among women than men, the idea persists in the
- public at large. When homosexuals are discussed in the media,
- men are almost always the focus, with women at best an
- afterthought. The very word gay has come to imply male, and AIDS
- has ironically exacerbated that distortion, even as it helped
- propel women to the forefront of gay leadership because so many
- of the male leaders were sick or dying.
- </p>
- <p> "Are we the gay wing of the women's movement or the women's
- wing of the gay movement?" asks Torie Osborn, executive director
- of the Gay and Lesbian Community Services Center in Los Angeles.
- In truth, lesbians have often been made to feel unwelcome as
- either. Within the gay movement, men have stressed sexual
- freedom and increased funding to fight AIDS. When lesbians raise
- such issues as the pay disparity between men and women--which
- hits lesbian couples doubly hard but, paradoxically, can benefit
- gay male couples--they are often dismissed as irrelevant. In
- some corners of the women's movement, lesbians are still viewed
- as an embarrassment: their presence might buttress the
- conservative claim that feminism leads to the decline of family
- values.
- </p>
- <p> The sense of not belonging can begin in adolescence or
- before. Even the most sensitive parents want to disbelieve a
- daughter's assertion of homosexuality and may dismiss their
- child's hard-won sense of sexual identity as "just a phase."
- Mary Falkner, 21, a senior at Queens College in New York City,
- recalls that when she came out to her mother, "she took it
- great. But she asked, `Do you want to tell the rest of the
- family?' Without waiting to hear my answer, she said, `Good, we
- won't.'"
- </p>
- <p> Despite this hint of shame, Falkner's experience was
- unusually easy. Many families reject lesbian daughters as they
- reach adulthood, and in turn, many lesbians do not reconcile
- themselves to their nature until after marrying and, frequently,
- having children. One Dallas-based businesswoman says she came
- out just a year ago, at age 65, after decades of unhappy
- marriage and raising four sons. In all, an estimated 1.5 million
- U.S. lesbians are mothers. Most bore their children while
- married, though adoption and artificial insemination are
- becoming increasingly popular among lesbian couples. Maria
- Cristina Vlassidis, 31, a Chilean-born law school graduate in
- Manhattan, has a son Erick, 8, from her former marriage, whom
- she is now raising with her lover, Marie Tatro, 29, a law
- student. Both women attend parent-teacher conferences; both
- support the child financially; they tell his playmates that they
- are both "Erick's Mom."
- </p>
- <p> This life-style carries risk. "People freak out when they
- see us interact as a family," says Maria. Neighbors in their
- Hispanic district have escalated from hurling insults to
- flinging garbage to tossing firecrackers through an open window.
- Even in more tolerant communities, lesbians may face subtle
- discrimination. Angela Bowen, 54, a divorced, free-lance writer
- in Boston, has maintained a union with Jennifer Abod, 44, a
- media producer, for 11 years, but because the relationship has
- no legal status, Abod's health insurance will not cover Bowen or
- Bowen's daughter.
- </p>
- <p> For most lesbians, however, being gay is basically a joyful
- experience. They seem to find lasting relationships more readily
- than gay men do. They face somewhat less harassment from
- strangers. AIDS does not haunt them as a constant personal
- threat. And many share a deep sense of community, bolstered by
- the philosophical and practical successes of feminism.
- </p>
- <p> Happy lesbian couples with long-term relationships are not
- hard to find, though not many want to broadcast their existence
- beyond a circle of trusted friends and co-workers. Rose Walton,
- 53, and Marge Sherwin, 49, are more up front. Walton, who chairs
- a department at the State University of New York's School of
- Allied Health Professions, and Sherwin, a physical-therapy
- instructor at Suffolk Community College, have lived together,
- without much incident or fanfare, for 13 years, after meeting
- on a blind date. The women have exchanged rings and, says Marge,
- "absolutely would not go to a party the other is not invited
- to." She adds, "My father, who is 85, has never been sat down
- and told. But when my mother died, Rose spoke at the funeral, at
- his request." Says Rose: "Being gay has never been an issue
- with me. I was always a civil rights person. That doesn't mean
- I've worn a banner or carried a sign. I've simply lived my
- life."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-