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  • Hi! Hi!

  • I am forty-five years old.

  • I know I look amazing, thank you. (Laughter)

  • I am forty-five years old

  • and I have never once

  • unselfconsciously held hands with a lover in public.

  • I am forty-five years old and I have never once

  • casually, comfortably, carelessly held hands with a partner in public.

  • I don't know how many of you can even imagine what that might be like

  • because, of course, it's a small thing, isn't it,

  • holding hands with a lover in public?

  • And it's not that nobody wanted to, it's just that we didn't feel comfortable.

  • Now, like many gay people, when I was younger, in my young life,

  • I struggled at one time against being gay.

  • I didn't want to be different.

  • I didn't want to be this thing that I didn't really understand.

  • This thing that I had learned was shameful or jokeworthy.

  • But when I eventually did sort of understand

  • and come to accept who and what I am,

  • I have never since that moment,

  • never once, have I ever wished that it turned out differently!

  • I am thoroughly, deeply, delightedly, happy to be gay!

  • (Applause)

  • It suits me! (Laughter) I am really good at it! (Laughter)

  • And yet, everyday I am jealous of straight people,

  • because that private, little, small, intimate gesture of affection

  • has never once been mine.

  • Everyday I see young, straight couples walking through the park

  • and they are casually holding hands and I am jealous of them!

  • I see a teenage couple at a bus stop

  • and she is leaning into him, and her hand is in his,

  • and both of their hands are tucked into his jacket pocket for warmth,

  • and I am jealous of that teenage couple!

  • I will sometimes see a man who unconsciously

  • put his hand, a protective arm, around his girlfriend

  • and she'll link her fingers through his, and I am jealous of that!

  • Maybe you're on Grafton Street and you see an older lady

  • and she gestures to draw her husband's attention

  • to something in the window,

  • and without even thinking he just takes her hand

  • and they stand there peering into the window

  • discussing whatever it is that drew their attention

  • and their hands are just carelessly joined together,

  • and I am jealous of that!

  • Because gay people do not get to hold hands in public

  • without first considering the risk.

  • Gay people do not get to put an arm through another arm

  • or put a hand on a boyfriend's waist without first considering

  • what the possible consequences might be.

  • We look around to see: where are we, who's around,

  • is it late at night? What kind of area is it?

  • Are there bored teenagers hanging around looking for amusement?

  • Are there bunches of lads standing outside a pub?

  • And if we decided OK, maybe it is, it's OK,

  • well then we do hold hands,

  • but the thing is that now those hands are not casual and thoughtless.

  • They are now considered and weighed.

  • But we stroll on hand in hand trying to be just normal and carefree

  • just like everybody else, but actually we're not!

  • Because we are constantly scanning the pavement ahead, just in case.

  • And then even if we do see, you know, a group of blokes coming towards us,

  • maybe we will decide sort of silently to continue holding hands, defiantly!

  • But now our small, intimate gesture between two people in love

  • is no longer a small, intimate gesture.

  • It is a political act of defiance, and it has been ruined.

  • And anyway then you sort of think:

  • "Well, we've had such a lovely afternoon poking around in that garden center

  • looking at things for the garden we don't actually have."

  • (Laughter)

  • And then you think, all it will take is one spat "faggots" or a split lip

  • to turn that really lovely afternoon into a bad afternoon

  • that you will never want to remember.

  • And even if you are somewhere where you think:

  • "Ah, it's perfectly fine here.

  • Nobody here is going to react badly to our tiny gesture."

  • You know, I don't know, say you're wandering through a posh department store.

  • Even then people will notice.

  • Now, they may only notice because they're thinking:

  • "Isn't nice to see two gays holding hands in public?"

  • But they still notice,

  • and I don't want them to notice

  • because then our small, intimate, private, little, human gesture

  • has been turned into a statement, and I don't want that!

  • Our little, private, gesture, like Schrödinger's cat,

  • is altered simply by being observed.

  • We live in this sort of homophobic world,

  • and you might think

  • that a small, little thing like holding hands in public,

  • "Well, it's just a small thing," and you're right!

  • It is indeed just a small thing.

  • But it is one of many small things that make us human,

  • and there are lots of small things

  • everyday that LGBT people have to put up with,

  • that other people don't have to put up with.

  • Lots of small things that we have to put up with

  • in order to be safe or not to be the object of ridicule or scorn.

  • And we are expected to put up with those things

  • and just thank our blessings that we don't live in a country

  • where we could be imprisoned or executed for being gay.

  • And we are so used to making those small adjustments everyday,

  • that even now we rarely ourselves even notice that we are doing it,

  • because it is just part of the background of our lives.

  • This constant malign presence that we have assimilated,

  • and if we complain about it, we are told we have nothing to complain about

  • because: "Aren't you lucky that you don't live in Uganda?"

  • And yes, I am lucky that I don't live in Uganda,

  • but that's not good enough!

  • This isn't some sort of game or competition

  • where the person who has it the worst wins the right to complain

  • and everybody else has to just put up or shut up.

  • Our society is homophobic!

  • It is infused with homophobia.

  • It is dripping with homophobia.

  • And when you are forty-five years old and you have spent thirty years putting up,

  • thirty years absorbing all of those small slights

  • and intimidations and sneers and occasionally much worse,

  • you just get tired of it.

  • You get fed up putting up.

  • I am fed up of reading yet another article by yet another straight person

  • explaining why I am less somehow than everybody else.

  • You get fed up listening to people describe you as intrinsically disordered,

  • people who don't even know you, from their celibate pulpits.

  • You get fed up of the scrawled graffiti,

  • and you get fed up of people sneeringly describe things as gay.

  • You get fed up of steeling yourself to pass by the Saturday night drunks

  • hoping that they won't notice you,

  • and you get fed up of people using their time and energies and talents

  • to campaign against you being treated just like every other citizen.

  • (Applause)

  • I'm forty-five and I'm fed up putting up.

  • Now I would, of course, prefer if nobody harbored any animosity towards gay people

  • or any discomfort with gay relationships,

  • but, you know, I can live with the kind of small, personal, private homophobia

  • that some people might have.

  • For example, I can live with Mary in Wicklow

  • who sometimes turns on the television and sees Graham Norton and thinks,

  • "Oh, he seems nice enough but does he have to be so gay?"

  • (Laughter)

  • I can live with that.

  • I can live with Mary who doesn't know any gay people,

  • apart from that fella who does her hair once a month in "Curl Up and Dye".

  • (Laughter)

  • Mary, whose only knowledge of gay people and our relationships

  • comes from what she has gleaned from schoolyards, church and Coronation Street.

  • I can live with that.

  • I would be happy to sit down on the sofa and watch Coronation Street with Mary.

  • I would be happy to have a cup of tea with her and discuss with her

  • why she feels a little uncomfortable with gay relationships

  • and I would hope that Mary would change her mind.

  • I would hope that she would meet more gay people

  • and find out pretty quickly that we are just as ordinary, just as nice

  • or just as annoying as all of you people are.

  • And I would hope that she would change her mind

  • for her own sake as much as anybody else's,

  • because gay people are just as capable

  • of bringing goodness into Mary's life as anybody else.

  • And, of course, we could help her with the decorating!

  • (Laughter)

  • But that kind of personal discomfort with gay people and their relationships

  • is entirely different

  • from the kind of homophobia that manifests itself in public.

  • The kind of homophobia

  • that manifests itself in an attempt to have LGBT people treated differently

  • or less than everybody else.

  • The kind of homophobia that seeks to characterize gay people

  • and their relationships as less worthy of respect.

  • That kind of homophobia I do have a problem with,

  • and I think gay people should be allowed to call it when they see it,

  • because it is our right to do so!

  • Of course, many people object to the word homophobia itself.

  • They object to the "phobia" part.

  • 'I'm not afraid of you," they say.

  • (Laughter)

  • But I'm not saying

  • that homophobes cower in fear every time they pass a Cher album,

  • (Laughter)

  • but they are afraid.

  • They are afraid of what the world will look like

  • when it treats gay, lesbian and bisexual people with the same respect

  • as everybody else.

  • They are afraid that they won't fit in this brave new world of equality.

  • But, of course, their fear is irrational

  • because, of course, the world will not look any different.

  • Kids will still want to eat ice cream, dogs will still play fetch,

  • the tide will still come in,

  • and parallel parking will still be difficult.

  • (Laughter)

  • The most vocal homophobes who know that they long ago

  • lost the arguments around the decriminalization of homosexual sex

  • or every other advance for gay people since.

  • These days you will find those very vocal homophobes

  • clustered around the same-sex marriage debate --

  • and it is quite the spectacle

  • because, of course, they know

  • that they can't just come right out and bluntly say what drives them,

  • which is an animus towards gay people,

  • and a disgust at what they imagine we do in bed,

  • because they know that that won't wash with the general public anymore.

  • So they are forced to sort of scramble for any other reason

  • that they can think of to argue their case.

  • So, gay people are going to destroy the institution of marriage,

  • gay couples will be wandering through orphanages picking babies off shelves

  • trying to find one that matches their new IKEA sofa.

  • (Laughter)

  • Or that allowing gay people to get married will destroy society itself,

  • and many, many more including my own personal favorite,

  • which is the old argument that the word "marriage" is defined in some dictionary

  • as a union between a man and a woman,

  • and that therefore same-sex marriage can't possibly be a "marriage".

  • Which is a piffling argument against words and dictionaries

  • and not an argument against same-sex marriage.

  • (Applause)

  • Now, of course, the other real driver of homophobia,

  • and you can all clutch your pearls here because I am going to go here,

  • is a disgust with gay sex, in particular with gay male sex.

  • The poor old lesbians just get caught in the homophobic crossfire. (Laughter)

  • You know guilty by association.

  • Because what they really don't like is anal sex,

  • sodomy, you know, buggery,

  • and they assume that that is all we do.

  • They feverishly imagine that we spend all day jumping around buggering each other.

  • I mean they obsess on it, and, in fact, what they actually do,

  • is reduce us down to this one sex act, whether or not we do it at all,

  • because we are not regular people with the same hopes and aspirations

  • and ambitions and feelings as everyone else,

  • we are simply walking sex acts.

  • Earlier this year I was invited to take part

  • in the St. Pat's for All parade in Queens, New York.

  • Now it is a really lovely, charming, grassroots event in Queens

  • which was set up in response to the ban on gay groups marching

  • in the famous Manhattan St. Patrick's Day Parade.

  • In that Manhattan St. Patrick's Day Parade any Irish group who wants can march,

  • Irish policemen can march, Irish firemen, Irish footballers,

  • Irish community groups, Irish volleyball teams, Irish book clubs.

  • Any Irish people who want to have a good shot

  • at being allowed to march in that parade --

  • except for Irish gays,

  • because, as far as the organizers of that parade are concerned,

  • gays are nothing more than walking sex acts,

  • and there is no place for buggery in their parade.

  • Now, I actually saw a small documentary once

  • about one of the leaders of the organizers of that parade,

  • they are the Ancient Order of Hibernians,

  • and they're like a Catholic Orange Order

  • (Laughter)

  • -- they dress the same and everything --

  • (Laughter)

  • and in the documentary, you know, he was a nice old fellow,

  • and he had this lovely wife, and they seemed very happy together.

  • And when I looked at them, I saw this life lived together,

  • and I imagined if I asked him about their life together,

  • that he would remember the first time they met,

  • he would remember how nervous he was on their first date together,

  • and how proud he was when he turned and saw her coming up the aisle

  • in that dress that she had fretted over for so long.

  • And I imagine that if I asked him,

  • he would remember that phone call to say that she had gone into labor

  • and the dash across town,

  • and the other time when she went so far past her due date

  • that she promised she would bounce up and down on a trampoline

  • until the baby bounced out of her and how they laughed so hard about that.

  • And I imagine he would remember other occasions

  • like when their youngest broke his arm and cried all the way to the hospital,

  • and that other time when she was sick and he could not sleep alone in the empty bed

  • and so in the middle of the night he got up and went back to the hospital

  • even though he knew they wouldn't let him in to see her at that hour.

  • I imagine that he would remember all of those things and many more.

  • All of the small things that go up to making a relationship

  • and making a person a person.

  • And when I looked at him, I imagined all of those things too.

  • But when he looks at me he doesn't see me that way.

  • He doesn't see gay people that way.

  • To him we are just sex acts and there is no place for sex acts in his parade.

  • I am forty-five years old and I am fed up putting up.

  • So, I'm not anymore.

  • I'm forty-five years old and I am not putting up anymore

  • because I don't have the energy anymore.

  • Putting up is exhausting!

  • I am forty-five years old and I'm not putting up anymore

  • because I don't have the patience anymore.

  • Forty-five years old! I was born six months before the Stonewall riots,

  • and you have had forty-five years to work out,

  • that despite appearances,

  • I am just as ordinary, just as unremarkable,

  • and just as human as you are!

  • I'm forty-five years old and I am not asking anymore

  • I am just being -- human being!

  • Thank you for your time!

  • (Applause)

  • Thank you! Thank you!

  • (Applause)

Hi! Hi!

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TEDx】すべての小さなこと|パンティ|TEDxDublin (【TEDx】All the little things | Panti | TEDxDublin)

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    go820609 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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