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Bloody hell. It's no longer Halloween. It's six in the bloody morning. How did it get to be six in the morning?
Unfortunately, two shots of JD is all it takes to make me forget that you don't go from spirits to lighter stuff. And after that, a pint of cider is the end of sanity.... I have amusingly little memory of the remainder of the evening. I vaguely remember kebabs coming into it somewhere, which is worrying, cos I'm a vegetarian. I actually slept a bit between about one and about four, but then some of the guys on my corridor got back... and now it's six o clock. I've pretty much sobered up.
And I was just about drunk enough to very, very vaguely come out to a couple of my new flatmates. Unfortunately, one of THEM was just about drunk enough to... to share his views on homosexuality and the bible, which... shall we say made for some interesting discussion. It was all very civilised. He was very polite. But we were still both really rather drunk, and really rather in disagreement. And we agreed to have the conversation again sober some time, which in retrospect was probably a bad idea.....
So. I'm going to go back to bed.

Re: Eeep

Date: 2003-11-01 06:06 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] anotherusedpage.livejournal.com
... Most of the schools I attended were ok about out gay teachers. Two of them made an actual effort to show it as a positive thing - despite clause 28 which says that's illegal. Oooh, in fact I think they sneaked through a legislation change under the bar last month which revoked section 28 which said it was illegal to "promote homosexuality" in schools - some places took this as far as you couldn't teach Oscar Wilde and if you taught Wilfred Owen and Sassoon you had to pretend they were straight... but the point was, even when it was illegal, a lot of teachers I knew made the effort to be out and positive.

My parents are most definately in support of gay marriage and that, which is nice. I know they'd be supportive if I was out to them... I haven't ever "come out" to them it would just be making too big a deal of it. If I ever had a steady girlfriend I'd take her home and introduce her no problems, and if I was getting serious descrimnation or harrassment for it, I'd ask for their help, but until then - if I brought it up they'd probably think that I had issues with it, and I wouldn't want them to make a big deal of it.

I've always wanted one of those 'nobody knows I'm a lesbian' t-shirts though, cos the extent to which I could wear one round the house and they wouldn't take the hint is quite amusing..... which is nice, cos soooo many people make the assumption the other way. I mean, just cos a girl wears combat boots, loves comic books, watches football and tends to sit with her legs apart.....

Re: Eeep

Date: 2003-11-02 04:21 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lucy-lupin.livejournal.com
I mean, just cos a girl wears combat boots, loves comic books, watches football and tends to sit with her legs apart.....

I wish I was more like that, but I am such a girly-girl. Well, I'm not "stupidly" girly. I can go outside without make-up (don't wear it most days) and pick up cockroaches and flush them down the toilet if I really have to. But when it comes down to it I'm the type who'd be more likely to wear a skirt than pants and even when I do wear pants, I usually sit with my legs crossed. This despite having some really masculine interests. Strangely the girly thing has only developed in the last few years when I moved to a rural town in New Zealand where we were expected to act as much like guys as possible. So I think I may have been rebelling against that in the same way children who have very liberal parents often develop quite conservative views. I think grooming is an emotional crutch for me. If I feel not quite ready to face the day I make a bit of an effort and then it's easier. Which isn't to say it's right.

My parents are also quite liberal, but they never really discussed their political views in front of my brother and I when we were younger. My mother's reason for this was because when she was growing up, she always had her parents politics forced on her and wanted us to develop our own opinions on things like religion. But they taught us all the moral stuff like not being racist, sexist, homophobic etc. I think my parents are fine with being gay in theory, but at the same time I don't think they'd like it if either my brother or I came out.

Re: Eeep

Date: 2003-11-02 04:26 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lucy-lupin.livejournal.com
Oh, one other thing about James is that I'm very surprised that someone who studies history would join the army. You'd think that of all people, he should see that wars are started over very stupid reasons (ie WWI) and that they cause more problems than they solve.

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