Making it to a mailbox isn’t something I’ve managed many times in my adult life. Until the marriage equality vote, I genuinely thought that the postbox out the front of our office was a historical monument. I’m proud to say though, that I had the form crossed, sealed and through the hole within days of it arriving.
I voted Yes. Done.
But as the campaign went on, and I watched reactions on both sides of the camp heat to the point of unfair dismissals and wedding ceremony cancellations, I got uneasy.
I know how many of the No camp feel about homosexuality. I know because I used to feel the same way. My childhood was unusual; waving hands above my head in worship services and speaking the sounds of Pentecostal tongues. Praying for people to be healed. Carefully underlining a verse in the big heavy bible balanced on my knee.
There’s something very satisfactory about religion, about having a purpose, being on the right side and following rituals to make sure you stay that way.
I don’t remember anyone actively saying homosexuality was wrong. There were a lot of things we called wrong; anger, lust, divorce, but homosexuality was one of those things that was so wrong, it was just never mentioned. It came out more subtly, in whispered stories. ‘He was rescued from a life of homosexuality.’ ‘Well, her son’s got a boyfriend…’
It was someone yelling ‘homo!’ on the playground and a friend explaining the act, a look of horror on her face. It was the older brother of a friend secretly flicking through a bible to the story of Sodom and giggling through to God destroying the city in a ball of fire. A teenage friend was sent to a ‘Cleansing Stream’ camp where homosexuality was on the menu of curses to be cast out of him.