I ventured out to our local gay pride event last weekend. I have actively avoided going to Reading Pride because it always felt a little close to home, on so many levels. I’ve been to a couple of other prides this year and really enjoyed myself, not least because I get to be with ‘my own’ without feeling self-loathing and revulsion as I used to. In the past I would watch or hear about ‘them’ in the media and my guts would twist because I knew I wanted to be out there too but didn’t know if I would ever have the courage of my convictions to be able to do so.
So yeah, last week I wandered into town past all the places I’ve come to know in my 30-something journey through life. It wasn’t long before I was waiting by the Civic Centre for the parade to start, with men dressed as nuns wearing pink plastic shoes, lesbian prison officers, the local gay police contingent and various other gradings of queer. After a short delay (I think we were on gay time!) we were off. I was given an anti-fascist placard which I held aloft and we began marching through the town centre. It felt wonderful.
I was totally out and proud and I didn’t give a stuff who saw me. This town I grew up in, that I realised I was gay in and which holds so many memories for me. To experience such freedom in a place where I felt a prisoner for so long, was exhilirating. I was walking alongside gays, lesbians, bisexuals, the intergendered and transgendered amid shouts of “we’re here, we’re queer, we have no fear” while rainbow-bedecked students blew on pink whistles. It’s one of the highlights of my life thus far.
As we snaked through the streets and alleyways and onwards to the park where the festival itself was held, I looked across and there, just 100 metres from where we all stood, was Reading remand centre. It had been Reading Gaol. It was where Oscar Wilde was imprisoned and sentenced to hard labour for committing homosexual offences and he drew on these experiences to write his infamous Ballad of Reading Gaol. That was a massive wake up call for me and in that instant I knew I could never return to the darkness and pain of the closet. Those days were finally behind me.
I looked up at the sky. It was a beautiful day weather-wise and it held out for us even though the forecast had been less than promising. I looked around at the leafy surroundings of the Forbury Gardens, which was still in full bloom with a dazzling array of late-Summer colour. How could I ever have doubted? How could I have ever feared being gay? How could I have ever wanted to deny who I was? I looked around at all these happy smiling faces and I knew in that instant that I was where I needed to be. Pride had brought it all home to me.


















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