By Tim'm T. West, Special to BlackVoices.com
I am one of the lucky ones: lucky, brave or both. This July, I celebrated my 36th birthday in the company of family, friends, and my partner Dave. The term "partner" doesn't rest well in the ears of some black families, but I am lucky. My family loves me for who I am, no matter what.
A few years ago my small, tight-knit family, consisting of two sisters and four brothers, as well as extended family, started a reunion for the generations to come. This year, being only the second time we've met, I created an online listserve, "The Blessed Wests", to shorten the distance of time and space when we are not together.
This year, I took the initiative to set the tone for the "The Blessed Wests". A gay man, I realize that getting my family to honor my partnership with Dave, a man I have known since 2004, but have only been partnered with since early 2008, might take some time. At 31, Dave is pretty new to the whole "coming out" process. Encouraged by the security of my love, and my desire to no longer love "in hiding", I'm grateful that he trusts my guidance as we aspire to build a family: a commitment ceremony, a home, and adoption are aspirations we both share.
My family is a Christian family full of preacher-men and good church women. I respect their beliefs as they respect my decision to live my life as an out gay man.
Timm West Gallery
I love my nephew DJ and niece Jasmine, like my own. They love their Uncles Tim'm and Dave as effortlessly as they loved Uncle Tim'm before Dave.
My brothers Joseph, Matthew, and David represent 3 of 4 brothers who love and support me and value family.
My partner Dave and I enjoy a moment with my young cousins Christopher (left) and Justin (right). Their mother, Cynthia, and I are more like siblings than cousins.
My cousin Cynthia, my sister Talisha, Dave, and my sister Toya pose for a shot. Their smiles say a thousand words.
Dave and I pose for a shot on the 4th of July, just days before my 36th birthday and family reunion.
I'm not certain about certain people's mother's love, but my mother, Irma Pearl Stinson, is priceless for here unconditional love and acceptance my partner, Dave.
As my mother's Family Reunion shirt suggests, "A Family that Prays Together, Stays Together".
I remain hopeful that my "family" will continue to honor the vast ways in which black families are constructed: second marriages, adopted children, long-standing friendships, and yes same-sex partnerships.
After graduating at the top of my class with scholarships to some of our nation's premier colleges, and having been a very popular student leader and athlete, coming out to my mother during my freshman year of college filled in some of the missing pieces. The burden of silence I carried as a teen, the depression, the fasting and praying for "change," and the suicide attempts for "change" proved masochistic at best.
On Sunday we made the drive from Shreveport to the outskirts of Taylor, Arkansas; a small township without a traffic light between paper mills, oil wells, and chicken plants. It is believed that Bible belt Christians, in places where the fields grow high and the roads "go dirt", are the most homophobic. I have a different experience. We arrived to the Church and received hugs from my niece and nephew. My brother-in-law, one among a few ministers in my family warmly greeted both me and Dave. There was such comfort in Dave meeting the family.
After a marathon sermon of the preacher men of my family about what it means to build a "strong house" (Mark 3:25), we gathered at the same modest three-bedroom wooden house in which we were raised. If it was crowded as children, you can imagine how quickly it filled. Midnight Starr soul train lines, "seconds" of fried chicken and potato salad, and a game of Family Feud were highlights of the day. As my family harmonized on "Happy Birthday," to help me ring in my 36th year, I made a wish that the love Dave and I were experiencing would grow-wished that my young nieces, nephews, and cousins would be part of a family tradition in which they always knew that they are welcomed home.
My mother is the rock of my family. In her quiet resolve she understands what it means for love to conquer all. We have a relationship rooted in her prayerfulness and love. My father, divorced from my mother and unable to attend the reunion, taught me toughness. While he deliberately sought to raise strong, virile, heterosexual sons, we joke that he raised, among them, one strong, virile gay man. He's proud that he raised a strong man-- one strong enough to confront the truth of my sexuality and live with its consequences, among them a shamed and confused past that led to HIV infection in 1999. My father, the same man who called us "sissies" when we missed tackles or failed to get a rebound, suggests that he would like to perform my commitment ceremony, when that time comes. My brothers, sisters, and cousins will be there. They understood that I wouldn't be me if hiding my sexuality.
Our recent gathering embodies the sum total of all our trials and triumphs. I am healthy, nearly 10 years after HIV almost claimed my life. We smile, fuss, cook, and dance like most families at reunions. We presented a powerful example of what it means to love beyond the fear of what others think. At 36, I'm as happy as I have ever been. Twenty years after I sat on the same front porch where we recently celebrated, contemplating an end to my life, I can say with full resolve and with all parts of me present: It feels good to come home!
Tim'm T. West is a poet, emcee, scholar and the author of three books "Red Dirt Revival", "BARE", and "Flirting". A graduate of Duke, The New School, and Stanford universities, he is also founder of the rap group DDC. Tim'm followed their success with two solo projects, "Songs from Red Dirt" and "Blakkboy Blue(s)". He also created and hosted the "Front Porch" Spoken Word/Soul/Hip Hop showcase in DC, Oakland, Chicago, Brooklyn, and Atlanta. Tim'm also appeared in Byron Hurt's "Beyond Beats and Rhymes", Alex Hinton's "Pick Up the Mic", and is featured in the forthcoming Mario Van Peebles documentary "Bring your "A" Game". Though Tim'm currently resides in Houston, TX he is a Visiting Lecturer in Ethnic Studies this Fall at Humboldt State University in Northern California. Find more about Tim'm's work at www.reddirt.biz


Comments: (395)
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By: Cornelius a.ka. "Life" on 8/31/2008 4:11PM
I'm amazed at some of the harsh comments posted on this site, but not everyone will accept you nor agree with you. Sadly that's still the way of the world. But with people like you, myself, and the other beautifully spirited people we can be the change that this universe is yearning for. Tim'm you and I both share similar stories and parellel lives with being gay, a black man, wanting to please God-family-the church, contemplating suicide, contracting HIV all because we were ashamed of who we saw in the mirror. I now embrace who I see in the mirror and I embrace what I like and stand for. I love God, he loves me,I love my family, they love me, and there ain't a damn thing wrong with me! You, my friend, have made your peace as well. Continue to share what you have with the world. It's courageous, meaningful, and important.
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By: ms. Black on 8/31/2008 6:35PM
The world would be a happier place if we just let people BE.
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By: Orion Jennings on 8/31/2008 9:14PM
I'm glad you're happy and the two of you make a beautiful couple!! Forget the haters and do your thing!!!
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By: JOANN on 8/31/2008 11:41PM
You or your family are not christians. You and people like you are Very sick. The bible clearly states Adam and Eve - Man and Woman and if you read the bible and study it you will know that you are a sick person and anyone involved in the same type of relationship is sick too. Be fruitful and Multiply (meaning have children). How can 2 women or 2 men multiply - give birth? They can't, so get some help.
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By: James on 9/01/2008 11:13AM
Tim'm,
Thanks for sharing this wonderful story. It provides encouragement to all of us. Keep rising up!
James
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By: RJ on 9/01/2008 12:12PM
Tim,
I couldn't have said it better that the previous poster myself. Fortunately, you come from an African American family who understands acceptance and individuality. That's RARE in the Black community (plagued with the ignorance of religious extremism and dogma, misinterpretation of ancient Hebrew text, small-mindedness, intolerance, prejudice and tradition-choked bible-fanatics).
The reality behind all the ignorance on this thread is that humans are created with the same diversity as the exotic fish living in the deepest of the ocean’s vastness. Everyone is NOT wired to be "straight" (homosexuality even exists in the animal kingdom), and DIVERSITY is the Creator’s greatest glory - not judgment. Your eye color and my height have nothing to do with what’s right or wrong – it just is. Human sexuality holds the same countless variables – we just can’t see them. To the “Nazis for Jesus” condemning this you and your partner: Stop assigning your own religious limitations from your microscopic, limited, unfounded, un-researched, inexperienced, Pentecostal choir stand point of view to someone else.
You don't know SHIT about being gay, bisexual, lesbian, transgender or transsexual until you've lived inside that person’s body, mind and soul – impossible. How can you say a person isn't born gay? You don’t know a damn thing about another person’s reality! When a person says this, what they really mean is as far back as they can remember, they have been attracted to the same sex. Sexuality develops at different points for everyone. A basic college course in Human Sexuality would’ve taught you that, however, if you would rather take notes from your screaming, scripture-singing, local preacher who hasn’t spent a single hour in college, your interpretation will be different. Believe the bible as your personal truth but don't try to wrap those chains around the minds of those of us who are free in our thoughts.
Tim, I encourage you to ignore people who condemn the entire world at large (something they have no clue about) based upon their ideas of what the bible means. Trying to convince you of your “sinfulness” because you’re not built the same way they are makes them feel elite, holy and righteous. The damning writers on this board are NOT experts in Hebrew text, history or the bible. This is clear because they write on a 7th grade level, and yet show the audacity to superimpose their belief system on your life as if they are an authority on the Creator’s feelings; laughable, actually. These are people that will live the rest of their lives in the reality of what "grandma" taught them about life. Their children will think the same way. Ironically, if your detractors really followed the bible’s commandments as literal truth, they wouldn’t have been surfing the net on a Saturday (the Hebrew/Jewish Sabbath) - they should've been praying. In fact, let's pray now. "Lord, Jesus – please save us from your followers."
The best of luck, Tim and Dave.
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By: Matthew Florence on 9/01/2008 5:51PM
Tim'm, I applaud and respect your decision to engage with your family openly, honestly and with honor. Just this past week, an extended member of my own black family was in town. She recently married into a family with whom my own family had ministered as missionaries for many years. One of her new brothers-in-law has a gay son. And while some in the family are accepting, others are not. My cousin commented that Christians are the only army that shoots their wounded. And how true that can sometimes be. We Christians far too often don't recognize the pain and struggle that our gay brothers and sisters go through. Would anyone choose to be ostracized from society, be open to derision, be victimized by hatred (both verbal and far too often physical)? Being gay is not a choice. In my own case, I tried to kill myself several times because Christians told me God did not accept me. But when I talked with God directly, He let me know that He made me and I am good. I hope that the other Christians on here will let God do His work and judge whom He will judge. We do not need to do God's work for Him. Our goal, as Jesus said, is to worship God and love our neighbors as we love ourselves.
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By: John Cornelius on 9/01/2008 8:47PM
Typically, people who write in all-caps have personal issues that should be discussed with their therapist. Congrats to you, Tim'm and your partner and your loving family. Being a family takes work, constant work and that love must be unconditional if it is legitimate.
I'm just glad that God loves us all, unconditionally. Period.
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By: nilla4me on 9/01/2008 9:31PM
Congratulations, Tim'm...I know what a long time this was in coming. You have been blessed!
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By: Antonio on 9/02/2008 12:01AM
Love is thicker than blood when it comes to defining this paradigm that we call "family." It was wonderful to see your family embrace you and your partner - a monumental occassion for the Black community, as we unfortunately continue to corrode with homophobia.
The small and closed minded will never be concerned enough to explore the current research on the biological contributions towards sexual orientation. Therefore, I wouldn't waste much energy trying to please them. However, I would only caution them to be careful - their sons and daughters may not have fully disclosed their orientation to them yet. Given the high rate of GLBT suicide, a dead child is even harder to accept when parents are contibuting factors to the suicide or prior attempts. I know - I'VE BEEN THERE, PERSONALLY!
Love yourself by loving someone who loves you back - regardless of gender. Those who truly love you will simply be glad that you found happiness. Everyone else can continue to live their miserable lives - void of true inner peace. They don't have a heaven or hell to put you in, so their opinion is irrelevant.
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