PHB Mobile



News Tips? Calendar Info?



"If you're gay, lesbian, or bisexual, would you sacrifice for your trans neighbors and siblings? If you're trans, would you sacrifice for your gay, lesbian, or bisexual neighbors and siblings? It's something worth knowing about yourself and those around you."
--Autumn Sandeen, 4/19/2010, the night before GetEQUAL's DADT repeal protest at the White House


Public Calendar

Press/media, organizations, and individuals send your time-based event info to: calendar@phblend.net

Full size PHB Calendar


About
-- The Blog
-- Pam | My home page
-- Autumn
-- Daimeon
-- Julien
-- "Radical" Russ
-- Terrance

Contact the Blend

Snail mail:
Pam's House Blend
105 West Hwy 54, Suite 265
Box #113
Durham, NC 27713









The Blend Blogrolls

Activism


Best of the Blend
Blog Posts

Special Events and Interviews

Blend-o-licious endorsements...



The Christian Civic League of Maine's Mike Hein calls Pam's House Blend:
"a leading source of radical homosexual propaganda, anti-Christian bigotry, and radical transgender advocacy."

He is "praying that Pam Spaulding will "turn away from her wicked and sinful promotion of homosexual behavior." (CCLM's web site, 10/15/07)


Ex-gay "Christian" activist James Hartline on Pam:
"I have been mocked over and over again by ungodly and unprincipled anti-christian lesbians."
(from "Six Years In Sodom: From The Journal Of James Hartline," 9/4/2006, written from the "homosexual stronghold" of Hillcrest in San Diego).

"Pam is a 'twisted lesbian sister' and an 'embittered lesbian' of the 'self-imposed gutteral experiences of the gay ghetto.'" -- 9/5/2008



Peter LaBarbera of Americans for Truth Against Homosexuality heartily endorses the Blend, calling Pam:

A "vicious anti-Christian lesbian activist."
(Concerned Women for America's radio show [9:15], 1/25/07)

"A nutty lesbian blogger."
(MassResistance radio show [16:25], 2/3/07)


Pam's House Blend always seems to find these sick f*cks. The area of the country she is in? The home state of her wife? I know, they are everywhere. Pam just does such a great job of bringing them out into the light.
--Impeach Bush


who monitors yours Bevis ?? Just thought I would drop you a line,so the rest of your life is not wasted.
--"Joe"

Content © 2004-2008
Pam Spaulding

House Blend logo © 2005
Melissa McEwan

Photo of Pam Spaulding
© Judy G. Rolfe
All Rights Reserved.


SITE TERMS AND CONDITIONS
Support the Blend




An Online Magazine in the Reality-Based Community.



Getting Over the Ick Factor (warning, potentially explicit)

by: Keori

Tue Dec 02, 2008 at 01:16:59 AM EST


I’m going to skip over the pleasantries and get right down to business here. Amongst all the post-Prop 8 discussion, we’ve talked about community outreach, minority outreach, showing our faces, our families, getting interfaith dialogue going. One thing I haven’t heard anyone talk about is gay sex.

Wait, what? “Gay sex”? Did someone really just say that? *gasp, pearl clutching*

Yes, I did. In all of this discussion about families and rights and outreach, this entire year I have not heard ANYONE talk about the elephant in the room. Namely, that one of the reasons straight people hate us is because they are grossed out by the idea of gay sex.

But, but, we can’t TALK about gay sex! It’s just not polite! We have to focus on the positive things like our families, our children, our jobs, our civil rights!

Bullshit. I say that we HAVE to talk about gay sex, for the simple reason that a lot of opposition to us comes from that knee-jerk "icky gay sex" factor and gendernormative expectations. It’s not always some Christian Dominionist spouting off verses from Leviticus. Sometimes the opposition isn’t even outwardly religious. Sometimes it’s just plain old misogyny and cultural conditioning about what sex acts and gender roles are acceptable and what aren't. This is yet another societal issue we need to tackle at a personal level. We are struggling against a cultural expectation of how plumbing should define us as people. Like it or not, Christianity’s views of men, women, and gender norms have colored American expectations of gender and sexual behavior. Something so ingrained into a cultural consciousness needs to be confronted before it can be exorcised. So yes, I think we need to talk about “gay sex.” We need a "Get Over the Ick Factor" effort.
Keori :: Getting Over the Ick Factor (warning, potentially explicit)
During the campaign and right after the election, I heard a lot of “Ew, gross, how can two women lick each other and call it sex?” and “Ew, one guy f***ing another in the ass is so nasty!” Let’s face it, these people aren’t upset by civil rights or some abstract concept of equality under the law. They’re freaked out about sex. They obsess over it. (I blame the patriarchy.) These people are weirded out by the myriad ways in which people achieve orgasm. Their issues and the subsequent lies they tell about us are all rooted in a cultural expectation of how sex and gender roles should play out.

Thus, I propose that we all get down to talking about gay sex and gender norms. People are afraid of what they don’t understand, and they shy away from anything that isn’t part of their bubble. We won’t change hearts and minds until we permeate those bubbles and make gay sex acts relative to hetero sex acts. Make it not so scary, so taboo, so icky! It’s just sex! I challenge everyone here to make a point of talking about sex and gender roles, to confront cultural norms. Expose the hypocrisy. Blow people’s minds.

This can be really fun. If you’re like me and enjoy shocking people out of their complacency, it becomes not only an educational experience for your target, but an amusing pastime for you.

I had a discussion a short while ago with a friend who was regaling me with the tale of how she let her boyfriend penetrate her anally for the first time. Rather than get squeamish, I let her finish, and then commented, "So it wasn't so bad then."

"No, it was okay."
"You'd do it again?"
"Sure, why not?"
"You know, a lot of gay men do the same thing you just did last night."
"Oh, EWWWWWW!!"
"Hold on. You just spent ten minutes telling me all about your boyfriend and anal and how great it was, and now you're saying ‘ew’ when talking about THE EXACT SAME THING?"

The deer in the headlights stare was priceless. I plowed ahead.

"You do realize that we're talking about the exact same sex act, right? And you thought it was great. So why the EW?"
"But...but...it's two MEN!"
"So what? We're talking about two people engaging in the same sex act. Why is one great and the other gross?"

I could almost see smoke coming out of her ears as she tried to process this. Clearly, this was a new line of thinking for her.

"No excuses,” I told her. “You just said that anal sex was okay. Why the double standard?"
"...I never thought of it like that."

I could tell she was struggling. Time to lighten this discussion with some humor.

“Okay, your boyfriend goes down on you, right?” *mischievous grin* “Because if he isn’t, you need to kick his ass.”
She laughed, nodded, and her tension level dropped visibly. I smiled some more, and pointed out, “Lesbians go down on each other during sex. It’s just another way to orgasm. Gay men give other blow jobs. It’s just oral sex. Really. All of this is just sex. What’s the big deal?”
“Well…I don’t know, it’s just gross!”
“You just confessed to having anal sex with your boyfriend and liking it. You just told me that he goes down on you. Are you really going to sit there and tell me straightfaced that gay sex is icky? You’re going to claim that the exact same sex acts you engage in are gross just because the two people involved have the same plumbing?”
“But it’s different!”
I gave her a very pointed look, folded my arms, and asked, “Is it? Is it really?”
I got a blank look with an undertone of conditioned response and a hint of defensiveness.

I softened my tone, leaned forward, and said, “It’s all just sex. There is no difference. It’s all just a way to achieve orgasm with the one you love. All the things you two do, gay people do, too. It’s all the same in the end. It’s just an expression of love or lust. It’s just sex.”

I seriously doubt that in one conversation I managed to overthrow 30 years of cultural conditioning about sex and gender norms. However, I am quite certain that she and I will talk about this again in the future. With the exception of the seriously prudish (and we’ll never win them over, anyways) people enjoy talking about sex, whether they’ll admit it or not. The next time we talk about this, I’m going to again challenge the double standard concerning sex acts. I’ll even take it a step further and ask her to think about why lesbians in pornography is acceptable, but lesbians as a monogamous family unit is taboo. If she’s smart, she’ll realize that all of this garbage is rooted in cultural misogyny that dictates how men and women must behave.

These kinds of attitudes can be overcome. They must be overcome in order for lesbians and gay people to be seen as humans and not sick perverted monsters. They really need to be overcome in order to combat transphobia. Those of us who do not follow the standard binary gender and/or sexuality formula need to make an effort to combat this cultural misogyny. We need to be willing to talk about sexual and gender fluidity within our own spheres of influence. Otherwise, we’ll just be protesting against a brick wall.

Help America get over the ick factor. Let’s talk about sex.
Tags: , , , (All Tags)
Bookmark and Share
Print Friendly View Send As Email
Respectfully...
When we are discussing Larry Craig, Mark Foley and Ted Haggard the only correct reaction is...Ewwww!

"All ages can testifie enough howe profitable that fable of Christe hath ben to us and our companie." Pope Leo X

1475-1521

Modern Translation "It has served us well, this myth of Christ."


Frank discussions
like you had with your friend are great, I agree.  Too bad we can't have these discussions with the public through campaign ads, but then we would run the risk of reconfirming their assumptions that gay relationships are about sex and only sex.  And of course, they're not.  But when it comes to sex, yep.  Sex is just sex.

You might ask your friend if her boyfriend might like her to anally penetrate him sometime.  After all, men get some kind of extra sexual arousal from having their prostrate gland stimulated.  Right boys?  So suggest it to her.  Then point out later that they both just engaged in "gay" sex.  Are they icked?  No, of course not, because they like it (especially him).  So if they're not icked at themselves, who are they to be icked at anyone else doing the same?

Click HERE and sign up: Campaign For Military Partners.

Lurleen on Twitter.


I remember...
...Being young and, not to be too graphic, but leafing through my uncle's "ButtMan" magazine (Sorry guys, totally hetero. You wouldn't think so, but it's for the straight guys...) and I was astounded by all the 'acts' that these girls were getting into (and by how 'detached' I was to them which is why I'm here of course!) with these funny looking guys....

Anyway, to make the rather boring story shorter, when I came out, all my uncle could do was go on about how 'unnatural' and 'disgusting' the sex was when in all honesty, there were way more perverse things in those magazines (if we wanna grade perversion which is nothing more than a slippery slope of course) than I had going on in my head. There were waay more perverse things in those images I found on his computer's harddrive.

And yet, what I do is 'disgusting'.

But to be fair and give the Straights a point (.5 of a point), I think a lot of problems straight people have is that they cannot talk about gay sex without thinking about THEMSELVES being engaged in gay sex. It's like describing it can throw a person 'there'. And also, it's just a cultural norm to go 'EWWW" like it is to lift up your hands on a roller coaster or in a stadium when some foool starts the tired and overdone 'Wave'- every time you watch a movie in a theater and something homoerotic comes along you can sense the 'wave' coming of "UGH, EWW!!!!, OMG! HAHAHAA, FAGS!" just a-coming and most people just hop on. when a group of boys see something gay, they 'have' to go 'EEEWW' and in unison and the one who does not might become 'suspect'. homophobia is like the safe haven of 'heterosexuals; it like saying 'you are like me right? Straight and masculine? I don't have to worry about you coming on to me or anything and you won't make me look 'suspect' when I'm around you.' It's important to remember that while gays are hardest hit by homophboia, it actually affects straight people to a degree too.


An OCD perspective
I have Obsessive Compulsive Disorder and to me all sex involving touching and body fluids is disgusting.

My immediate reaction to seeing naked bodies touch is "EEEEEEEW!"

However, the sex drive is a powerful thing and when the time is right that primative core of my brain takes over and nature takes its course.

I think many straight people are afraid that they will experience something similar when it comes to gay sex. The "ick factor" will succumb to a more basic physical drive.

It is just a thought I'm tossing out here.

When you look for the bad in mankind, expecting to find it, you surely will.

- Abraham Lincoln.


It has been shown
that homophobes in general experience more arousal from homoerotic imagery than non-homophobic straights. You're definitely on to something.

NOM ~ "Mine is an honorable task and I shall drown out anyone who claims otherwise!"

[ Parent ]
Menu

Make a New Account

Username:

Password:



Forget your username or password?


Days left for Joe Solmonese's promise to donors of DADT repeal in 2010 to be fulfilled
Leave your comments here.


The President's State of the Union promise to repeal.



Report TOS Violations

Premium Sponsors



BlogAds






Search the Blend
Current site


PHB 2.0 Web
Search Blend 1.0 Archives
Ad Networks


BlogSheroes BlogAds


Miscellany

RSS Feeds

Subscribe with Bloglines

Visit NCBlogs


frontpage hit counter

Stats

Powered by: SoapBlox