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The Chick Fellatio Ep. II: To Get to the Other Side

August 6, 2012
By

(A previous post about Chick-Fil-A, called “Chick Fellatio”, went viral, sparking substantial discussion and generating over 1 Million page views. This post is about some of the responses to that post. To read the previous post first, click here.)

“I believe that unarmed truth and unconditional love will have the final word in reality. This is why right, temporarily defeated, is stronger than evil triumphant.” 

- Martin Luther King, Jr.

Over 1 Million Page Views! That seems like a good milestone to stop and pause in wonder at how amazing Twitter is, and how delightfully generous, loving, and healing total strangers can be, even as friends are being cruel.

I’m simply gobsmacked by the response a little blog post intended for a few friends can receive, and I feel honored to have found a place on your Twitter feed, your Facebook feed, your website.

After the events of the past few days, I’m simultaneously undaunted, hopeful, and amazed, and want to share with you some of the reasons why.

Undaunted 

Chick-Fil-A had a cable TV network and phalanxes of church-based political operatives supporting them, virtually guaranteeing a day of record-breaking sales. Lines around stores make for easy, TV-friendly shots. The short-terms gains for the restaurant and for the network of “religio-political” organizations they support will no doubt continue for a time.

To Get to the Other Side

Cartoon by Joe Parrie at joeparrie.com

But, in the long run, it matters how we nourish ourselves, and there was not much nutritious going on at Wednesday’s Chick-Fil-A Appreciation Day. There was little on the menu that was good for their bodies, little in the crowd that was good for their souls, and little in their big day that was good for their movement.

I do believe that some people were there in well-intentioned defiance of perceived government over-reach, but the celebratory atmosphere turned the day into a feast of smugness disguised as faith and anger disguised as cheer, and I have good reason to believe that neutral people noticed.

Smiling to wound is its own punishment; over time, it erodes a smile’s sincerity. That’s Sarah Palin’s future, and it’s the eventual future of the church-based arm of the anti-LGBT movement. You can’t disguise hatred as love and expect your love to go untarnished.

So, while they were gorging on empty calories, assembling the usual partygoers for the easy win of a fast-food lunch to publicly celebrate the right to fund inequality, we who oppose Chick-Fil-A’s harmful giving were feasting on more wholesome fare. We were doing the better, harder work of creation, connection, and persuasion. We were challenging our friends, and, yes, losing some friendship, but also forging newer and more productive ones, and establishing relationships that will last for years to come.

We refused to be told how to feel or that it wasn’t important. We refused to keep quiet. We kept telling the truth, and we began to connect in ways that will last long after Fox News has moved on to something else.

Hopeful

The comments came in trickles, then in waves, then in oceans. It became impossible for me to read and respond to each of them in a timely way, but I read as many as I could.  Sure, there was hate mail, but not much. The responses were overwhelmingly positive and positively overwhelming. Many, like this one, contained stories of changed hearts and minds:

“I was kind of stuck in the middle on this debate. I have lots of gay friends and I understood why they were upset but didn’t understand why it became such a huge issue…. Last night I commented on someone’s post that it is spiraling out of hand and someone linked your article. I just felt that I needed to tell you that…I am no longer lost in understanding why its such an issue and I will not be eating there again. I think that this is just the start of something big and I hope that Human Rights wins out against hatred in the end.” – Rev. Jason Pitman

That is so cool. There were many such sentiments, some from Christians who have embraced our dignity and equality, some from opponents of Same-Sex Marriage who nonetheless don’t wish to support Chick-Fil-A’s harmful giving, and some from people who  simply didn’t know the extent or scope of that giving.

Thank you, thank you, thank you to the open minds among us, and to everyone who refused to be silenced or give up. In this polarized time, it’s sustaining to know that we can still reason together.

In addition to frank statements of changed minds and opened hearts, there were responses so sweetly personal that they moved me to tears, like the mother who engaged her young daughter in a conversation about Dan Cathy’s statement that we are “prideful and arrogant” to try to define marriage.

“Do you have a definition of marriage?” the mother asked.

“It’s when you mean so much to a person you can’t get enough of each other,” the daughter replied, and together they decided to eat elsewhere from now on.

Some of you were not quite convinced. You truly grappled with the points I made and wanted to share my post, but would be challenged on the veracity of my claims about Chick-Fil-A’s giving, or about Christianity’s compatibility with LGBT rights. For you, here’s a page a friend and I put together with more detailed information and resources on Chick-Fil-A’s harmful giving.

For those who contacted me with good-faith attempts to engage on the topic of Christianity and same-gender love, I have a very special resource to share. This courageous young man, Matthew Vines, does an incredible job of explaining why his very respectful, very devout approach to the Bible is not incompatible with same-gender love. I urge anyone who is truly interested reconciling the Bible and Homosexuality to watch, in its entirety, this video by this astonishingly articulate soul.

Some people shared more pointed questions and reservations. Some didn’t like the vulgarity of the title (here’s another version with the title cleaned up). Some were outraged by the mayors who are trying to keep Chick-Fil-A from their towns (my post was about what I expect from my friends, not what I expect from Rahm Emmanuel), and some simply wanted to hurl Bible verses at me, which invites rebuttal, since anyone can do it to anyone else (“Now this was the sin of your sister Sodom: She and her daughters were arrogant, overfed and unconcerned; they did not help the poor and needy.” – Ezekiel 16:49).

Amazed

I’ve been amazed by the frankness and openness with which people have shared their personal struggles. These stories have already broadened my perspective and I’ve so many more yet to read.

“First of all, let me say I agree…with your basic opposition to Chick-fil-A’s actions and I have decided to join the boycott of CFA restaurants. I am heterosexual, but a close family member is lesbian. I love her dearly…and I can’t imagine why someone would want to get in the way of someone else’s love and family.

“That said, I did want to answer your question about ‘What has CFA ever done for you?’ Well, actually, quite a bit. 

“I am a single mother with limited resources. Eating out in restaurants is not something I get to do a lot. In fact, even if I could, it’s very awkward for me to go into a fine restaurant where mostly couples are dining, and be the only one who is without a partner, dragging along a small child. I choose my eating out days carefully and over time I found that the best option for me was CFA. Every Tuesday, my daughter eats free at CFA. We eat there for almost the same price as if I made a home cooked meal. I get to sit back and relax, play on my cell phone, read my mail, whatever, while my daughter gets to play with other children in the enclosed play space. There are children of every race there and they all play together. 

“So, there you have it. That is what CFA has done for me. I didn’t know, until know, about what CFA was doing against gay people and I’m very sorry to hear it. Please know, however, that though narrow-minded and bigoted, they do have some goodness mixed in with the intolerance and have in fact helped a lot of people. 

“So I make the decision to boycott them with mixed feelings, but I weigh the freedom and safety of my gay and lesbian fellow citizens more heavily than I weigh the benefits of what CFA has done for me. I just wanted to let you know my perspective, in case somehow, the virulence of the rage against CFA could be mitigated.” – [Name Withheld by Request]

My initial post was a search for common ground among some pretty diverse friends. That circle of friends has grown exponentially and I still found the common ground I sought: Most everyone who responded realized that, late-night comedians aside, this issue has never been about chicken. Fast-food’s ubiquity and the growing visibility of LGBT people have suddenly demanded that many everyday, non-activist people pick a side and take a stand, suddenly rendering this issue personal. For a wide array of people, this issue is no longer one of ideas, but of family, friendship, community, kitchen table economics, freedom, respect, love, faith, betrayal and, for some of us, sacrifice.

We in the LGBT community are always challenged to let our own oppression teach us empathy for those who have been, and continue to be, oppressed or even gunned down as economic, racial, ability, gender, religious, or cultural minorities.

Likewise, when we call ourselves Christians, no matter how we hurt in those moments when we feel persecuted by society or even government, we are challenged not to appropriate the language of the oppressed to describe our mere inconvenience, but to let those moments teach us empathy for the truly downtrodden.

Empathy isn’t just some feel-good term. Empathy takes strength. It’s like a muscle that needs nutrients and exercise or it atrophies into uselessness. So, as an exercise in empathy, I’d like to make a commitment to you. With the permission of those who wrote to me, I want to share with you some of the many passionate, funny, honest correspondence I’ve received about the very personal struggles they face every day around issues of homophobia, family, and society. I’ll share one every few days, with a few of my thoughts, until there are no more to share.

Let’s nourish one another with “unarmed truth and unconditional love” wherever we can find it, making sure there’s enough room at the table for everyone who’s come to believe in equality and dignity for all people.

And, when our political foes get tired of waiting in long lines to chow down on tasty but ultimately empty self-satisfaction and willful ignorance, let’s be quick to call them over, kick out a chair, pass them a plate, and welcome them home.

- Wayne Self
Twitter: @owldolatrous
Facebook: facebook.com/owldolatrous

NOTE: If you send me feedback, you are agreeing that anything you send via email or Facebook may be quoted by me in future blog posts! I will withhold your name unless you indicate that you don’t mind it being used. 

Wayne Self is a playwright and composer whose current project is a musical tribute to the 32 LGBT and allied victims of the 1973 arson fire at the Upstairs Lounge in New Orleans, LA. Considered by many to be the largest hate crime against LGBT people in U.S. history, the fire is sometimes seen as a lesson in the perils of silence. ”Upstairs” will give voice to the victims of the fire–many of whom self-identified as Christian–and is scheduled to premier next year, in time for the 40th anniversary of the tragedy. For more information about the Upstairs fire, please visit http://tinyurl.com/8g6lr8jFor booking or production information, contact ewayneself@owldolatrous.com.


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9 Responses to The Chick Fellatio Ep. II: To Get to the Other Side

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  2. McCall Bennett- Lawrence on August 11, 2012 at 7:04 pm

    “Likewise, when we call ourselves Christians, no matter how we hurt in those moments when we feel persecuted by society or even government, we are challenged not to appropriate the language of the oppressed to describe our mere inconvenience, but to let those moments teach us empathy for the truly downtrodden.”
    Now THAT is a challenge – I wish – all people would accept and to which we all should try and rise! It’s so easy to feel the Victim, but to make a CHOICE and, look outside of one’s own cirumstance(s), to turn around and allow awareness of OTHERS to mitigate our own desperation and crisis… This is truly a noble aspiration, and could, in any other words, simply be called LOVE FOR OUR NEIGHBORS. Making others MORE important than ourselves, and their troubles more critical than our own, to check judgement at the door and battle it rigorously with open communications and honest disclosure… If we all (gay, straight, monk… JesusFreaks, MuhammadFreaks or JaRastafariFreaks) if everyone of us would focus on these battles within ourselves and focus on serving outside of ourselves, well, I guess that would make this Eden again, and we’d all be wearing fig leaves!

  3. lisa on August 13, 2012 at 1:14 am

    I agree 100% with you Wayne, I have Alot of Bi-sexual, lesbian, gay friends, straight friends as well :) Sexual orientation is of no importance to me i could care less if two men date I feel that if they love each other then they deserve happiness like everyone else does. I also want to point out that the Man who started this hateful campaign is a bully and what id like to know is why he is doing this anyway there is no point to it! I am a strong believer in the fact that What goes on between a couple in their bedroom whether they are gay or lesbian, etc, IT IS NOBODIES BUSINESS!!! I think it’s disrespectful to even be raising a campaign over! You know i am also going to put out there the fact that the government is bullying the Same sex relationships/marriages, when didnt they push to make bullying ILLEGAL?! What people are lacking is dignity, this country i believe is really hitting hard times because we have some very selfish greedy, hateful people running our country. Its like there are rich people that think they are better than the rest of the population because they have money and whatever their hearts desire while we work our asses off practically to death trying to provide for our babies and ourselves! We overstress about things we aren’t able to control and its frightening knowing that people that are suppose to make this nation a proud one….An overly greedy and Judgmental one. Here is a saying I wrote when i was 18, ” The beautiful palace in which the king sits upon his throne, the very food he puts in his mouth, was all built and harvested by a poor man. The very night in which the king lay softly to slumber, he dreams of vacations and automobiles, while the poor man lies awake for hours deep in thought about how he is going to feed and shelter his children with so little.” So its sad that most of us are dedicating our lives to leaders that care more about money than our welfare or well being and again I think we have some selfish ignorant people in this country that thinks this bullying crap is okay, so as far as im concerned, the way our leaders function is why we are in the path of destruction.” JMO (just my opinion) I SUPPORT GAY PRIDE PEACE,LOVE,MUSIC -lisa

  4. Selma on August 13, 2012 at 9:40 pm

    I just read your original blog entry on ChickFilA and this follow up. Thank you. I witnessed some very hateful things being said on some of my friends’ FB pages when all this started (by their own friends!!), and it made me sick. I was even more sickened by the fact that I have friends who were proudly “checking in” for the ridiculous publicity stunt earlier this month.

    I am neither Christian, nor homosexual, but it was easy for me to “pick a side”. Do I love their chicken sandwiches? Yes. Their waffle fries and sweet tea? Yes. Will I ever eat there again? No. I know it won’t save the world, or end the struggle, but I’ll know that I didn’t help to dictate what “love” is by helping to fund the opposite.

  5. The Cost of Speech « sermonizing on August 15, 2012 at 11:52 am

    [...] http://www.owldolatrous.com/?p=308  “The Chik-Fil-A Show: To Get To The Other [...]

  6. Michael Calderbank on August 22, 2012 at 7:26 pm

    Excellent blog post.

    I do have an issue with your advertisements though. I know they’re probably generated by Google, but at the moment, they read for “CFA coupons” and “starting a CFA franchise” Perhaps it’s time to abstain from Google AdSense?

    • Owldolatrous on August 22, 2012 at 7:50 pm

      Yeah. Still trying to work that out. I have to justify the time financially, somehow, and hopefully fund some of my productions. The kind of musical theatre I do isn’t exactly “Cats” and there’s no money in it. If there’s another way, I’d love to know what it is.

  7. Tamara @mockingbirddont on October 17, 2012 at 4:14 pm

    I live in rural Alabama, and as I’m sure is no shock to anyone, our CFA was brimming with the sorts of people I avoid.

    I’m a Christian. But…I don’t go to church. I don’t have many Christian friends, and none that go to church themselves, and I don’t like modern Christianity. However, and I know I’ll be hated for this, I still believe homosexuality was not part of God’s initial plan. I don’t. I can’t argue about why, because everything I could possibly say is already said on some hateful forum somewhere, so I won’t even go there.

    But, I also don’t believe my infertility was part of God’s plan. He commands us to “go forth and be fruitful”. I’m technically disobeying Him because I’m infertile. And yet, I know I am loved, and I am blessed. So, it’s clear to me that just because something may not be (from my point of view) a part of God’s original plan, it doesn’t mean it doesn’t end up serving a purpose.

    I have best friends who are gay. I have best friends here in Alabama who would be alone, cast out, and honestly? Probably would be dead today if it weren’t for their husbands and wives. (And yes, I use the term husbands and wives because I respect and acknowledge their relationship status.) Their spouses came in and gave them hope. Gave them purpose. Gave them LIFE again and a reason to live. Someone wants to take ALL that away just because they’re gay? I can’t accept that. And I won’t.

    I’m a Christian. And instead of focusing on who my friends love and how they love, I’m focusing on what love is supposed to be. Unconditional. I have no conditions for the love of my friends. If CFA or any other company wants to support groups dedicated to spreading hate and fear of homosexuals, no matter how much I love that damn chicken, I won’t be eating it. It’s just not for me. CFA has every right to feel as they do. But I don’t feel as they do. So that’s all there is to it.

    And one last thing to fellow Christians who see this as some sort of spritual battle to win: in a neighboring county here the poverty level is so low, many of the residents don’t have running water. These people NEED the money you’re forking over to CFA to win this “spiritual batte”. In my county there are currently 200+ children in foster care in DESPERATE NEED of safe and loving homes to stay in while their parents attempt to reconstruct their lives. That’s another “spiritual battle” that needs to be won. If you want to show that you’re a Christian and you wan’t to stand up for God, go into your community and ACTUALLY DO SOMETHING. Something no one will notice. Something you won’t get thanked for. That’s what being a Christian is about.

    Not filling up on CFA because you hate someone you’ve never even met.

  8. Phire Walk With Me | To get to the other side on December 10, 2012 at 5:30 pm

    [...] its sincerity and patience. This week, Wayne followed up, with a degree of optimism and goodwill that I found personally inspiring [emphasis mine].I do believe that some people were there in well-intentioned defiance of perceived [...]



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