A question was posed on one of the many chatty parenting lists that I'm on about dealing with people's reactions to the revelation that your child is parented by two moms. Not the bigoted asshole reaction that many of us live in fear of, but the "oh, sorry" reaction. We all know it, the moment of horror when the person talking to you realizes that their foot is firmly entrenched in their mouth and they've made a huge assumption about your family.
This is typically followed by a story about another one of their lesbian friends who have or are trying for a child, which is meant to inform you that they really are cool with you.
It's Straight Guilt.
M. and I were talking about this issue and I offered that it was okay to reassure said person that their assumption was understandable and that you took no offense. M. took offense. She said they
should feel bad about their assumption of heterosexuality and if we give them an out they won't learn to stop making that assumption.
She's right.
We don't live in the era of the nuclear family anymore. We don't all have a Ford in the driveway and a mom in an apron with dinner on the stove and a cocktail in her hand, chain smoking as she waits for her husband to return from his hard day at work. Our families are diverse and complex. Our interactions in public should reflect this reality.
Many types of families are hurt by the well meaning assumption that there is a mother and a father.
Our families. The ones with two moms. Then there are the two dads. What about kids who are adopted and have to field questions about which parent they received some random biological characteristic from? There are single mothers who decide to use donor sperm. There are single dads. Don't forget grandparents raising their grandchildren.
It's time to change the paradigm of family.
It starts with those of us who are part of a non-traditional family and the way we interact with the world. Do we send a message that it's okay to make assumptions or do we allow people to have their guilt and awkwardness, allow their transgression to sink in a little bit?
We must advocate for ourselves and for our families.
Personally, I'm done telling anyone it's okay in any way to assume that my son has a father in the picture. I will no longer say that it was an understandable mistake. I will simply inform the person that they are wrong and move on. I'm done assuaging straight guilt. That is my small bit of activism.