As a 16-year-old from rural Devon, I should have been delighted when my mum and dad took me to San Francisco. So why did the drag queens and Dykes on Bikes make me so miserable?

I came out very early as a teenager and immediately wanted it all. I wanted to work for a fashion magazine and trot urgently across city streets with takeaway coffees. I wanted to dance to London Bridge by Fergie on London Bridge. I wanted to have sex with men. I had big dreams. But I still had my GCSEs to do, and we lived in a tiny village in Devon. I was fuming.

So, when I turned 16, my parents very sweetly took me to San Francisco Pride. They were exceptional. Before I was born, they lived for a time in Provincetown, Massachusetts (sort of an American Brighton). There, my mum, a miner’s daughter from Barnsley, and my dad, from an underprivileged suburb of Boston, became ingrained in the town’s queer scene and its colourful cast of characters.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Alexander Zeldin: ‘We need to find a way to talk about things we don’t want to see’

The playwright found acclaim with works about the devastation caused by austerity.…

Home Office bussing asylum seekers who cross Channel 500 miles to Scotland

Charities shocked by treatment of people traumatised by dangerous boat journeys Asylum…

Is Apple’s image-scan plan a wise move or the start of a slippery slope? | John Naughton

The tech giant says its iCloud security update is designed to help…