blogs about human beings

The Cost of Their Love, The Power of Ours

Editor’s Note: This blog was written especially for the Humanity Project by Tracy Ikola, a freelance writer on health issues.

The Cost of Their Love, The Power of Ours

by

Tracy Ikola, RN-MSN, CNL

Love, in its purest form, should be safe, steady and unconditional. It should lift us up, not break us down. But for many in the LGBTQ community, love comes at a cost. It is a price paid in fear and rejection. Sometimes, it means losing everything we believe is ours.

Fear is woven into our daily lives, no matter how much the world progresses towards equality. Fear lingers in the way people look at us, in the shift of conversations when we walk into a room and in the whispers they think we cannot hear. I still remember the first time someone screamed at me from across the street: “Dyke!” Someone meant that word to wound and strip me of my humanity. In that moment, I was not a person. I was a target. More than a decade has passed, but that memory has never left me. It is a reminder that acceptance can be fragile and rejection is never far away.

Some of us face rejection in the most public, humiliating ways. Others experience it in silence, erased by those who are supposed to love them the most. My wife knows that kind of loss intimately.

It was 2020. We had known each other for two months and had only been on one date when Marissa’s mother found out we were talking. One afternoon, I got a text: I’m in my driveway with all my stuff. While she was at work, her family had thrown her belongings outside. The only message she received was cold and final: You can come get all your things and find somewhere else to live. Just like that, she was homeless.

I still get choked up remembering her standing there, her entire life stuffed into black trash bags. As I helped her load them into our SUVs, fear and anxiety sat heavy in my chest. If they could do that to their daughter, what might they do to me? But none of that mattered. I just needed to get her out of there.

My home became our home. We barely knew each other, but there was no time to figure things out. We joked about adding her things to the decor. We celebrated the idea of sharing makeup, clothes and jewelry. We laughed about the old stereotype of lesbians moving in together too quickly. But beneath the jokes, there was grief. She was in a place that wasn’t hers, trying to settle into a life she hadn’t chosen. The challenges of dating while learning to live together were nothing compared to the weight of losing everything familiar. And no matter how much love I gave her, I could not bring her family back.

Her mother’s rejection escalated. She showed up unannounced, leaving pamphlets on our front porch filled with religious propaganda disguised as salvation. Scripture-laced text messages twisted faith into a weapon. Each word was meant to convince her daughter she was broken. The pain did not come from any truth in the messages but from the source: a mother who was supposed to love unconditionally.

Next, she stripped away what little security my wife had left by draining the savings account meant for her future. It was never about the money. It was about control and making Marissa feel powerless, as though without them, she would fail. She contacted Marissa’s extended family, childhood friends and lifelong neighbors, turning them against her. They disappeared. They blocked her, ignored her and shut her out. This was not just about empty seats at our wedding. It meant silent birthdays, lonely holidays and the cruel certainty that no matter how much Marissa tried at first or how deeply she still loves them, they have chosen not to love her back in the way she deserves.

Finally, in 2022, her father died suddenly from COVID. The man who had been there for every childhood milestone left this world without ever trying to mend what was broken. She grieved not just his death but the finality of it. There was no chance for healing, no last conversation and no redemption. She wept because he died alone and wept because she had to mourn him alone, carrying the weight of everything left unsaid.

Loving my wife means carrying some of that pain with her. It means standing beside her when the weight of rejection is too heavy, when grief resurfaces in the silence of lost connections, and when the world reminds her of everything she lost. But our love also means building something stronger in those spaces of pain.

Self-worth means refusing to let rejection shape who we are. It’s knowing that real love, steady and unconditional, isn’t something we must fight for or prove we deserve. The world may not always be kind, but we still get to choose how we show up in it. We get to create spaces where love and respect aren’t given on conditions, where we are seen and where we belong.

Fear and love often exist side by side. We feel it when we hold hands in public, introduce each other as spouses or step into spaces that should feel safe but don’t. But fear does not diminish love. My wife and I share some scars of rejection, but we also carry something far more powerful: the unshakable truth that we are not broken, that our love is real and that we deserve to exist in this world without fear.

Our love remains. When family turns away, we create our own. When the world tries to silence us, we speak louder. No matter who turns their back or what is taken, we are still here. We are still whole. And we are still worthy of love.

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Honor and Privilege

A recent Humanity Project Board of Directors retreat (two members absent)

The Humanity Project Board of Directors has just adopted a new code for themselves… a set of expectations, really, for those who are privileged to sit among this distinguished group of folks. Our board includes respected authors and college professors, teachers and journalists, health experts and LGBTQ activists. They are smart, seasoned and eager to advance the values of the Humanity Project.

The recently adopted document spells out expectations big and small, something that should prove especially useful for future board members. Here is the new statement:

Responsibilities of Humanity Project Board Membership

The Humanity Project is a unique nonprofit organization with a rich history dating from its founding in 2005. THP board membership is an honor and a privilege given carefully selected individuals who unequivocally agree with the Humanity Project’s mission, motto, programs and methods. Accordingly, this statement of responsibilities is adopted by the Humanity Project Board of Directors as guidance for members, new and old. We believe it outlines the minimum engagement that THP board members should expect of themselves and each other as part of a team that aims to make a significant difference in the community and beyond.

Every Humanity Project board member is expected to do the following:

1. Read each THP newsletter and email carefully

2. Respond promptly to important emails when feedback or votes are requested

3. Attend all THP board meetings unless prevented by an unavoidable personal or professional conflict

4. Make at least one personal monetary donation to THP each year

5. Attempt to raise donations and/or attract sponsorships whenever feasible

6. Attend at least half of THP’s public events each year

7. Do your best in daily life to spread word of THP’s mission, website, social media and work in the community

8. Whenever possible, assist with hands-on efforts to advance THP programs and projects under the guidance of THP’s president or other staff leadership: e.g. helping deliver Humanity Club sessions; making phone calls; helping event setup/breakdown; scheduling Speakers Bureau appearances; etc.

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Those eight simple items make clear that the Humanity Project is an active organization with strong, engaged leadership — and that future board members must plan to take vigorous part in our efforts. We think this is just one more way that our 20-year-old nonprofit can ensure we’re doing everything possible to inspire individual self-worth as well as universal respect and equality. That’s our goal. Our great Board of Directors is an important tool as we go about doing this work, day in and day out.

Self-worth Is The Goal

January 28 2024: Talking about the Humanity Project’s emphasis on self-worth

The Humanity Project was founded in 2005 with one central focus: to promote individual self-worth. Despite our many changes in all those years, that goal remains our focus. Briefly, we’d like to explain why this is true.

Our stated mission is “instilling greater respect for the goodness and inherent value of humanity.” And our trademarked motto is “Equality for Each, Respect for All!” How, then, is self-worth the focus of the Humanity Project’s work? Those statements sound as if our efforts involve social change more than individual change.

But here’s the connection, which some folks may not realize when looking over our programs: We promote social changes that result in the individual improvements we seek — that is, greater self-worth. For example, research has shown for decades that school bullying damages student psyches, lowering a child’s sense of value as a human being. Other kids are making fun of them, afterall, or even harming them physically. Obviously, this often makes bullying victims feel bad about themselves. So our acclaimed, nationally known antibullying programs help to stop the bullying, which is the immediate goal. But the true underlying intent of our programs is to prevent individual students from suffering psychological scars that may diminish their self-worth for a lifetime.

This underlying goal is also the reason the Humanity Project works as close allies of organizations in the LGBTQ community, whose individuals are disproportionately bullied and attacked, verbally and physically. And for the same reason the Humanity Project does whatever we can to promote the value of religious and racial minorities as well as all genders. By laboring for equality and respect-for-all, we’re really working to ensure that more people have the opportunity to feel good about who they are. That effort, that goal, is the fundamental “project” in our name — to create greater self-worth among our fellow humans. Or as many of us as we can reach, anyway.

Yes, equality for each, respect for all. Yes indeed, greater respect for the goodness and inherent value of humanity. These are just lovely ways of saying that the Humanity Project wants each person to appreciate their own worth, which in turn allows them to appreciate the worth of other people. We hope to inspire a recognition of our individual humanity … and thereby, the humanity of everyone else. That’s the Humanity Project.

Our 15th Anniversary!

On November 3, 2020, the Humanity Project turns 15! We are proud that our values, programs and ideas have proven lasting. And we’re very grateful to every person and organization that has supported our work. A special shoutout in that context to State Farm, Our Fund, Children’s Services Council of Broward County, Joe DiMaggio Children’s Hospital and Google, among others.

As we look forward to the next 15 years, we also feel pride in the continuing improvement of our organization. Our mission statement has been thoroughly rewritten several times and our motto updated to be as clear, concise and effective as possible. Our Board of Directors and Leadership Council as well as our founder, Bob Knotts, all believe the current mission and motto at last make very plain what we’re fundamentally about. Our mission: “Instilling greater respect for the goodness and inherent value of humanity.” Our motto: “Equality For Each, Respect For All.” We see ourselves as spokespeople for humanity itself, reminding folks in our challenging world that despite all the conflicts and tragedies, among the many setbacks and losses, humanity continues its unsteady advance toward fulfillment. As a species, we are on the march toward equality for each, respect for all. Look around you — you will see the progress in major areas of our lives. Grand advances in human knowledge, major strides in access to water and food for everyone, progress in racial and religious and gender and LGBTQ equality. The work is far far from done, obviously. But step by slow step, humanity is gaining ground … “advancing on Chaos and the Dark,” as Ralph Waldo Emerson expressed it.

You may ask yourself, “What right does the Humanity Project have speaking for humanity? Who are they?” To which we reply, “We have every right, as do you. We are all human beings. We are members of the species Homo sapiens — and our membership automatically grants us the privilege to speak about human life as we see it.” We think a deep belief in humanity fosters belief in the individual human being. And in ourselves as individuals. And this strengthens humanity’s drive toward greater fulfillment of our best traits and abilities.

We take a long view of human history. If you try this for yourself, you’re likely to find it comforting. We each tend to become so lost in the daily flow of dispiriting news, political conflicts and disrespectful words and rampant inequality, that our minds easily lose a more accurate perspective. As Dr. Martin Luther King famously said, “The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.” And it also bends toward understanding, wisdom … and spectacular achievement. You and your family and your friends and all of us are the inheritors of a tradition that includes the Mona Lisa and Beethoven’s 9th Symphony, the Parthenon and Petra, Hamlet and Ulysses and Moby Dick. We have stamped our footprints in the dusts of the moon, snapped photographs of galaxies and black holes, launched probes that have passed out of our own solar system toward destinations yet unknown. We have wiped out whole diseases, improved treatments of others. We have traced the obscure records of our history and envisioned ambitious paths to our future. We have gifts not granted to any other species, including the power and flexibility of our imaginations and an extraordinary adaptability.

We are humanity. So are you.

And we also are the Humanity Project. Yes, we’re justifiably proud of all we’ve accomplished in the past 15 years, including the nation’s first mass march against bullying and other large-scale events; effective programs that include Humanity Club, I Care, Antibullying Through The Arts and One Common Humanity; 128 podcasts so far and hundreds of blogs as well as original essays, fables, videos, music and more.

We hope you will become part of the Humanity Project too. Join our campaign at no cost by signing our simple “Pledge For Humanity”: Sign the pledge. Help us to speak on behalf of humanity’s best, assist in the effort to continue our species’ advance toward “equality for each, respect for all.”

We Believe ... In Humanity

At the Humanity Project, we believe… in humanity itself. The value of our species and every individual.

Please watch this new inspiring video from our Humanity Project YouTube Channel, a discussion that explains our views concisely and clearly:

We take a long view of human history and the moral arc identified by Dr. Martin Luther King. We believe that if human beings embrace unity and collaboration amid our diversity, the equality of every individual, humanity's advance will continue. Please do take a moment to watch the new video … and consider signing the Humanity Project Pledge For Humanity at this link: Sign the pledge.