I am intolerant of your intolerance.

Speak20out (I got many requests to repost this essay as a stand alone piece for easy linking. I'm happy to do so here.)

It hurts me, deeply, to know that my lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, intersex friends face this kind of reality daily. Just as racism and sexism hurt. Every ism.

And I'm tired of getting hateful notes when I advocate for gay marriage and other rights for my friends who are as deeply, fully human as I am.

I'm not going to be polite about this issue any longer by acknowledging that you have a right to believe the awful, hateful things you believe–you may believe them but I don't in any way have to collude with them by ignoring them, being polite about them, making peace about them.

This is hate, pure and simple. Call it what it is. You can hide behind religion if you want, but no religion I want any part of is based on hate. if you disparage my gay friends, I'm not going to be silent about it, I'm not going to apologize for my point of view, I'm not going to take the HRC sticker off my car, and I'm not going to say "let's all just get along." No.

You are wrong. You are as wrong as people who insisted that black Americans drink from a different water fountain. You are as wrong as school districts that let black schools use old textbooks of white students, but handed out sandpaper at the end of the year so the little black kids could sandpaper their germs off of them. Imagine the lesson those kids learned as a result of that hateful action.

No, I won't participate in that wrong and I won't be quiet about it. Nor do I care if you buy my books if you feel this way, so stop threatening to boycott me. I don't care. If I care about that, I am truly lost. What I do care about is that my gay friends have families that they love. They have babies they adore. They live lives of great meaning and joy and commitment. They do mundane things like wash the dishes and get into arguments over housework and forget to put the milk in the fridge, like straight people. Just like people with disabilities and just like white people and black people and every other color of people. Just like Jews and Christians and Muslims.

What on earth do you fear? Don't write to me and discount the experiences of other people. Don't write to me and threaten to stop buying my books. Don't write to me and argue with me about this. It is non-negotiable. I am intolerant of your intolerance.

About Patti Digh

Patti Digh is an author, speaker, and educator who builds learning communities and gets to the heart of difficult topics. Her work over the last three decades has focused on diversity, inclusion, social justice, and living and working mindfully. She has developed diversity strategies and educational programming for major nonprofit and corporate organizations and has been a featured speaker at many national and international conferences.

26 comments to " I am intolerant of your intolerance. "
  • Well said!

    Ms. Digh, I’ve always loved you and your works, and your books have made a big difference in my life–but now I love you even more. :)

    Sara

  • Thank you, thank you, thank you!

  • Susan

    I made a similar post right before Prop 8 removed equality from people who I know, love and many more that I’ll never meet. I lost many friends in the ensuing months over my unwillingness to tolerate their ignorance and hate disguised as devotion to a text that they have to ignore most of, anyway, just to get along in civil society. I’m forever glad I drew that line in the sand and stood on the correct side of it.

  • Carol

    Beautifully said. Thank you.

  • Sarah

    Yesterday, my son asked why people hate his family. I told him not everyone does; it’s just that those that do seem to speak louder to get attention.

    Thank you for speaking loud and making sure your voice is heard.

  • Vince Flammini

    Spot on. Thanks for saying it so well. I think I’ll go buy yet another copy of 37 days to give away.
    Vince

  • right the hell on! I know that feeling of being polite because I’m a public person to a small degree and people think i should act a certain way – or is it that I THINK I SHOULD! Holy hate crimes toward myself – every time I shut up about my beliefs not to make a sale, how lost would I be! but because I teach about service and savoring and its not nice to say YOU ARE FULL OF HATE AND GET AWAY FROM ME. Thanks Patti, this has been brewing for me for years and I needed your post

  • Another reason you are one of my heroes…

  • Yeah… what you said. Bliss you!!

  • Thank you Patti! As the mother of a lesbian daughter, we need all the voices we can muster.

  • Attitudes in Canada have improved dramatically since same-sex marriage was legalized and society didn’t fall apart. The current Prime Minister threatened to revisit the issue if he were elected. Fortunately, the majority of Canadians (even Conservative Canadians) weren’t interested. So things continue to get better.

  • I appreciate your words very much and I just told someone this morning, that I was intolerant of their intolerance.

    I am also exhausted with people not listening to what is said and worn out from repeated “sound bites” that have no meaning.

    bravo

  • Linda

    I love this post – my former husband is gay and he and his wonderful partner struggle with being accepted in our society. We’ve taught our children that love is love. It has no boundary. So when we hear our kids telling their friends, with quiet confidence, that their dad is gay and their mom is straight, I am proud to know I’m raising boys who will become men who stand for equality.

  • Jyl

    Thank you Patti. Perfectly said…

  • thank you! your words are inspiring!

  • Sheri Lawson

    Love, Love, Love this. I’ve tried to say this same things so many times and in so many ways, but here, you say it perfectly. I will share.
    Sheri Lawson aka Joyful Mystic.

  • Soozie

    heLLoo Patti,
    Sitting here tonight, as Irene thunders up the East Coast and once again I land here. Today, I spoke out, choose a path of love instead of judgement, tried to just lean into an intent of truth & compassion. Learned that in sometimes choosing love, we firmly choose to not love something else. I cut a cord & though sure – it was not easy. And here I am, leaning into your light, and finding peace. Thank you & love. . .

  • this is the attitude we need for a shift, thank you and
    so much love

  • Jingouk

    Love and let yourself be loved.

  • And I am in intolerant of your intolerance.  Label a belief an intolerance?  I just can’t tolerate that.

  • And I am in intolerant of your intolerance.  Label a belief an intolerance?  I just can’t tolerate that.

  • Marla T

    Bless you Patti Digh. 

  • Mary Chaddick

    Sounds like intolerance packaged under a different brand name.

    • Actually, no, it’s not intolerance packaged under any different brand name. I specifically said, I am not tolerant of others’ intolerance. By definition, that means that I am intolerant of it. If there is a point beneath your point about language, feel free to let me know.

Leave a Comment

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