Friday, May 22, 2026

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Via White Crane Institute \\ Harvey Milk Day

 

White Crane InstituteExploring Gay Wisdom & Culture since 1989
 
This Day in Gay History

May 22


The Harvey Milk Forever stamp
1930 -

HARVEY MILK DAY in California. Gay rights pioneer, martyr and San Francisco city supervisor HARVEY MILK was born on this date. Milk was an American politician and Gay Rights activist and the first openly Gay city supervisor of San Francisco, California. He was often called, "the first openly Gay man elected to any substantial political office in the history of the planet," though this slights others who were elected before him in cities not so associated with Gay life.

What is not as well-remembered was his amazing ability to bring communities and neighborhoods together for progressive ends. 

Milk served almost eleven months in office, during which he sponsored a bill banning discrimination in public accommodations, housing, and employment on the basis of sexual orientation. The Supervisors passed the bill by a vote of 11–1, and it was signed into law by Mayor George Moscone. On November 27, 1978, Milk and Moscone were assassinated by Dan White, a disgruntled city supervisor.

The U.S. Postal Service officially revealed the Harvey Milk Forever Stamp in 2015. The stamp’s official first-day-of-issue ceremony took place at the White House. The public was invited to attend the May 28 Harvey Milk Forever Stamp special dedication ceremony in San Francisco. Customers may order the Harvey Milk stamp now through this link for delivery following the May 22 stamp issuance.

The stamp image is based on a circa 1977 black and white photograph of Milk in front of his Castro Street Camera store in San Francisco taken by Danny Nicoletta of Grants Pass, Oregon. Antonio Alcalá of Alexandria, VA, was art director for the stamp.

Today's Gay Wisdom
2018 -

TODAY'S GAY WISDOM

Harvey Milk Day is a state-wide holiday in California now. Organized by the Harvey Milk Foundation and celebrated each year on May 22 in memory of Harvey Milk.

Harvey Milk’s ‘Hope Speech”

My name is Harvey Milk and I'm here to recruit you.

I've been saying this one for years. It's a political joke. I can't help it--I've got to tell it. I've never been able to talk to this many political people before, so if I tell you nothing else you may be able to go home laughing a bit.

This ocean liner was going across the ocean and it sank. And there was one little piece of wood floating and three people swam to it and they realized only one person could hold on to it. So they had a little debate about which was the person. It so happened that the three people were the Pope, the President, and Mayor Daley. The Pope said he was titular head of one of the greatest religions of the world and he was spiritual adviser to many, many millions and he went on and pontificated and they thought it was a good argument. Then the President said he was leader of the largest and most powerful nation of the world. What takes place in this country affects the whole world and they thought that was a good argument. And Mayor Daley said he was mayor of the backbone of the Untied States and what took place in Chicago affected the world, and what took place in the archdiocese of Chicago affected Catholicism. And they thought that was a good argument. So they did it the democratic way and voted. And Daley won, seven to two.

About six months ago, Anita Bryant in her speaking to God said that the drought in California was because of the gay people. On November 9, the day after I got elected, it started to rain. On the day I got sworn in, we walked to City Hall and it was kinda nice, and as soon as I said the word "I do," it started to rain again. It's been raining since then and the people of San Francisco figure the only way to stop it is to do a recall petition. That's the local joke.

So much for that. Why are we here? Why are gay people here? And what's happening? What's happening to me is the antithesis of what you read about in the papers and what you hear about on the radio. You hear about and read about this movement to the right. That we must band together and fight back this movement to the right. And I'm here to go ahead and say that what you hear and read is what they want you to think because it's not happening. The major media in this country has talked about the movement to the right so the legislators think that there is indeed a movement to the right and that the Congress and the legislators and the city councils will start to move to the right the way the major media want them. So they keep on talking about this move to the right.

In 1977, when he won a seat on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, Harvey Milk became the first openly gay elected official in the United States. Less than one year later, on November 27, 1978, Milk was gunned down along with San Francisco Mayor George Moscone. The shooter was Supervisor Dan White, a conservative board member who had campaigned on a platform of law and order, civic pride, and family values.

White, packing a gun and extra bullets, climbed through a window in City Hall in order to confront Milk and Moscone about his troubled tenure on the Board of Supervisors. After shooting Moscone four times at close range, White reloaded his gun, walked to the other side of the building, and invited Milk into his former office. White shot Milk in the arm, the chest, and twice in the head. He then fled the building the same way that he had entered. A few hours after Diane Feinstein, who became Acting Mayor, named him as a suspect, White turned himself in.

On May 21, 1979. after White was convicted of voluntary manslaughter and sentenced to five to seven years in prison for killing both men, protestors gathered at City Hall to vent their outrage over the verdict. In what has come to be known as "White Night," demonstrators broke windows at City Hall, burned police cars, and clashed with police at various flashpoints throughout the city.

In 1985, after serving just over five years in Soledad prison and one year of parole in Los Angeles, White returned to San Francisco despite Mayor Feinstein's public objections. On October 21, 1985, seven years after the assassinations, White killed himself in the garage of his wife's home. White's suicide did not provoke any significant public reaction.

So let's look at 1977 and see if there was indeed a move to the right. In 1977, gay people had their rights taken away from them in Miami. But you must remember that in the week before Miami and the week after that, the word homosexual or gay appeared in every single newspaper in this nation in articles both pro and con. In every radio station, in every TV station and every household. For the first time in the history of the world, everybody was talking about it, good or bad. Unless you have dialogue, unless you open the walls of dialogue, you can never reach to change people's opinion. In those two weeks, more good and bad, but more about the word homosexual and gay was written than probably in the history of mankind. Once you have dialogue starting, you know you can break down prejudice. In 1977 we saw a dialogue start. In 1977, we saw a gay person elected in San Francisco. In 1977 we saw the state of Mississippi decriminalize marijuana. In 1977, we saw the convention of conventions in Houston. And I want to know where the movement to the right is happening.

What that is is a record of what happened last year. What we must do is make sure that 1978 continues the movement that is really happening that the media don't want you to know about. That is the movement to the left. It's up to CDC to put the pressures on Sacramento--but to break down the walls and the barriers so the movement to the left continues and progress continues in the nation. We have before us coming up several issues we must speak out on. Probably the most important issue outside the Briggs--which we will come to--but we do know what will take place this June. We know there's an issue on the ballot called Jarvis-Gann.

We hear the taxpayers talk about it on both sides. But what you don't hear is that it's probably the most racist issue on the ballot in a long time. In the city and county of San Francisco, if it passes and we indeed have to lay off people, who will they be? The last in, and the first in, and who are the last in but the minorities? Jarvis-Gann is a racist issue. We must address that issue. We must not talk away from it. We must not allow them to talk about the money it's going to save, because look at who's going to save the money and who's going to get hurt.

We also have another issue that we've started in some of the north counties and I hope in some of the south counties it continues. In San Francisco elections we're asking--at least we hope to ask-- that the U.S. government put pressure on the closing of the South African consulate. That must happen. There is a major difference between an embassy in Washington which is a diplomatic bureau. and a consulate in major cities. A consulate is there for one reason only -- to promote business, economic gains, tourism, investment. And every time you have business going to South Africa, you're promoting a regime that's offensive.

In the city of San Francisco, if everyone of 51 percent of that city were to go to South Africa, they would be treated as second-class citizens. That is an offense to the people of San Francisco and I hope all my colleagues up there will take every step we can to close down that consulate and hope that people in other parts of the state follow us in that lead. The battles must be started some place and CDC is the greatest place to start the battles.

I know we are pressed for time so I'm going to cover just one more little point. That is to understand why it is important that gay people run for office and that gay people get elected. I know there are many people in this room who are running for central committee who are gay. I encourage you. There's a major reason why. If my non-gay friends and supporters in this room understand it, they'll probably understand why I've run so often before I finally made it. Y'see right now, there's a controversy going on in this convention about the gay governor. Is he speaking out enough? Is he strong enough for gay rights? And there is controversy and for us to say it is not would be foolish. Some people are satisfied and some people are not.

You see there is am major difference--and it remains a vital difference--between a friend and a gay person, a friend in office and a gay person in office. Gay people have been slandered nationwide. We've been tarred and we've been brushed with the picture of pornography. In Dade County, we were accused of child molestation. It's not enough anymore just to have friends represent us. No matter how good that friend may be.

The black community made up its mind to that a long time ago. That the myths against blacks can only be dispelled by electing black leaders, so the black community could be judged by the leaders and not by the myths or black criminals. The Spanish community must not be judged by Latin criminals or myths. The Asian community must not be judged by Asian criminals or myths. The Italian community must not be judged by the mafia, myths. And the time has come when the gay community must not be judged by our criminals and myths.

Like every other group, we must be judged by our leaders and by those who are themselves gay, those who are visible. For invisible, we remain in limbo--a myth, a person with no parents, no brothers, no sisters, no friends who are straight, no important positions in employment. A tenth of the nation supposedly composed of stereotypes and would-be seducers of children--and no offense meant to the stereotypes. But today, the black community is not judged by its friends, but by its black legislators and leaders. And we must give people the chance to judge us by our leaders and legislators. A gay person in office can set a tone, con command respect not only from the larger community, but from the young people in our own community who need both examples and hope.

The first gay people we elect must be strong. They must not be content to sit in the back of the bus. They must not be content to accept pablum. They must be above wheeling and dealing. They must be--for the good of all of us--independent, unbought. The anger and the frustrations that some of us feel is because we are misunderstood, and friends can't feel the anger and frustration. They can sense it in us, but they can't feel it. Because a friend has never gone through what is known as coming out. I will never forget what it was like coming out and having nobody to look up toward. I remember the lack of hope--and our friends can't fulfill it.

I can't forget the looks on faces of people who've lost hope. Be they gay, be they seniors, be they blacks looking for an almost-impossible job, be they Latins trying to explain their problems and aspirations in a tongue that's foreign to them. I personally will never forget that people are more important than buildings. I use the word "I" because I'm proud. I stand here tonight in front of my gay sisters, brothers and friends because I'm proud of you. I think it's time that we have many legislators who are gay and proud of that fact and do not have to remain in the closet. I think that a gay person, up-front, will not walk away from a responsibility and be afraid of being tossed out of office.

After Dade County, I walked among the angry and the frustrated night after night and I looked at their faces. And in San Francisco, three days before Gay Pride Day, a person was killed just because he was gay. And that night, I walked among the sad and the frustrated at City Hall in San Francisco and later that night as they lit candles on Castro Street and stood in silence, reaching out for some symbolic thing that would give them hope. These were strong people, whose faces I knew from the shop, the streets, meetings and people who I never saw before but I knew. They were strong, but even they needed hope.

And the young gay people in the Altoona, Pennsylvanias and the Richmond, Minnesotas who are coming out and hear Anita Bryant on television and her story. The only thing they have to look forward to is hope. And you have to give them hope. Hope for a better world, hope for a better tomorrow, hope for a better place to come to if the pressures at home are too great. Hope that all will be all right. Without hope, not only gays, but the blacks, the seniors, the handicapped, the us'es, the us'es will give up. And if you help elect to the central committee and other offices, more gay people, that gives a green light to all who feel disenfranchised, a green light to move forward. It means hope to a nation that has given up, because if a gay person makes it, the doors are open to everyone.

So if there is a message I have to give, it is that I've found one overriding thing about my personal election, it's the fact that if a gay person can be elected, it's a green light. And you and you and you, you have to give people hope. Thank you very much.


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Gay Wisdom for Daily Living from White Crane Institute

"With the increasing commodification of gay news, views, and culture by powerful corporate interests, having a strong independent voice in our community is all the more important. White Crane is one of the last brave standouts in this bland new world... a triumph over the looming mediocrity of the mainstream Gay world." - Mark Thompson

Exploring Gay Wisdom & Culture since 1989!
www.whitecraneinstitute.org

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Via Daily Dharma: The Meaning of Study

 

The Meaning of Study
On the spiritual path, to study means to immerse yourself in the landscape and not just read the map.
 
Vanessa Zuisei Goddard, “When Nothing Works”
 
CLICK HERE TO READ THE ARTICLE
 

Via Dhamma Wheel | Right Living: Abstaining from Taking What is Not Given

 


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Thursday, May 21, 2026

Via Daily Dharma: Keeping Balanced

 

Keeping Balanced
Without that quality of balance, it’s easy to confuse compassion with pity or loving-kindness with attachment.
 
Daisy Hernández, “The Noble Abode of Equanimity”
 
CLICK HERE TO READ THE ARTICLE
 

Via Dhamma Wheel | Right Action: Reflecting upon Verbal Action

 


Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Watch "Repeat These 5 Affirmations for 14 Days (Life-Changing)" on YouTube


 

 

White Crane InstituteExploring Gay Wisdom & Culture since 1989
 
This Day in Gay History

May 20

Born

1952 -

TRAVIS JOHN KLUNE, born today, is an American author  who writes under the name TJ Klune. He writes fantasy and romantic fiction featuring gay and LGBTQ+ characters. His fantasy novel The House in the Cerulean Sea is a New York Times best seller and winner of the 2021 Alex and Mythopoeic Awards. Klune has spoken about how his asexuality influences his writing. His novel Into This River I Drown won the Lambda Literary Award for Best Gay Romance in 2014.

Klune was born in Roseburg, Oregon. He was eight years old when he first began to write fiction. His young work in poetry and short stories were the first to be published. Klune's writing influences include Stephen King, Wilson Rawls, Patricia Nell Warren, Robert McCammon, and Terry Pratchett.

Klune has been open about his lived experiences with asexuality, queerness and neurodiversity, and how they influence his writing. The historical absence of these communities in fiction has motivated choices in Klune's character development.

In 2013, Klune proposed to author Eric Arvin at the GayRomLit Conference in Atlanta, Georgia. The two had met for the first time in person one year earlier at the 2012 GayRomLit Conference in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Arvin endured many years of health struggles and passed away in December 2016.

Klune's Young Adult debut, The Extraordinaries, is praised by Kirkus for its use of superhero and fan fiction tropes, while Publishers Weekly compliments Klune on writing a teenaged character with ADHD in a positive and supportive light.

His stand-alone fantasy novel, The House in the Cerulean Sea, is a New York Times Best Seller and has been named by The Washington Post as one of “2020’s Best Feel-Good Reads”. Publishers Weekly calls it a “thought-provoking Orwellian fantasy” in its starred review. It was named one of Amazon's Best science fiction and fantasy books of 2020.

Klune was nominated as an all-time favorite M/M author on the book review website Goodreads in 2017. He is also an advocate for better LGBTQ2+ representation in novel, wishing to see more asexual characters like himself reflected in books.

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Gay Wisdom for Daily Living from White Crane Institute

"With the increasing commodification of gay news, views, and culture by powerful corporate interests, having a strong independent voice in our community is all the more important. White Crane is one of the last brave standouts in this bland new world... a triumph over the looming mediocrity of the mainstream Gay world." - Mark Thompson

Exploring Gay Wisdom & Culture since 1989!
www.whitecraneinstitute.org

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Via Daily Dharma: The Dalai Lama’s Life

 

The Dalai Lama’s Life
The mark of a visionary leader’s life is that his or her example keeps guiding us toward fresh possibilities for generations to come.
 
Pico Iyer, “Calm in a World on Fire”
 
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Via Dhamma Wheel | Right Speech: Refraining from Malicious Speech


 

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Via Ram Dass - Love Serve Remember Foundation \\\ Words of Wisdom - May 20, 2026 🍒

 


"Look at your relationships and notice at which point you figure that you have too much to lose to let go into The One. I have sat in relationships and watched with horror that what I wanted I couldn’t have; because what I wanted was getting in the way of it. My desires with regard to the relationship were getting in the way of sharing awareness with another human being, which was going to be the ultimate intimacy. My yearning for intimacy was making me grab for intimacy relationally, and it was destroying exactly the thing I wanted."
 
- Ram Dass

Source: Ram Dass – Here and Now – Ep. 134 – Relationships and Living Impeccably

Via FB \\\ The Little Prince


 He wrote The Little Prince, disappeared during a reconnaissance flight in WWII, and had multiple affairs with men. Somehow, that last part frequently gets left out.


Antoine de Saint-Exupéry gave the world a beloved book about a tiny blond alien who wandered from planet to planet asking lonely adults uncomfortable questions. What usually gets left out is that Saint-Exupéry’s own life was full of the same contradictions, longing, and emotional chaos that pulse through the book.

He spent years drifting through intense relationships with men and women alike, building a reputation in Paris and New York as charming, emotionally elusive, and impossible to pin down. Friends described him as deeply affectionate with certain men. His letters could turn intimate fast.

Even The Little Prince reads differently once you know that context.

It is a story obsessed with hidden identity. With love that cannot quite be explained. With feeling out of step from the world around you. The prince leaves his tiny planet because staying still hurts too much. He searches for connection everywhere and rarely finds adults capable of honesty. The fox teaches him that love means creating ties that change you forever. Then the prince disappears before anyone can fully understand him.

That is not exactly the emotional blueprint of a tidy heterosexual war hero.

Saint-Exupéry married Consuelo de Saint-Exupéry, and their relationship was famously volatile. They separated repeatedly. Both had other relationships. Friends described their marriage as theatrical, passionate, and exhausting. Meanwhile, rumors and coded references followed him for years, especially in artistic circles where queer identities often survived through implication instead of declaration.

Disappearing during a flight in WWII made him a hero, but his politics were messy. He wasn't a Nazi sympathizer or a Vichy collaborator, but it took him a while to come around to the Free French movement under Charles de Gaulle. His other books were a little too friendly with colonialism as well, but those works are far lesser known than The Little Prince.

Queer history is full of people whose lives got flattened into “eccentric genius” because the full story made later generations uncomfortable. Publishers cleaned things up. Biographers got cautious. Fans preferred symbols over actual humans.

But queer people have always recognized ourselves in stories about outsiders searching for home.

Via True Stories \\ Obergefell


Jim Obergefell sat beside the man he loved while his body was shutting down from ALS and realized something horrifying:

The federal government was preparing to treat their marriage like it never existed.

Not because they were strangers.
Not because they lacked commitment.

Because they were two men.

By the time Jim Obergefell became the name attached to one of the most consequential Supreme Court cases in American history, he was not trying to become activist, symbol, or political lightning rod.

He was trying to keep the man he loved from disappearing legally after death.

Long before the courtrooms and headlines, Obergefell lived a relatively private life in Ohio where he eventually met John Arthur, a quiet, funny, deeply loved partner who became the center of his emotional world. Their relationship lasted decades through a period when same-s3x couples in America often built entire lives together without basic legal protections heteros3xual couples received automatically.

That invisibility carried constant risk.

Hospital access.
Inheritance.
Medical decisions.
Marriage rights.

Everything could collapse legally during crisis.

Then came ALS.

Arthur’s diagnosis changed time itself inside the relationship. The disease slowly destroyed his physical body while leaving his mind painfully aware of what was happening. Watching someone you love disappear physically while remaining emotionally present creates a kind of grief many people cannot fully imagine.

And Obergefell lived inside it daily.

Then the couple made a decision.

In 2013, with Arthur severely ill and unable to travel easily, they flew to Maryland where same-s3x marriage was legal. Arthur, physically fragile and dependent on medical equipment, boarded the plane because they wanted their relationship recognized before death separated them permanently.

The image haunted people afterward:
a dying man traveling to marry the person he loved before time ran out.

They married on the airport tarmac shortly after landing because Arthur’s condition made ordinary ceremony logistics nearly impossible.

Then Ohio refused to recognize the marriage.

That refusal became devastatingly personal.

Because Arthur wanted Obergefell listed as surviving spouse on his death certificate. Ohio law said no. The state intended to erase the marriage legally once Arthur died, reducing decades of shared life into nonexistence under official paperwork.

That cruelty changed Obergefell permanently.

He sued.

And suddenly one grieving husband became central figure in a constitutional battle over same-s3x marriage rights across the United States. The case eventually reached the Supreme Court as Obergefell v. Hodges.

Meanwhile, Arthur’s health kept deteriorating.

He died in 2013 before the Supreme Court ruling arrived.

That loss sat underneath everything afterward.

Because while media networks turned the case into political warfare, Obergefell himself often spoke less like activist and more like widower carrying unfinished grief publicly. Supporters saw civil rights struggle. Opponents saw constitutional controversy.

He saw John.

That difference mattered emotionally.

Then came June 26, 2015.

The Supreme Court ruled same-s3x couples had constitutional right to marry nationwide. The decision transformed American law permanently and ignited enormous celebration, fury, relief, and political backlash across the country.

And suddenly Jim Obergefell became historic figure whether he wanted the role or not.

But perhaps the strangest part of his story is how ordinary its emotional center remained.

Not abstract politics.
Not theory.

Love.
Loss.
Fear of erasure.

The terror that somebody you built an entire life beside could die while institutions pretend the relationship never mattered officially.

Years later, Obergefell often spoke publicly about grief and visibility with unusual emotional clarity because he understood something many political debates erase completely:

Rights become most real during moments of vulnerability.

Hospitals.
Funerals.
Death certificates.
Final goodbyes.

That is where inequality stops feeling theoretical.

And maybe that is why Jim Obergefell’s story still hits people so hard emotionally now.

A man watching his husband die discovered the government planned to erase their marriage afterward...

so he carried his grief into the highest court in America and forced the country to look directly at what legal invisibility actually does to human beings once love collides with death.