• Love Is Not a Lie: In Sickness and in Health

    “Our wedding plans went on hold when I found myself unable to get out of bed.”

  • Prone to Wander

    “Selfishly, I’m worried about what will happen if I say out loud that I’m uncomfortable with all this God, if I let my brain run its anxious course. If my atheist, queer, bipolar self comes to choir with me in all its unkempt glory, will I lose my safest place?”

  • From Willow to Waverly: A Decade of Being Out and Me and Queer TV

    “I remember little moments so vividly — like Ashley kissing Spencer on the shoulder while they looked in the refrigerator for something to eat. This is what I wanted. And I wasn’t afraid of wanting it anymore.”

  • “Transparent” Changed Me (And TV) Forever

    “Do you have something to tell us?” my mom joked. It was a joke, because of course I didn’t. “No,” I said with a laugh. And I thought I was telling the truth.

  • Uncovering My Secret Queer Family History

    Both Marge and Madeline chose to find family within each other, and from there I understood, as I heard these stories from Marge after my grandmother had died, and then from my mother after Marge had gone, that such a thing could be done.

  • How My Badass Butch Skyrim Character Saved My Life

    In the mirror, I saw a scrawny, hollow-eyed girl dressed in ill-fitting boys’ clothes, a parody of a parody of masculinity. But in the screen, I saw myself made strong, confident, fearless, perfect.

  • Birthdays I Remember

    Melanie was born on August 5, 1982. I know this because I fell in love with her in fifth grade.

  • How I Let Queer Literature Come Out to my Middle School Students for Me

    Middle school is weird. It was awkward as hell when I was a hormonal, monstrous, uncertain twelve-year-old, and only slightly less so when I went back to teach English. So when I found myself, a 23-year-old rookie teacher, standing in a cafeteria fielding a question about how lesbian sex works from a seventh grader, I can’t say I had any right to be surprised.

  • 20 of the Best Personal Essays on Autostraddle in 2018

    We published so much good work this year, and here is a fraction of it we think you will particularly enjoy reading back through!

  • The Life We Never Knew Would Find Us: Navigating Loss as an Interfaith Queer Couple

    “We’re in Lancaster County at Erin’s family’s house, surrounded by plastic Bible quiz trophies adorned with gold crosses and family portraits taken at national parks. My bewildered partner comes to me, face slack, and tells me I need to call my mother.”

  • The Closet Let Me Feel Anything and Everything

    Closets suck, generally speaking, but sitting in mine gave me joy. This is a coming out story that doesn’t neatly fit in the queer community, much less my own mind.

  • How I Learned to Tie a Tie Without My Dad

    Perhaps he would have loved me enough. I’ll never know, and my eschatology doesn’t include a heaven from which re-embodied souls watch over our earthly lives. All I have is speculation about how he might have reacted to his daughter’s bisexuality, and to his daughter not being precisely a daughter at all.

  • You’re Just You: An Accidental Love Letter to Los Angeles

    “Towards the end of the night you fall and tear the skin on your knee. But you pop back up and keep skating. You’re relieved. Now that you’ve fallen once you know you’ll be okay.”

  • When You Wear An Agbada

    “To understand my relationship with this symbol of masculinity, we’ll have to start with my journey of queerness I had no idea I had embarked upon until I was turning 28, the sleeves of my buba — the tailored Agbada shirt — all rolled up to my elbows and my fingers rubbing down on the clit of a girl I had only met a couple of times prior to that moment.”

  • Take Me Home

    “She asks me how it went, I say it went bad. I don’t say much more because she hates hearing about my family like they hate hearing about her. It goes better when I keep it to myself.”

  • “Sex Education” Taught Me How to Masturbate

    “I wanted to be single so I could explore my sexuality. Instead I was exploring other people’s.”

  • Desert Heartbreaker

    “I always went the extra mile for you and did so gladly because I loved being around you. You never returned these more concrete gestures, which should’ve been the first sign that things were not reciprocal between us, but I was oblivious and idealistic. I genuinely believed I had found love.”

  • The Might-Have-Been

    I was only pregnant for seven and a half weeks before my miscarriage. There was no body, no breath; there was no measurable part of a lifetime spent together. I’d only known there was life inside my body for three and half weeks, and yet the experience seems to still have a heartbeat.

  • Love That Looks Like Me: Finding My Queer, Non-Binary Place in the Wedding Industry

    “And there was Susan and Rachel at the heart of it all, dancing to the band Susan had sworn would play her wedding if she ever got married. As they laughed and moved to the music and worked up such a sweat that their jackets had to come off, I saw a glimpse of the future wedding I hope for, marrying someone I love, the two of us not fitting so strictly into the feminine.”

  • Finding Roots Without Hiding My Rainbow

    “We don’t talk about our roots as they relate to the heaviness of humid air recycled through our generations on swampy plantations. My family has never talked about it with me, at least. It feels like a small betrayal, choosing to go south when we were given a new chance in the West.”