Being the Lesbian in Brideland, Farmtown, Indiana.
OBT member Caitlin wrote this post on how it feels to be girl engaged to another girl in a school and a small town surrounded by girls engaged to boys.

Photo of Van and Carina by submitted to the OBB Flickr pool and taken by Love Life Lens Photography
I offered up my wedding date (a year later than most of theirs) and showed off my ring too (and explained why I don't have a diamond).
Mostly, however, I have not corrected them when they use the preposition "he" to refer to my fiancée.
This is for several reasons…
One, while I've been secure in my orientation for about six years now, it's only been the past year and a half that I got used to coming out to people that I didn't know really well.
Two, as the title mentions, I'm going to school in a medium-sized but very rural-minded Indiana town, which of course in my brain has all sorts of assumptions attached about "those people."
Three, I'm not just a music major — I'm a music education major, and that second word + GLBT has a high enough chance of inducing screaming that I'm still trying to figure out what my closet status will be in my career, and I've been playing it safe rather than sorry.
The fourth and final reason, and probably the truest, is that I am quite friendly with some of these girls, and really do enjoy hanging out with them, and know them, if not intimately, well enough to know without a doubt that they would be extremely uncomfortable with my orientation for religious reasons. Since I'll only be spending one more semester with them, why rock the boat?
It's an uncomfortable position for me to live in as a bride. It's an uncomfortable position for me to live in as a person.
But I am out to a few people in my department, and since I didn't bind them with a lot of "hush-hush," apparently the word has gotten around at least a little bit.
Results?
One of the friendliest brides, while discussing wedding plans with me and another music major bride while we waited in line to rent bassoons, used the phrase "So your fiancée… what is she majoring in?" Like it was no big thing. No big thing at all.
So even with my female fiancée and my claddagh ring and my bridesmaids in sundresses and Chuck Taylors and her Man of Honor and our Unitarian Universalist officiant… I'm one of those smiling, flocked with admirers, rosy-cheeked college brides after all. And yes, it does feel good.
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About Caitlin
Caitlin is a college student, planning to marry her wonderful girlfriend as soon as they graduate (so in about three years). She's a music education major, and interested in other various and sundry things like the neopagan/reconstructionist religious world, shoujo-ai anime, gardening (particularly herbs, particularly indoors), photography, and blacksmithing.







Meg said
Yay! As a fellow hoosier, I'm so excited for you! <3
buddhaluscious said
I really want this world to change. I want you and your future wife to not just be comfortable telling the world you are gay, but to know there will be no negative consequences to your honesty. I believe the world is getting better, and I really hope that by our children's generation people will feel free to be who they are, and love who they love. Why do some religious people want to stand in the way of love? Why is the expression of your natural self offensive to them? I hope that you continue to find acceptance and wish you the best.
Kristen said
Why did you choose not to get a diamond? It said in the article you had to explain why but with no explanation lol. PS – I love your story it gives me hope!