Lesbian Nuns Quotes

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Lesbian Nuns: Breaking Silence Lesbian Nuns: Breaking Silence by Nancy Manahan
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“If our culture defines normality in terms of male experience and values only women who relate to men, both nuns and Lesbians tend to be ridiculed or dismissed as irrelevant to the strides of history.”
Rosemary Curb, Lesbian Nuns: Breaking Silence
“I didn't know I was in love with her. I only knew that the chapel vibrated when she walked in, and my stomach lurched when she knelt soundlessly behind me. I longed for her touch.”
Nancy Manahan, Lesbian Nuns: Breaking Silence
“(Straight people may have a difficult time understanding this desire to say our name because they have never been forced into deception.)”
Nancy Manahan, Lesbian Nuns: Breaking Silence
“Ironically groups of nuns or lesbians are often mistaken for one another today, since we often travel in female packs oblivious to male attention or needs. Eschewing the cosmetics and costumes of the commercially promoted feminine mystique, both nuns and lesbians are emotionally inaccessible to male coercion. Time and energy which heterosexual women devote to catering to men can be focused on private or communal projects. Despite similarities, a male-defined culture which moralizes about "sins of the flesh" and the pollution and evil of women's carnal desires sees both nuns and lesbians as "unnatural" but at opposite poles on a scale of female virtue.”
Nancy Manahan, Lesbian Nuns: Breaking Silence
“Once she asked me to kiss her. I said, “No, I want to keep our friendship and give it back to God.” She agreed. We remained friends for over fourteen years.”
Nancy Manahan, Lesbian Nuns: Breaking Silence