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What is Heterosexual Privilege?
Marrying--which includes the following privileges:
- Public recognition and support for an intimate relationship, such as
receiving cards or calls celebrating your commitment to another
person.
- Joint child custody.
- Paid leave from employment when grieving
death of your spouse.
- Property laws, filing joint tax returns,
inheriting from your spouse automatically under probate laws.
- Immediate access to your loved ones in case of an accident or
emergency.
Not questioning your normalcy, sexually and culturally:
- Having role models of your gender and sexual orientation.
- Learning about romance and relationships from fiction, movies and
television.
- Having positive media images of people with whom you can
identify.
Validation from the culture in which you live:
- Living with your partner and doing it openly.
- Talking about your relationship, or what you and your partner are
doing together. Expressing pain when a relationship ends from death or
separation, and having other people notice and tend to your pain.
- Dating the person of your desire during your teen years. Working
without being identified by your sexuality/culture (for example, you
get to be a farmer, artist, etc., without being labelled the
heterosexual farmer, etc.)
Adapted from the presentation by Kathy Obear at Old Dominion
University, February 8, 1993.

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