Finding a Love That Heals - I was less interested in a romantic partner when I dated. Because I never lost hope that my deeper dream would become a reality—and I’d become somebody’s mother.

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I had a type when it came to dating. I’d find myself smitten with how her straight, soft brown (or blond) hair touched my skin whenever we’d kiss. Or how her stories, the ones she felt safe enough to share with me, did not define her, but allowed me to understand that she too was broken. I often fell for the women who were either unsure of their sexuality or had dabbled a bit, like one does when perhaps they try out hot yoga and by the third or fourth class, they realize it’s just not for them.

Her baggage though, never quite felt as heavy as my own. My mother was in and out of jail throughout my childhood, pregnant four times by four different men, and my father committed his life to serving his country, in the Army, and he too became a ghost in my life. Being in a relationship allowed me to care for another person, that person, often unavailable to me in the ways I needed, just like my parents had been. Their love for me was conditional on their ability to be emotionally or physically present in the ways I needed them to be.

I clung to my dreams. Often revisiting the daydream I’d had countless times as a kid. In the dream, I’d be standing in my cozy, well-decorated, farmhouse-style kitchen. I’d be wearing an oversized gray sweater, and in my hands, I’d be rolling my homemade chocolate chip cookie dough into a nicely rounded ball, proud to have made them from scratch. The first batch of cookies, a perfect golden brown, are being pulled out of the oven, oven mitts on, and just then my tween kids, two to be exact, walk through the front door, deep in conversation, as orange and brown leaves follow them inside. It’s fall, my favorite season, and as they gather around the island in the kitchen, nothing else matters but their happiness, and mine, the freshly baked cookies giving our home the perfect scent. In my dream, my kids, and my house were the only two things I needed.

A partner never showed up in my dream. I hadn’t yet imagined what she would be like, how she would come to understand my complicated life, if she’d accept my baggage along with the person I was, despite it. I’d never reserved a spot for her in my dreams. In college, I dated plenty and allowed myself the freedom to settle into my queerness, as a lesbian, as a woman of color, as the daughter of an incarcerated woman…carrying around the secret within my family.

I dated and never lost hope that one day, my daydream would become a reality and I’d become somebody’s mother. If romantic love was in the cards for me, perhaps I’d find that too, but what happened, I could never have dreamed.

My mother died the year after I graduated from college, leaving behind her fourth child, Jonathan. In 2006, as a recent college graduate with plans to attend a pre-med program in Erie, Pennsylvania, I decided to pause my rather premature engagement to my most serious girlfriend and uprooted myself and my future to show up and take care of my mother’s fourth child the moment he was born in late November of 2006.

In the short four months of his existence, mentally, I’d tried, best I could, to prepare myself to live out my daydream, to become his mother, and to do so as a single woman. Who, in their right mind, would want to commit themselves to the insanity of loving someone who had mama and daddy issues, someone who feared abandonment, and someone who chose to be a parent to keep a baby out of foster care?

And yet, a huge part of me knew how deserving I was of love. I never lost hope that perhaps, one day, I’d find love. In the raising of Jonathan, in the sleepless nights and the bottle feedings, through the late payments made on my bills, to the disconnection of my cell phone to the unemployed days that became our normal, from excited recent college graduate to burdened single mother who had yet to mourn the passing of her mother who died at the age of 42, I had to redefine who I was and what I wanted my future to be. It no longer was my future alone, but Jonathan’s too, and I had to consider what he deserved.

As my mother’s body settled into the red clay soil in central Virginia, I began to breathe a little easier, knowing that the only person I had to care for was Jonathan. It gave me a little room to think about myself and what I wanted my “new” life to be. I decided I wanted to feel wanted, in some warped way, like I’d hoped I’d made Jonathan feel like he mattered to someone…to me. And now, I wanted someone to matter to.

Four months after my mother’s passing, I decided to create an online dating profile and began emailing and chatting with a woman who taught sixth graders, who shared her hopes and dreams with me, who was honest with me from our very first exchange. I too was honest with her, sharing with her the reality of my situation, the colorful childhood I had, and how I wanted to be pregnant and have babies, to create a “normal” family. Dinushka shared with me stories from her homeland of Sri Lanka. I shared with her the insecurities I had because of being raised by my grandparents.

One month after our first email exchange began, we met in New York City. Our lunch date quickly turned into something more. As we walked the streets of Manhattan, sweating in the humid summer air of September 2007, our deep “like” for one another—the like that grew out of our email exchanges—sunk into a comfort, skipping over any lustfulness I’d imagined we’d find ourselves wrapped up in. She knew me and I knew her in the deepest of ways—ways that had nothing to do with sex.

We had a soul connection that gave me hope that somebody might just love me back.

We spent the night together that September in 2007. And by the morning light the next day, we knew that our first date had turned into a relationship. By the third week of our relationship, we’d said, “I love you,” and by that October, she’d met Jonathan. We were an instant family. And there was no turning back.

We were creating something beautiful, something out of love, something blessed by God. We were building a foundation for what kind of future we wanted. We knew that the glue holding us together was love, what else could it have been?

In time, Dinushka, the woman I’d fallen in love with, had also fallen in love with Jonathan. We did not plan on being parents, being a family, but there was no denying what we felt for one another. When Jonathan looked into her eyes, the love he had for her was palpable. And when I saw them together, in my heart, I felt that Dinushka’s calling was to be his mother.

We were the parents he needed, and he was the son we were meant to mother. What we found in one another, what I found in Dinushka was a comfort, a knowing. The love she was able to give me (and still does) provides me with a place to call home, in her heart and soul.

It is because of the love we have now, that I now know, it’s what I deserved all along.
 
I had a type when it came to dating. I’d find myself smitten with how her straight, soft brown (or blond) hair touched my skin whenever we’d kiss. Or how her stories, the ones she felt safe enough to share with me, did not define her, but allowed me to understand that she too was broken. I often fell for the women who were either unsure of their sexuality or had dabbled a bit, like one does when perhaps they try out hot yoga and by the third or fourth class, they realize it’s just not for them.
Drawn to vulnerable confused women who she could safely prey upon.
One month after our first email exchange began, we met in New York City. Our lunch date quickly turned into something more. As we walked the streets of Manhattan, sweating in the humid summer air of September 2007, our deep “like” for one another—the like that grew out of our email exchanges—sunk into a comfort, skipping over any lustfulness I’d imagined we’d find ourselves wrapped up in. She knew me and I knew her in the deepest of ways—ways that had nothing to do with sex.
Settles in with a BFF who she is not attracted to and who is not attracted to her.

World's first honest lesbian. Quite the find, DMG.

ETA: NYT "wedding" announcement.

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We stood in the same living room my fiancée sat in as a child watching Saturday morning cartoons. It was the night before our wedding, and in front of our families, friends and her parents’ friends at the rehearsal dinner, her father pulled out a tiny, white piece of paper from his shirt pocket. The smile on his face told me he was both nervous and uncertain about the impending response from the crowd.
His only daughter was marrying a Black, gay woman. As he began to speak, I watched, my hands clasped and resting on the grape purple dress I had bought for the occasion. I held my breath, my skin shiny with sweat. What would he say?
Dinushka, my soon-to-be wife, and I stood on different sides of the room. We were scared to show our love around so many people, even though our wedding, held on Sept. 8, 2011 at the Stamford Museum and Nature Center in Stamford, Conn., was the next day. A year or so of planning had brought us here, to this moment, packed into her parents’ home. Getting this far did not come without struggles: We had many conversations with our families about our love, about why we wanted to get married and about our different cultures.
My mother, who had a lifelong addiction to drugs, died six months before I met Dinushka. My father was not among the family and in the room that evening. I did not invite him to our rehearsal dinner because he was physically and emotionally unavailable to me from birth. While my paternal grandmother made an effort to build a relationship over the years, something her son never did, I was raised by my maternal grandparents, who had conservative views about what marriage was in the eyes of God.

After they met Dinushka, though, they adjusted to our relationship because of who she was: a believer in God, empathetic and generous. By the time that they, along with some aunts and uncles, arrived at the rehearsal dinner, my family in attendance had reached a place of acceptance.
Dinushka was marrying outside her family’s norms, too. I was not the South Asian man they assumed she would wed one day, but the first woman she dated and the reason she came out to her family. I had baggage that I was still unpacking: abandonment issues because of my mother’s addiction and a father who was never there. I had no savings to speak of. In getting to know me, her family had asked difficult, uncomfortable questions: “Why isn’t your father more involved?” “Did your mom ever live with you?”
As I stood against the back of the leather sofa in her parents’ living room, my eyes darted from person to person. When my gaze finally landed on her father, I realized this night was just as important as our wedding day.
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“Dear family and friends, thank you for coming and celebrating the union of Dinushka and Nikkya,” he began. “We left Sri Lanka 27 years ago to provide our children a secure environment to grow up and greater opportunities to better their lives. We did our best within our means to give them the best of everything we could afford. We let them follow their dreams as we realized we could not live their lives.”

He went on to share what he knew about me. “Dinushka has been a kind, loving, caring and thoughtful child, and she has found an equally kind, loving, caring and thoughtful partner in Nikkya,” he said. Her father’s words suggested that he saw me, his daughter-in-law, the same way he saw his daughter.
My mouth opened slightly, in awe. My heart began to open, too, to a fact that my head knew all along: This was family, my family, our family. And despite the struggles they had gone through trying to understand us as a gay couple, Dinushka’s father and mother, like the grandparents I considered as my parents, could not deny our love.
In that moment, it was clear I was marrying into a family that cared about getting to know me, even if they didn’t know the parts of me that only Dinushka knew. The parts I was still getting to know after my mother died that, with her help, had slowly begun to heal. The feelings I’d carried with me my entire life of not being good enough. There, before her family in that living room, I was good enough. I was not perfect, but good enough was enough for me.
There was a stillness in the room as my future father-in-law continued. All eyes were on him. Some people began to cry. Some nodded in agreement. Some laughed at his jokes.
Aloud, for all to hear, Dinushka’s father spoke a truth that touched me so deeply. “Love has no barriers,” he said, “and it can break all traditions.” I tried to look into the faces of the people who would look at us walk down the aisle. What were they thinking? What were they feeling as he spoke? My eyes stopped on Dinushka. Listening to her father’s words, I knew that all he wanted was for her to be happy. If she were happy, then he would be, even if it meant she was marrying me.
Dinushka and I knew who we were getting in marrying one another. We knew that, as two women of color, our marriage would come with its fair share of challenges. We knew that along the way, we’d need to have each other’s backs. And we knew that we would need to call on the people in that room, and invite them into our marriage over the years to help us with growing pains.

That night, I learned that her family was willing to answer such a call, no matter if it came from me or their daughter, because they loved us much the same. Marriage is not just a commitment to a partner but to family, both the one that we are born into and the one that welcomes and accepts us with open arms.
As those in the room listened to her father’s final words, and as some tears fell from their faces, I inhaled all of the love and support in the air. “It is not easy to break traditions, and it requires courage to do so,” he said.
My belly expanded as I released a long breath, and with it, any shame I had about who I was, where I came from, and how that might affect my future with Dinushka. I knew that when we walked down the aisle the following day, it would be the next step in a journey taken with family who were willing to learn from one another, grow together and love us for who we are.

Jeeta girlfriend is a fake pisky "priest" too:
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The Rev. Dinushka De Silva began her ministry at St. John’s Church as deacon on November 1, 2022. Professionally, she is a pediatric hospital chaplain at Yale New Haven Children’s Hospital.

Dinushka received a BA in Education from American University in Washington, DC, and taught children of all ages for many years in different settings. She earned an MA in Religion from the University of London and trained for the diaconate at the Episcopal Church’s Province I School for Deacons. She is a wife and a mom to three rambunctious kiddos. Most days she’s tired but coffee and prayer help her along the way! Dinushka’s ministry portfolio includes preaching, leading worship, and working closely with the parish’s Outreach committee. A deacon’s ministry is to have one foot in the church and one in the world, and Dinushka’s work links St. John’s Church more closely with the people of Stamford and beyond.
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You move from Sri Lanka to give your kid a better life than you had and she goes and does this.
Notice in the longwinded NYT piece she drops the factoid that she was the first woman the jeeta had ever dated. Beauty Parlor enjoyers don't want you knowing this but there is an entire large subtype of lesbians who specialize in this- in wheedling, manipulating, and working angles to get straight women to go gay for them.
 
Jonathan of the two mothers...what could possibly go wrong?

Notice there is no mention of Jonathan's father.

And few do a pre-med program after graduating from college. That's something you do in undergrad work. You go to medical school after graduating from college.

Plenty wrong with this picture, in my opinion.
 
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Professionally, she is a pediatric hospital chaplain at Yale New Haven Children’s Hospital.
Red Alert. Check her hard drive and the security cameras outside non-verbal children's rooms.
there is an entire large subtype of lesbians who specialize in this- in wheedling, manipulating, and working angles to get straight women to go gay for them.
I've seen it in action. They tend to go for struggling single mothers and/or women who are drunks or drug addicts.
 
I've seen it in action. They tend to go for struggling single mothers and/or women who are drunks or drug addicts.
Precisely. You know what I'm talking about.

I saw one who convinced a woman with obvious mental problems who she befriended online to leave her marriage, bring her two kids cross country with nothing but a couple suitcases, and set up the lesbian as a "stay at home mom" to them, then aggressively sue for full custody.

Everyone in our social circle already had the lesbian at arms' length because we had suspected she might be a diddler. She was pretty obvious.
 
Did the kid die? I don’t understand
Her mother/the kid's mother died. When he was 4 months old. And sounds like it was long/expected because the diggernyke author was puffing herself up mentally prepping to step in and use the kid for her fantasy of motherhood the whole time leading up.
 
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