by Lucy Albuery
I had the privilege of sitting down and talking to the incredible Miss Bolton, who has been pastoral and Latin at PGS for the past six years. We discussed how her life, both in and out of teaching had been affected by her identity as a member of the LGBTQ+ community.
I love teaching at
PGS, it gives me a tremendous amount of freedom. I am part of the Ignite!
program and teach pastoral curriculum, which is a real passion of mine. I love
discussions around relationships and sexuality, to create an open dialogue in
school and in society. I think it is really important that we’re opening up
those conversations, but I never want to make students feel ‘wrong’ if they are
prejudiced, it’s up to me to bring out their best.
When I first
started teaching, schools were subject to section 28, a law that meant schools
couldn’t “promote” homosexuality. The law was introduced to encourage a
“standard, normative family life with one dad and one mum”, particularly in
primary schools. Being at school at that time was scary, because what it
covered was very wide, and a teacher, parent or pupil could complain
about even a nuance of ‘promotion’. Life was made very difficult for the
gay teaching community at that point. I taught pastoral then too, but it was
much more about politics and citizenship. It was very liberating when section
28 was rescinded.
When I applied for
the job at PGS I was very clear about my sexuality all through the application
process. I had reached a point in my life where I thought it was really
important to stand my ground, my sexulaity is a part of me and I’m not willing
to hide nor do I need any external affirmation about it.
I think that
openness is so important in teaching, particularly in the more pastoral side. I
have often questioned myself about how can I expect pupils to be as honest as
possible and tell me what's going on when I can't be honest with them?
The first time I
noticed it I was 11 and I remember thinking “I’m female, she’s female I’ve got
to do something about this.” But even then I thought it was more about falling
in love with the person than any other factor. I never had positive role models
around me, however my mother had many bohemian friends. I was about 16 and I
went to a party once where I met two lesbians. They were Swedish
artists. I was fascinated, but I still never addressed my own sexuality,
and definitely never spoke about it. There was a weird push me pull me effect
at that time, where on one side I was in a culture that was becoming much more
open and in a family and space that was very welcoming, but still in myself I
was struggling.
Well it’s quite
stressful at the minute, we're in the process of moving my partner's mother
into a home because she’s taken a few falls. Our dog’s been quite poorly so
I’ve been sleeping downstairs because she needs to be let out a lot at night.
But we celebrated 10 years together last week. We became handfasted 10 years
ago. Handfasting is a pagan ceremony, like a marriage, but you only make
a commitment for a year and a day and at the end you consider “is love still
present?” and if it is you go on for another year.
Something a teacher
said to me when I was at school comes to mind, that the only thing we need in
the world is kindness. Every single one of us is a human being, and all human
beings are the same in how they respond to kindness. The kindness to accept a
person just as they are, no matter what, creates the inclusivity we yearn for.
Kindness transcends labelling and branding, it transcends everything.
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