Sunday, July 7, 2019

Heterosexual Pride Flag

The Heterosexual Cis-Gender Flag is made up of three colours: blue, pink, and white.  Blue represents the dominant male aspect while pink represents the recessive feminine aspect, like Yin and Yang.  White represents the separation and divine purity of love between a man and woman. White also represents the potential of their love to generate new varieties of life as white light holds all the colours of the spectrum within itself.

Blue is dominant to reflect the nature of male dominance as found in many types of organisms. Although the pink-female component takes up less space, it retains the central honor point.  Further, the feminine aspect shows a different kind of power—it is unbroken and conveys unity and strength.  This flag echoes the sexual dimorphic nature of men and women.

Thus this flag recognizes that both cis-males and cis-females have a different powers over the other, yet are united harmoniously to make a whole.  For it is with the union of male and female, new life can be created.  It is a sacred trust; as taking life or making life should be done with proper respect and care.

Note that, in the original "gay/happy pride flag" pink was associated with sex and cyan/turquoise was associated with magic/art.  Likewise, when a man and women engage in the reproductive process, they create the finest kind of magic by opening the door to the other side—to the realm of unborn souls.  Although scientists may understand the biological process of sex in extreme detail, it is truly a kind of miracle beyond our complete understanding. Like magic, new people appear from the heterosexual process.  This organic aspect of love between man and woman is honored with this flag. 


Male dominance by size, behavior, and social order occurs in many types of mammalian species.  For example sea lions, lions, gorillas, deer, dogs, cats, and most monkeys—it is the male half that dominates the female with behavior and physicality.  This may seem like the dominant nature of things but there are numerous examples where the female half dominates, the bonobo and hyena being clear examples.  In those cases where the woman or the female species dominates by size, behavior, and social rank—the colours are reversed; the middle X is blue and the outer four wings are pink.

But times and standard gender roles are changing, or rather expanding.  On rare occasions you will find taller and more economically successful women who choose shorter, less economically dominant men—an extremely rare event. For the vast majority of heterosexual couples, the man is more economically dominant and a few inches taller.

This Heterosexual Pride flag is extracted from Gilbert Baker's original Gay Pride flag and in support.  The pink and light blue colours honor Gilbert Baker's original Gay Pride flag which had pink and cyan—which now finds a home in the Straight Pride flag.

Finally, X indeed marks the spot since both men and women have X chromosomes.  The pink X also adds an extra honor to womanhood.  If you forgot, women have two Xs while men only have one X chromosome.  Instead of two Xs, men have a Y chromosome which is smaller and deficient—because life can not be sustained on a single male chromosome alone; a female X chromosome must be present. Thus all gender identities are united by the feminine X chromosome. After all, women are the final gatekeepers who open and allow new souls to enter this universe.

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