After the Parade: Holding Onto Pride as Protest
The flags come down. The brands quietly move on. The rainbow crosswalks fade. And if you're queer, you might be left wondering; “Now what?”
For a lot of LGBTQIA+ folks, June brings a rush of visibility, connection, even joy. There’s color, community, celebration. But that high can drop fast. And underneath it all, there’s often a heavier truth we carry: Pride didn’t start as a party. It started as a protest.
That legacy matters.
The first Pride was a response to police violence. To being pushed out of public spaces. To living under threat for existing. And while a lot has changed since Stonewall, a lot hasn’t. Anti-LGBTQ legislation is still getting passed. Trans people, especially Black trans women, are still targeted. Queer kids are still being told they’re broken. People are still fighting just to be safe in their own bodies and homes.
So what do we do with that in July, when the world moves on?
There’s no one right answer. Some of us show up at rallies. Some of us donate. Some of us survive the day. All of it counts. Protest doesn’t have to be loud to be real.
It might look like:
Saying no to people or spaces that drain you
Letting yourself rest without apology
Talking back to that old voice that says you’re “too much”
Wearing the shirt even when you know it’ll get you a look
Choosing joy in a world that told you to shrink
Getting support, because you don’t have to hold this alone
I work with LGBTQIA+ adults across Ohio and Massachusetts—people sorting through everything Pride stirs up: identity, burnout, hope, grief, anger. Sometimes it’s all in the same breath. That’s part of the work. And therapy can be one of the places where that messy, honest truth gets to exist without being filtered.
If June left you raw, lit up, disconnected, inspired—or all of the above—you’re not doing it wrong. You’re just feeling it.
And if you’re looking for a space to keep unpacking all of that in therapy, I’m here. You can reach me at www.dryadcounseling.com.
You don’t need a parade to keep your pride.
You don’t need a perfect plan to keep protesting.
You just need to stay connected—to yourself, to your people, to what matters.
That’s more than enough.