I have found an unexpected sanctuary in my move to Winchester. My family is composed of the quirky, the crafty, and the frequently othered. It has been so rewarding to find new friends who also buck the norms, floating through this thing called life in their own special way.
When people talk of Winchester as a gateway to Appalachia, there are often stereotypes expressed implying a homogenization of culture, a lack of education. While I have faced many of these stereotypes as a Kentuckian out of state, the way others speak of the region east of Lexington has its own specific ire. What I’ve discovered in my time here is that not only do those stereotypes not apply to most folks in Winchester, there are so many people here actively dedicated to eradicating the “norm.”
Winchester is more progressive than one may think. It is a town with immigrants, veterans, witches, yogis, disability rights advocates, cyclists, artists, grannies, and anarchists. It is a place for healing and self growth, offering much needed medical support for many in the surrounding counties. It is a community reinventing itself and bucking the trends that plague so many of the other towns surrounding Lexington.
Whether it’s a bright purple barbie jeep whipping down the bypass, two hippies in a side by side along the river, or a hay wagon on Two Mile blasting Black Sabbath on their Bluetooth speaker, each day I find something to love about the people here. These small moments of humanity add up to so much more than Winchester is given credit for, even among some of its more “traditionally” minded residents.
It is okay to do things differently. It is okay to express yourself in the way that makes you feel your best, so long as you do not intend harm towards others. We are all experiencing this phenomena of existence simultaneously, facing myriad challenges each day. Make time to celebrate our differences and give yourself grace in trying new things. Encourage others to embrace their quirks.
I was on the porch at Abettor the other day, sampling the fantastic brews they have on tap, when a woman in a really interesting dress passed me by. My spouse and I complimented her outfit as it had a sort of sci-fi vibe. She jokingly said, “I wasn’t sure if this was like too weird to wear in Winchester. I actually moved away a long time ago. I’m just visiting my Mom.”
This took me by surprise and I responded “No, I think it’s just weird enough! Winchester has got its own vibe for sure.”
This lady shared how she felt very othered and isolated here in her youth. Those experiences were what motivated her to move to Portland to seek out other oddballs. When I told her the Beer Cheese Festival was a blast, Abettor has a Night Market, and there’s a Pride festival coming up, her jaw dropped: “I would have never thought stuff like that would happen here!”
It’s happening because local people are making it happen. These events happen because locals step up to create magic and change the perception of what this town can do. We are capable of more than we yet know.
I was complicit in believing the grass might be greener on the other side of the fence. After graduating high school in-state, I moved to the Rockies, then Austin, then the Bay Area, then Minneapolis, hoping that I would find myself more easily within a larger social setting. In many ways I did. My coming out was made easier by the camaraderie and community I found outside of the Commonwealth.
However, I have always felt the calling to return home and bring home those experiences to motivate me in my contributions to our culture. Kentucky is the place that made me understand what feeling homesick really means.
Frankly, at this point, I refuse to surrender the Bluegrass state to misogynistic bubbas, out of touch Baptists, and the Godawful Old Party. It is not Stanley cups or Labubu trends, or Cybertrucks that make us who we are, it’s those whose contributions are so often overlooked. In the face of addiction rocking our communities, there are mothers who stand brave and share their lived experiences losing family members. I have met so many people here who own their truth and claim their space unapologetically. Even at the Winchester farmers market, we have gay couples pursuing their culinary dreams, nonbinary musicians, bisexual crystal curators, and lesbian crafters who preserve the time honored artforms of Appalachia.
So with that, I’d like to raise the challenge to other self-proclaimed oddballs: stand your ground. Too often, we sacrifice authenticity, we lose our most interesting artists, our potential community leaders, to large cities instead of challenging and defeating those who would seek to silence us. Fundamentally, those who try to shut down what they identify as too weird are suffering from a lack of self acceptance. They lack self love.
Our most contentious neighbors are forcing themselves to bend to a false sense of normalcy, that ultimately leaves them feeling hollow, as they too are trying to fit into a mold that was never intended to be inclusive of our humanity. I challenge myself to dump the shame and guilt that comes with religious trauma and cultural homogenization. I hope others feel safe enough to unburden themselves as well. We are multifaceted, nebulous, and ever changing. You deserve the space to be yourself and a community that embraces our differences. History is what we make it, and I hope we leave a vibrant, intense, and welcoming legacy.
It is okay to do things differently. It is okay to express yourself in the way that makes you feel your best, so long as you do not intend harm towards others. We are all experiencing this phenomena of existence simultaneously, facing myriad challenges each day. Make time to celebrate our differences and give yourself grace in trying new things. Encourage others to embrace their quirks.
To those of you who feel disconnected, othered, excluded, I invite you to join us weirdos. Show off your funky tattoos, express your love of horror films, eat your vegan sandwiches in the park under the stars. You are not alone and there are more of us than them.
This October, I’m joining others at the Winchester Pride + Inclusion Festival. A time to gather and celebrate the greater spectrum of our humanity. If you have been seeking a sense of community, this is your open invitation to join us, to celebrate and dance and feast alongside potential new friends. We owe this sense of community to each other and to ourselves.
I hope to see you there!

