By: Ashlyn Brothers
TULSA, Oklahoma -
Oklahomans gathered downtown this weekend for the state’s longest-running LGBT Pride festival. The Dennis R. Neill Equality Center said this year’s festival is the biggest it has ever held.
"Families come in all shapes and sizes. All genders and ethnicities. Everything,” Comfort Keidel said.
Keidel is pansexual and believes you do not have to look alike to love alike.
"I see you. There's a difference with you,” Keidel said. “Guess what? There's a difference with me and in that there's connection and there's community.”
The Family Equality Council said research shows 63% of LGBTQ people planning families expect to use assisted reproductive technology, foster care or adoption to become parents.