Monday, November 19, 2012
A roadblock
Monday, November 5, 2012
Ranting
The problem, though, with having a clique (in the very best sense of the word) of trans women who connect primarily via Twitter is that the medium is simply unsuitable for certain types of communication. For instance, say I have a couple paragraphs of detailed answer (I mean, this is me after all) to some question. What if I want to deliver the answer in the form of an answer—as opposed to polishing it into a simple expository form and posting it here—and haven't access to email? What if I post it via a number of tweets? What a mess!
This happened enough times, yesterday, that I feel the need to try again. So here are a couple of rants, slightly edited and reprinted in long form, as prose.
First, during a conversation re: Jackie Green …
Of course, I apologized for that particular tweet-flood and moved on.(the tweet to which I was replying): well I'm glad that video hasn't melted you all into seething pools of jealousy. :)I grappled with that inevitable melt for a few years and I finally solved it. I talked about it with my partner one evening. She reflected on her own experience (as a woman and professional engineer in tech). She told me "I just think, well, I'm glad I was born in the 70s and not in the 60s or 50s."I was so mortified. We've all heard bits of <awesometweep>'s story. And as a student of our history, I can vouch for her story being perfectly normal. The generation before us, the survivors: give them love, give them respect. They. Have. Earned It.
Oh great. Now I feel like a crotchety old granddam. GET OFFA MAH LAWN, KIDS! IN MY DAY …
But, seriously: that settled the melting bit: Today's young (teens and younger) trans girls can transition because we exist.
However, it was not much later that some troubling reflection on privilege and TWoC—and the recent, nasty, transphobic screed by C. Benvenuto (published by the Guardian, whose editorial standards are clearly nonexistent)—led me to post an abbreviated version of the following. (warning, some strong language)
So. My daughter attends a public (in the U.S. sense) elementary school; it has two "programs", a Japanese bilingual program, which draws students city-wide, and an English-only program which preferentially places students from the surrounding housing projects—predominantly children from African-American families and immigrants from the Middle East. Yes, this is so totally a San Francisco type of school.Anyway, there's a poem written on the wall of the Kindergarten/1st-grade hallway, right by the school entrance. You may have encountered it elsewhere; it reads …
Rosa sat so Martin could walk.Now. Here I am: privileged, well-educated, well-paid whitey. I feel like absolute shit appropriating anything so fundamentally bound to African-American disenfranchisement and that community's struggles for equality and Justice.
Martin walked so Barack could run.
Barack ran so our children can fly.
BUT.
Trans women and girls are systematically, unquestioningly stripped of every privilege but race and family (if there's even that—c.f. Trans Women of Color and the tragic population of homeless transgender youth). If we aren't among the lucky few with family support or hard-won material resources, and if we can't game the system—and without privilege, who can?—we are regularly routed into base labor and sex work. When we seek to have lives outside of the scrabble for survival, we are regularly brutalized or killed solely for presuming to be real people and the abusers and murderers walk free.
… The hell? No, wait: THE HELL? FUCK THAT.
I'm no chicken little. I do have some idea of how privileged I am. I know that with an Ivy education, a broad CV, highly-employable skills, and savings in the bank, I'm probably safe and secure, despite my earnest invective. But I know people, people I could have been, who are not so fortunate. There are people I care for deeply whose lives and hopes may yet be stripped-away by a hostile and faithless society. There are children I know and love—mine and others'—who one day may begin to queerly blossom, only to be crushed--erased, even.
And so I'm being a privileged asshole, and appropriating the sense of that poem. We have to live.
We have to live because my son and daughter may well be gender-fluid. We have to live because many children today kill themselves rather than do this, rather than try to be real.
We have to live because there's nobody else who will stop the C. Benvenutos of 2032 from having an unchallenged pulpit. We have to live so that someday, maybe, nobody will have to hurt like this, be afraid like this, be broken this way.
We have to live.
And every teen trans girl I see today, untouched by androgens, having suffered but one puberty, tells me that I'm doing what's right. Not 2nd best. Not consolation, not also-ran. The Right Thing.
We have to live so that they can thrive.
… and as I said, at the end of that rant, "Holy crap! See? I told you I'd fly off the handle after reading the Benvenuto screed. It just took half a day to precipitate."
Monday, October 22, 2012
A Loss
I have a story to tell, but I'm afraid to tell it—afraid of how I will hurt, afraid of missing the mark, afraid of finding more questions than answers. But I'm terrible at sorting these things out in my head, at least once they've aged this long and grown this tangled. What am I good at? Telling stories. So.
I have a story to tell. It's a story about a family, and about how terrible things happen to nice people. It's a story that is full of pregnancy- and mortality-related triggers, so I advise you now: read with caution. It's a piece of my story. Specifically, it is how I exited denial.
…
In the spring of 2005, a beautiful baby girl is born in San Francisco. The birth is not easy, and her mother struggles to recover and to endure the strain of new motherhood. A fiery little creature, she takes much attention and minding as the months pass and she begins to crawl and climb and walk and run. She tweaks people as easily as she charms them, then charms them all over again, and so the family grows together in its way, quirky, imperfect, but loving.
I am one of that little girl's mothers and also her father; this is the story of how our family grows from three to four.
Around my daughter's second birthday, we conceive our second child. It had taken some time to get over the memory of her first pregnancy, but my wife wanted the children to be relatively close together in age, and so family planning wins out over reticence. There's that first heartbeat, and then the ultrasound, where a little peanut of a person shows-up with a beating heart. [I'm freaking-out, right now as I write, desperate to understand why I'm doing this to myself, why am I re-living this? WHY? How many tears do I want? How many is enough?] Proud, anxious newly-expectant parents, all over again.
One battery of fetal-health tests pass, then another. We see a tiny human begin to form on the ultrasound, and it moves. Then we see genitalia—a little girl. A little sister. We are thrilled.
Then a test result from the second battery is reported as being borderline. Could we get more tests done? Of course we can. We have a more precise nuchal fold measure taken, and full body stats revise the date of conception later by several weeks. The numbers are insignificant by themselves -- nothing manifestly abnormal, only borderline, but there are enough of them askew that our Ob/Gyn orders more precise testing. It is too late in the pregnancy for a CVS, so an amniocentesis is performed.
We wait for the results with a horrible sort of dread; somehow our new, beautiful little girl has slid in an eyeblink from future joy to immediate fear. The nightmares that every newly-pregnant couple puts to rest as soon as possible—that WE had set aside—are all of a sudden hiding just out of sight.
I receive a summons: “The clinic called; come home, please.” I leave my half-completed voice lesson and hurry the five blocks home.
She was there on the couch.We call our parents. Mine hurry into town, collect our little girl from her day care and bring her, briefly, home. And here is another moment seared into my memory: My wife suddenly collapses, sobbing, into my mother's arms, her postponement of grief failing catastrophically, and our 2½ year-old daughter looks up at them from a few feet away, transfixed. She is in shock. Her little jaw opens slightly as her world lists, one particular pillar having just crumbled before her eyes. For almost two years afterwards, she will make a habit, throughout mornings and evenings, of regularly, repeatedly checking on our emotional condition: are we happy? are we sad? are we tired? are we okay?: Every question an aftershock.I don't remember the precise words; I mean, I do—heaven help me, I do—but I'm incapable of the internal review to organize those particular memories to my usual precision. She was in tears:
“Triploidy. They say she's triploid; three of every chromosome. It's terminal.” “Oh god. Oh my god. How … What …” “I want this baby” “What do we do?” “What do people do?” “I love this baby” “Our baby girl …” “I really want this baby.” Not one of those fragments, handed back and forth between us, was delivered whole. Each was punctuated by sobs, gasping sobs, voices cracking, shaking. And yet I will never, ever, ever forget them.
Like the moment JFK was shot. The moment, for us both, that our second daughter began to die.
My parents take our daughter for several nights, we take bereavement leave from our jobs, and the snarl of questions unravels into ruin. We google “triploidy”—after all, my brother has trisomy-21, and he has led a loving, if slow, life. It is absolutely, unequivocally, fatal: miscarriage, or a few weeks of painful, failing life. One girl, the longest-lived on record, survived almost half a year, and I'm moved to tears by how hideously cruel her parents' outspoken belief in sanctity of life feels as I read of it.
We visit our clinic and meet with a genetic counselor, who gently summarizes what we already have learned: a painful, weeks-long life if she survives to term, serious danger to the mother: risk of death in delivery or sterility from molar complications. Terror grips us. We come to a conclusion.
We will terminate. We meet with a surgeon. I ask … but no, some things are inessential. [And some pain I still husband alone.]
It is a D&C. We learn what this entails and go numb. Our daughter could be born into brief and inchoate agony and threaten to end her mother's life, or … could gently enter a final sleep in utero. This is no choice. And yet, we cannot shirk our agency—we do choose. Oh, God. We choose.
We begin grief counseling. The termination happens. We continue counseling. We return to our jobs, going through what motions we can. Months pass, little more than a blur in my memories.
We grieve all through the winter. I teach myself to knit, and construct an absurdly sophisticated, crazily geeky scarf.
We get the medical okay to try again, to risk another conception, another devastation. Eventually, we achieve the courage to try, and conceive our third child immediately.
I find a route to expiate my grief and my new terror, to focus the love that found itself horribly adrift, the love that could not save my tiny, broken child. I will make a baby blanket, of course. Every stitch will be cast with this love. Every ounce of affection that what remains of her spirit might accept, will be offered there. Every stitch will catch a mother's and father's love, and as our third child grows and we discover who it is—who it might be—the new love growing will be caught as well. And when her spirit fully departs, when her time is truly past, what love is left will mingle with this new love to finish the blanket that shall warm and comfort her sibling.
What an animistic concept to spring from the heart of an agnostic, deeply apostate, permanently lapsed Catholic. But there is a gaping, bleeding hole in my psyche, now: The data strongly suggest a dyandric origin to the triploidy. Either my sperm was broken, having improperly undergone mitosis, or a second sperm also fertilized the egg. A cell from my body, that should have given my child life, took it instead. I have blood on my hands, and a gravid heart that must somehow be delivered of its unreleased longing and warmth before they sour and turn to rejection and bitterness. And so, to mend my soul before loss could cripple me, I knit.
This third pregnancy progresses. A heartbeat. Simple measurements. As soon as viable, we schedule a CVS. We wait for results.
That day, that glittering-bright and amazing day, I receive a phone call. “The results are: healthy, karyotypically normal, male!” We leave our respective offices on foot and meet midway across town to hold each other and cry tears of relief, tears of joy, tears of hope that our nightmare might be drawing to a close.
There are weeks of gladness, now, and we recenter ourselves towards a normal gestational routine. The blanket progresses, the loves now blending into sweetness as the soft, daisy-yellow stitches gradually amass.
And then a shadow grows. A nagging worry lingers, somewhere just out of sight. A little boy is coming. I've fathered a little boy. A little baby boy. I fathered a boy. A beautiful boy. A father. A boy.
I start sleeping poorly. There are dreams I cannot recall that leave me exhausted. I wake abruptly from dreams of fighting with my parents, the final shouts voiced fully in the dark of the bedroom. Once I punch my sleeping partner in the arm, struggling as a dream-child to defend my dream-family against an abusive captor/abductor. I begin to fear sleep, and the insomnia begins. Thoughts whirl about me in the dark hours, thoughts I grudgingly consider, robbed as they are of dream-expression. I start to write, and I begin to voice questions.
How can I model male for this boy? How can I be something I'm not? How can I exemplify something I've never accepted being? Who will he see when he looks at me? Will he see me, obscured as I'll be by the trappings of all the role into which he will grow? Will he know me?There is a fear I call the isolator-fear. It is a bleakness, and a distrust. It is the panicky urge behind every camouflage defense, propping-up every shell, every mask. It is the lie that we, any of us, might truly be unlovable to anyone. It is the lie that the surety of affection to our faces could ever be preferable to even just the possibility of affection to our hearts. It is an insidious serpent that makes islands of us, stony and barren, by threatening to cast us adrift. It devours our relationships and gives us certainty—the certainty that we must always hide.Will I know my child?
Will my child see me?
Can I hope to share all my love?
And at last, in a shifting of darkness, the isolator-fear stirs, feeding greedily on this flood of insecurity. I mustn't rock the boat. There's nothing here to consider; surely I know precisely what I am: a genderqueer man with some complex fetish and much needless angst. It's so simple, how could I let myself be conflicted? I need sleep. This has to stop.
But the powerful, aching love for two dear children, one now nine months dead, one yet unborn and curled quietly within the woman lying beside me, is now furiously ablaze. Every morning, with every stitch, I consider words to share with my son. Every night I rest in bed, sometimes for hours, fiercely brandishing my sorrow in two needles, making a thing of tenderness and nurture, calming and relaxing each twitch of tension in my hands. It is more consuming than any fear.
And as that serpent, in those late, dark pre-dawn hours, winds about my every worry, it cannot help but brush against the firestorm of emotion I have been nursing. Touched by flame, drifting askew in confusion, it catches briefly alight. And in that fleeting illumination, I see the hypocrisy. I see the life that its dusky coils chain me away from. I see the final moment of the interior of the closet all around me, as its walls disintegrate and leave me exposed in a strange new land.
And my world changes.
Friday, October 19, 2012
Here. Now.
Tuesday, October 16, 2012
The self survives
The marvelous thing about a well-kept journal is how present it can make one's past.
The miserable thing about a well-kept journal is how present it can make one's past.
Memory is fluid so that we may be as well.
Can it really be only four years ago that this began? Reading the entries, I cannot believe how distant, how uncertain this voice sounds. I feel old. I feel weathered and bent and hardened and somber, like an old pine stooped low atop a windy ridge. Not that I don't also feel like a new bud at the break of spring, leaning gently in a breeze every time I feel my smooth hands, with every breath that stretches my tee around my nascent chest. But we are manifold creatures, we humans. And so … so I am old.
When was it that I aged? I think I might guess. I aged every time I cried, every time I sobbed at the endings that had come to stories I thought I was still writing. I aged the night I broke under her denial, broke my possessions in despair and fury, broke my promise to leave her to her choices, her silence, leaving both our hearts broken on the floor. I aged when I saw what I had done and swore myself new oaths, with bonds too tight to chafe. I aged when I surrendered our past and wept for our present. I aged when I asked for what I needed, and received it, when I decided to grow, when I impaled my thigh on 1½" of 22-gauge surgical steel and, gently, died. I am so weary. I have been and been and been: filling those terrible moments with days of worry and fear, pouring seasons of grief into minutes and hours of wailing dissolution. We are manifold beings and we live so brightly when we burn in the dark.
How is it that we can live so much in so short a time? Even with the goad of mortality, reminding us of the finality of every loss, every change, it is not fear that kindles my anger at falseness. Nor is it a looming end that ignites my need. I grow and change because I cannot do otherwise and survive. This is a new-kindled drive: until the closet disintegrated, survival—persistence—was rarely so central. Perhaps our transitions—not just our bodies and our persons, but our worlds and words, our homes and our others—are the bulk of our lives, to date. Perhaps the wonder is not that these few years grip us so but that those few decades before them held us so terribly little.
Those selves we shared—who joined and fled families, built or pursued careers, raised and lost children—how, exactly, did they grow? Where were we when they lived fiercely? Were we there, too? Did we fuse for those fiery moments, out of need and love and joy and desperation, into chimeras of presence and embodiment? Maybe we cling so resolutely to these moments of brilliance and terror in our closeted past because they are our own: lived briefly for ourselves and not for any other. I may, myself, only now be waking, but I have stirred so many times during that long, quiet fever-dream of survival.
I think that must be why the man in this journal feels so distant in his fearful and morose reflections. He was only just ceasing to be that man, and his perspective was that of a frightened yet hopeful child who knows only how little she understands. As a youth thrust forth into independence, she struggled and grew as only the survivor-child (Walker's gifted child?) can. She found children in her heart, loved them, nursed them, and grew; she found herself in a career, accepted it, built it, and grew. She found a partner in her life, loved her, held her, lost her, and grew. Four years, and a recapitulated lifetime: such a gulf separates the man I was from the woman I am becoming.
And now comes the reflective denouement where, embracing anecdotes at last, we recant our hyperbole and repent of our metaphors. Of course I am no binary man-girl chimera—and never was. I have ever been blessed with a single voice, even when I have consciously partitioned it by name (in high school, I once tried to name six! they were all boy-selves or neuter, though …). The search for authenticity could only begin once I surrendered those partitions and accepted this. But the idea of multiplicity is what coalesces most clearly when I try to paint the transitional identity in words.
Similarly, the self that lived my pre-transition life was every bit as much me as the self I am now. However, who we learn as has so sweeping an effect on what we can recall and retain that the concept rings true. And yes, I do find that I am starting a new life, and I find no issue with the idea of many fractional selves populating my past. Every role I have filled, every context I have inhabited, is a part of me—though some I may wish to deny. I do not so much change as allow a more authentic self to blossom and overcome all its peers.
For truly I am a manifold being, and today I am alive.
'anima, ex multis; inde, superstes' : from the many, a soul: thence, a survivor
Thursday, October 11, 2012
Seasons and Seasons
Saturday, October 6, 2012
young identity, young sexuality (revised)
I don't recall traditional family-social role-play ("playing house") as an interest — likely because it was not attractive to any of my playmates — but I do clearly recall startling myself with at least one phenomenon. Around age 9, I found myself inventing a quite sophisticated backstory, along with individual characterizations, for the family structure and dynamics of a group of LEGO figurines, who were (as best I can recall) pilots, navigators, and counselors on deep-interstellar-space capital-intercept vessels. I had only “Space”-type LEGO, you see, since I never asked for any other type (although I profoundly envied a close friend’s medieval and town sets, I was also powerfully obsessed with science fiction and space opera). I vividly remember how, in one scenario, the captain (“Jonathon”), who had lost his only son in a poorly-executed military action, was faced with the task of counseling a subordinate who was the sole survivor (and a chief culpable party) of some colossal tactical slip-up (I don’t recall what it was, precisely). I must have lost most of a long summer Saturday afternoon thinking about the bleakness of the situation, writing scripts in my head for meaningful, cathartic, but succinct addresses “Jonathon” could deliver. It seguéd back and forth between character elaboration and reflections on the nature of the divine and mortality, but I dedicated hours and hours to building the personality of this compassionate, expressive, military father, facing a great grief of his own and building from it a gift of meaning for this other poor, shattered fool who had caused such suffering yet lived, and had to come to terms with his future.
Ironically, I never really explored theatrical drama or creative writing at all in my childhood, except for playing the gay kid in a production of Fame, my senior year of high school. It’s a pity, really.
The following segment of this journal entry is woefully outdated in light of coming to understand the fragmented nature of my consciousness and personality throughout much of my life. I’ll set it apart, here, and discuss the pieces ...
Again, I really didn’t do the projection thing with dolls; I could never have a tea party with stuffed animals (which, unlike dolls, I had plenty of). I imagine, though, that I could have had not other aspects of my psyche intervened. You see, from age 4 until my early twenties I had a horribly, horribly bittersweet relationship with cute … effigies: Stuffed animals, dolls, little characters and figurines … in short, representations of living things.In fact, I absolutely “did the projection thing”--I did it compulsively and powerfully, and still do. However, the Spectre of Consistency (also in its capacity as strict enforcer of masculine gender norms, specifically the limiting of expressive affection) reliably, swiftly, and destructively intervened.
My attachment would follow a very pronounced, predictable, dramatic trajectory. Immediately upon encountering any such thing (a fond/horrid example is an 18" or so plush white rabbit received for Easter, one year), I would be overcome with affection for the … creature. I loved cute things. I always have. I do still to this day.
However, this surge of warmth and attachment would swiftly hit a wall. Something in me [that's the Spectre, of course] would look closely, and see the artificiality of the item, the glass eye, the nylon whiskers, the uniform whiteness and acrylic shine to the [sweet, soft, cuddlable] fur. And try as I might, I couldn’t split-off a bit of myself to make an “other” to drive and inhabit the [awfully, gut-wrenchingly hollow] form. I tried make-believe, once or twice, pretending that the creature was alive. The hurt was only magnified. For, you see, as soon as the detached, assessing eye finished its pass, there would be a leadenness to my attachment, as the two perspectives confronted each other and the emotional attachment would bow its head to the rational detachment. The toy could never love me back; all the love I could ever pour into it would be gone, would never return, multiplied.“Rational detachment” ... UGH: What a miserable crock. The ways I savaged myself at that age are horrifying. The only thing worse is how little the rest of me defended myself.
It was my original heartbreak. There were no corners of “me” that were out of conscious scrutiny that I could allow to be externalized into the toy to receive and return my affection.There’s a degree of rationalization, here. In retrospective clarity, it was far more pervasive than simply being unable to project; I could not permit myself to have any valid target for (what I now see as healthy) sentimentality or affection.
There were no “magical” sources of creativity from which ideas could spontaneously appear without clear origin, plausibly attributable to a stuffed companion. I was viciously introspective, even then (the earliest I can recall this phenomenon must be 1st or 2nd grade, when I was 6).Describing actions of the Spectre here, again, along with the blade. Petra was reduced to Alder by age 5, and further pared-away into shreds and the bar of light by 14 or 15. And so I diminished.
I had already at that age encountered and internalized the idea of nihil novi sub sole (though not in the vulgate, directly), and ferociously followed my own ideas to their sources in memory or immediate sensation, in play or musing. Something in this sense is connected to a feeling that only living things could actually respond to me. So in a matter of minutes, or less, I would fall deeply, wholly in love with a beautiful, adorable thing, "discover" it to be an empty, nonliving object, and crash straight into grief, mourning the loss of the perceived lovable being which turned out not to exist. It was awful.It was awful, but it was not nearly as rational or causally-sequential as this skewed representation suggests. There was no “discovery” ... rather, there was a conflict of internal states and one simply violently crushed the other. And then it rationalized the savagery away. History’s authors, and all that.
Around age 11 I think I finally articulated this in its completeness to my mother, who never again gave me something that could trigger it. I had been aware of it, partially or wholly, since the middle of elementary school. It wasn’t until I was 12 or 13, though, that I suddenly realized that what it meant was that I wanted a friend and partner whom I could love deeply and expressively, and that I wanted children to love and nurture. It would be another decade before I would realize clearly how central compassion and love were to my mind and heart.
I was a very emotionally sensitive child. I thought SO MUCH about other people, about thinking, about feeling, about what I felt and what others felt (which for simply ages seemed utterly opaque). I dwelt for very, very long periods on the idea of identity. I struggled for years to discern my identity as something lasting and permanent. I was very afraid to play-act parts because in the adoption of synthetic roles and personae, I lost myself. I remember spending months, cumulatively, gazing at my face in mirrors and photographs, trying to find me.
Face paints horrified and terrified me; I resisted any and all opportunities to wear them. Halloween was a source of unbelievable internal emotional torture. I don’t really remember when it was that I realized that other children did not seem to be like that. It would have been in the elementary years, perhaps around 8. I think the best way to summarize is that I was intensely aware that I did not know who or what I was, and it was a source of massive fear and anxiety when I was forced to confront it. All the nightmare-triggering scenes or ideas that I can recall from my elementary school years center on the subversion of identity and body.
At some point, around age 9, I began to realize that part of why costuming and facepainting frightened me was that my body was my only external access to my self. If I couldn’t see my body, then I had only thoughts inside my head to know myself by, and those were clearly changeable and uncertain. I think this is the first conscious relation in my mind of identity and body. I think I started to pay attention to my body, consciously, then. I may have first determined around this time that the male genitalia were an impractical and awkward piece of tissue that was more inconvenience than anything else. I believe a sense of both aesthetic and practical streamlining played into this assessment, and defensibility was also considered. This was, in fact, before I really knew there even were other genital configurations. I hadn’t even thought about variation (“bodies were bodies were bodies,” right?). I just saw it as a piece of peculiar baggage that served no clear purpose, sort of like the “appendix” I’d recently heard about. In retrospect, I must have seemed a rather amusing little boy.
I began to experiment erotically at 12, after learning in sex-ed class what all that equipment was for. I must have spent weeks trying to orgasm via something roughly equivalent to very determined Kegel exercises (I succeeded, explosively, at last, when a falling throw pillow brushed the glans and my brain shut-down). It honestly had never occurred to me to use my hand.
I felt plenty of attraction to women and other girls. At the time I hadn’t quite begun to explore and question my sense of identification — although I’d preferred the company of girls to that of boys since I was 9. I certainly felt attracted to girls, although I don’t know how much of it was erotic, to begin with. That came along, too, eventually, but a fair amount of it was, at first, simply longing to be a part of the socializing, the friendly gossip, even the cliques. I consciously yearned to be able to wear what I consciously termed “more interesting” clothing (though the correct adjectives would have been “delicate”, “elegant”, and “feminine”), and not to feel so expected to be more athletic. Even then I had some sense that the grass probably wasn’t much greener, but I was so fed-up with the gender roles that made no sense at all to me, the exclusion from social communication I could have thrived within, the demand of masculinity, bleh. I didn’t want it, and I saw how other girls weren’t suffering it, so I was envious. It wasn’t for another year or so that I would develop a crush or two.
So, age 14, summer before high school, I overhear bits of a trailer for an episode of Geraldo, and it communicates that “Transsexuals are women trapped in men’s bodies, and use surgery and hormone therapies to ‘correct’ their bodies”. This sets some gears turning. Slowly, at first, but persistently. Finally, I try stuffing my chest, traumatize myself badly2, and discard that notion without much exploration. After the chest-stuffing I still take a chance and speak with my mother about “transsexuality”. She tells me she loves me regardless of how I develop sexually, and cautions me not to agitate myself too much, that adolescence is a time of confusing change and questioning, and to give it all time before concluding one thing or another. I interpret this as “nah, probably not, don’t worry about it” and happily shove aside the WEIRD, NOT HEALTHY label I’d been toying with.
High school, however, involved much more sexual identity and social complication than I expected. I think I’ll skip the narrative of that phase for this entry and jump straight to the next big step in my body image. It’s during my senior year, and I’m part of the Academic Decathlon team, which entails a lot of fun group study sessions at various member’s homes. These are the first real co-ed casual, unchaperoned events in which I’ve participated and the first mixed-gender friend group I’m an integral part of. My pedagogical ability, wide-ranging familiarity with all sorts of interesting historical, cultural, and technological trivia, and generally sweet, friendly temperament make me (as far as I can tell) very popular within this group, and people start looking beyond the academic, oddball shell I’ve raised to detach myself from the physicality of my [attractive,] teenage, miserably-masculinized body. They start actually befriending me.
Having a semi-eidetic memory for models and trivia, I have the luxury of sitting-out various review parts of the study sessions. This is good, because the one of my best female friends that I’d developed a crush on is also on the team. I’m having difficulty focusing on the tasks at hand, with her present and working with us, so I head off to a back room and dig-out some quirky electronica3 and try-out his biiiig stereo system in the dark.
I’m also having a difficult time with depression, and have been employing meditative techniques to help relax and direct my thoughts. I lie on the floor and fill up my body with light. Then there’s a surge of frustration, and (deep in my focused state) I set the world around me aflame. I feel, and almost hear, the conflagration, which is simultaneously gratifying and unsettling, so I extinguish the flames. Then follows a wave of disgust at my own body, feelings of dissatisfaction, and the familiar wish to wear a conventionally-feminine form.
So I take control of the light and guide it around, reducing muscle and bone in my arms, hands, and shoulders, widening my hips, searing-away my beard and body hair, inverting and smoothing-over my genitalia, and finally raising a little more flesh upon my chest. It’s an amazing feeling. Lying on a soft carpet, I’ve physically spaced-out my limbs and reclined my head so no external sensations contradict the internal perceptions, and it’s as if it’s all real. And it feels … comfortable. Correct [I believe the term I'd use today is “congruent”]. I don't feel arousal at all, which strikes me then as a little strange since I'm accustomed to fantasizing about my body undergoing such transformations followed by romantic or occasionally sexual fantasies.
I don’t know quite what to think, confused by my own response. Eyes closed, I turn the image around in my mind, my viewpoint spiraling away from my head. I can’t see my face. I wouldn’t say my image is nude, but neither do I have clothes, so I add-in the detail of what I’m wearing, adjusted for the body shape I'm now perceiving. I can feel the clothes on me … on my arms … on my breasts … on my legs … my feet wiggling in the socks. It’s all so … real. The sheer unfamiliarity of this feeling — comfort and contentment, instead of an erotic thrill — starts to frighten me a little, and I push the image away, but I don’t know how! I don’t know where my hips are supposed to go! I don’t know where my shoulders — my physical shoulders — really are. I don’t … I don’t want to flatten my chest! At this point, a little bit of panic starts to creep in, so I open my eyes and sit up, looking around and breaking the trance (as, in retrospect, I’d describe it). I feel my body, literally patting myself down, and stand up, trying to clear my head. I feel exhausted, and close to tears.
The sequence of thoughts and feelings, above, took maybe a minute or two to play-out, and was (unlike most of the experiences I recount) mostly devoid of an internal monitor, so much of the “dramatization” of the narrative feels excessively detailed, pushing raw feelings and images I can still clearly recall into words that don’t really capture their essence (but do so better than anything else). I wasn’t thinking in my normal sense throughout this; it was a different sort of consciousness.
What this left me with was a feeling of real uncertainty. I began to wonder seriously if I’d been ignoring something important (duh). I started to think much, much more clearly about gender as something separate from sexuality and other eroticism. I began to explore what I actually felt about living within a masculinized body -- of which I’d been in near-complete denial for several years at that point.