I got a lot of really helpful feedback and Im going to keep working on this. Its hard for me to share work that I think is still in progress, I think especially this one as it chronicles a lifetime of denial/self acceptance and some really difficult moments. Im glad I can look back from a place of confidence and put humor around things that were not at all funny for me at the time. So without further adieu...
A
Bender on Gender
"Can
you call my grandfather? He could come pick me up." The
school nurse had caved yet again and was letting me go home. In the
6th
grade I developed a habit of faking sick. Usually the ailments were
embarrassment or boredom, manifesting as a mysterious, incurable pain
in my stomach. I don’t remember why I was at the nurse's office
this time. Maybe it was that day in sex ed when the teacher
claimed some girls have more testosterone than "normal."
“These
girls might have lower voices,” she explained, provoking a lot of
snickers and pointed fingers in my direction.
I began
to wonder if the permission slip my parents signed allowing me to
participate in sex ed was really more like a waiver for skydiving.
Grandpa pulled up in the Cadillac. Tan. My grandmother's was canary
yellow, which he referred to as “the junker.” The smells of
leather and Old Spice greeted me as I slid across the passenger’s
seat. Trying to keep up my sick act, I attempted to suppress the
relief I felt and focus on the guilt of dishonestly cutting school.
Bullshit was Grandpa's native language so of
course he knew I was full of it. He played along and we made
some small talk on the way home. Grandpa had just got a puppy named
Max. Max was a wild Collie, tearing through the apple orchard after
deer and peeing all over the kitchen floor. He seemed entirely
nonplussed to be beaten with a newspaper while chewing on Grandma's
rattan furniture in the sunroom.
“Max
doesn’t seem all that obedient,” I commented.
"Well,"
Grandpa replied, “that’s because Max isn’t old enough to
understand English." I nodded knowingly while wondering if
dogs really ever understood English. Grandpa smirked his wry smile,
the same smile I smirk when someone believes a total bullshit story I
tell them.
Born an androgynous female in rural America in
the 80s, gender is a concept I could have done without. From the get
go I wanted to be a boy. I dressed like a boy. I carried myself
like a boy. I played exclusively with boys, tackling, fighting,
spitting. I was confused when my dad wouldn’t let me take my
shirt off to play basketball. I wanted very, very badly to be a Boy
Scout. More than anything I remember wanting to be my grandfather. He
was always so put together; I remember him in brown slacks and a
striped oxford and a tie with a gold chain tethering the tie to his
shirt. He didn’t speak much, but had this way of making you believe
anything he said.
“Is that a boy or a girl? I think it’s a
boy.”
I sat on the ground nursing my elbow. I’d
just tried riding my boyfriend's skateboard. Turns out a maiden
skateboard voyage down a steep sidewalk isn’t the brightest idea.
Both my elbow and my ego were smarting as the kids across the street
mulled over what I was. I pulled down my ball cap and walked around
the back of the house.
While I was just being myself my childhood
peers were noticing that I wasn’t the same as they were. I think at
some point my parents uncomfortably realized it wasn’t a "tomboy
phase" that was going to go away. I was a lone queer in a
small town. By the time I met other queer people I had no idea that I
was one of them. I was convinced that something was wrong with me. I
was too aggressive, wore the wrong clothes and had the tiniest
breasts of anyone I knew. And dating? I understood as much about
dating as Max the dog did about English. I never had feelings for the
boys I dated. I just assumed it was some kind of defect, just like my
masculine traits.
Growing up we had one of those big console TVs.
It resided in a stunning fake wood enclosure which attempted to
legitimize its place among the living room furniture. To change
channels you had to get up and manually turn the dial. 44 was PBS. 38
was FOX (best after school cartoons). 16 was WNEP Newswatch 16. The
rest was white noise. If you tuned the dial to a setting just before
a channel you could faintly make out the image and garbled audio in
the white noise. I felt like one of those phantom channels; something
was there, but it wasn’t quite in focus. I tried to modify my
behavior, my clothes. I tried religion, graduate school, getting
married to a man and extreme sports. In hindsight I was kind of like
Max the dog, tearing around spending my nervous energy in an attempt
to flee my pain. The whole time it never felt right.
“No matter what someone says, it’s never
about you. It is always about them.”
Shifting listlessly in a metal folding chair I
found myself in some hippie group of people trying to learn to
communicate better. I wasn’t a hippie, but I was a
soon-to-be-divorced terrified 28 yr. old running around (again) this
time trying to salvage a relationship that had long been dead. We
drank tea and talked about our feelings. Eventually I got over being
jaded about west coast new age woo woo and learned some things. Like
how to empathize with myself, and that the things others tell us
really have nothing to do with us. Really!
Suddenly, I realized I’d spent my life
blaming myself for who I was and I resolved to face it.
In a truly meditative fashion I began
unearthing myself. Meditating goes like this: you resolve to sit
still for some time, usually longer than you’ve sat still in a long
while, maybe ever, and attempt to “clear your mind.” What
actually happens is you get about 30 seconds into your “om”
chanting and someone lets Max out and he chases deer all over the
orchard like a maniac. After some time you realize what is going on,
lock Max back up, and then repeat. Occasionally you scratch your ear
and wonder if that’s OK.
Om
- “I’ve always wanted to live in Northwest Portland. I’m going
to move there!”
Max-
“I'm going to work out like a maniac, climb Mt Hood and do a
triathlon!”
That’s
kind of intense. How about we pick one sport? Cycling. That’s a
nice sport.
Om
- “Cycling is great. I like riding with these nice people on
country roads and having a beer.”
Max
- “I’m going to race bikes! Ill join a team and train 10hrs a
week in the pouring rain because I’m that hardcore. I’m also
going to take hot yoga, because that is also hardcore.
Annnnd
now I’m injured. Guess I’ll just stick to yoga for now.
Om
– Wow. I really feel amazing around my yoga teacher Cindy. It’s
like all the feelings I expected to have with men but...
Max
– I shall learn the lyrics to every Indigo Girls song! I’ll hang
out with softball players and go to Pride.
Why
is nothing happening? Clearly this was a dumb idea.
Om
– I don't enjoy my job. In fact, I think what attracted me to this
field is that it is so mentally demanding I don't have time to think
about my life. I’m going to figure out what I’d really like to
do.
Max
– While changing careers I’m going to train to ride my bike on
the world's steepest, longest mountains in Northern Italy! While I’m
grinding up glaciated peaks Ill chew on rattan.
And so it went. I started coming into focus on
this rollercoaster ride. My family started noticing that my witty
quips and wry smile were coming back. I wore dresses and makeup and
grew my hair, then I chopped it all off, bought a men’s suit and
started lifting weights. Finally things were feeling right. As it
turns out I wasn’t too off base with the yoga teacher and to my
delighted surprise I am quite a charming fellow. I feel like a
mixture of Rainbow Brite and HeMan, soaring through the sky on the
back of Falcor.
As a child, faced with the compartmentalization
of "boy things" and "girl things" I definitely
wanted to be a boy. What I’ve realized is really, I just wanted to
be myself and forget about all this gender nonsense. Sometimes that
means I want to crochet or wear makeup. Other times that means I want
to be a quick witted, dapper gentleman, smiling wryly as I try to
convince a pretty lady that at a certain age, dogs understand
English.
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