make room.

Attention, white people, hetero-normatives, cis-gender friends, manspreaders, monogamy apostles, abled-bodies, and anyone else who is super comfortable in your undisputed roles in the regular everyday world,

Move over.  Make room.

Why yes, I am cis-gendered, white presenting, able-bodied, thin, and accepting of hetero privilege on many occasions.  I’ve made space.  I am constantly checking myself, moving aside, stepping back.

Are you?  Why not?

I am writing this specifically because I want to hold myself to a standard.  I have entertained enough of the (American) white cis-male experience, in literature, art, my personal time and energy.  I will no longer spend time or money on the unknowns-to-me-personally among these people (I’m bailing on a lot of the knowns-to-me-personally, as well; sad but necessary.).  I’m not doing this out of some misplaced rage, and in fact the only person I’m angry with is myself in this case, for the oversight thus far.  Instead, this is an effort to raise the voices, art, literature, time and effort of women, POC, non-binary, trans, GNC, and every other voice that has been so long silenced by the norms.  We call it “marginalized”.  I will happily step aside to move these folks front and center.

Won’t you?

I want to have new conversations about relationships.  The expansion of touch outside the limits of sex.  The ability of intimacy beyond our beds. The possibilities of love when it isn’t caged by monogamy.  I want you to know that whatever version of love you experience is correct, not to be ignored.  I want all the bi/pansexual kids out there to know they aren’t greedy:  they are the future.

I want to see brown women standing tall.  Instead of struggling to make a point or a dollar on social media, I want to see women of color in public, at weekend markets and county fairs.  I want to see white people face to face with the beauty of native endeavors.  The work itself thus expanding the worlds of others.  I want to see more pow-wows.  More celebrations between tribes.

I want more space for people who aren’t cis-gendered.  I want to see them thrive.  I am a cis-woman, but I do not doubt that gender will die.  Gender non-conformity is the future.

Also the future:  fatness and “other” bodies.  Different strengths.  Dangerous curves.  I will make all the space for bodies that don’t fit the traditional norms.  The gorgeous thighs that rub each other.  The rolls of fat and exuberant bosoms.  I want freedom for every fucking body.

Don’t you?

a sob story

In 2001 I made out with a girl friend or two.  I tried to come out as bisexual to people I thought were close friends at my high school, and consequently brought myself all the negative attention in my whole world.

I stretched my ears daily on the bus to high school because my parents didn’t want me gauging them out.  I would take out the spacers on the way home and hide my bloody, abused lobes whenever I was around my folks.  I made it to zero gauge like this, and honestly I feel lucky my ears didn’t just fall off in refusal.

I had a few really amazing, supportive, good friends.  But they were from other schools, so I would see them on weekends if I was lucky.  Some of them were gay, which helped.  We’d talk about actual things even though I was already deeply closeted by the time I became close with these friends.  One helped me pierce my tongue frenulum as well as my septum.  The pain felt exactly right.  One of those piercings was much easier to hide from my parents than the other.

Everybody at school thought the visible piercing was fake.  I continued to be a target.  Nobody else had this piercing.  Nobody else at my school wanted to tell people they were bisexual.  I was alone.  The bullying was thorough and cut me cleanly from any local friendships I’d experienced up til then.

One girl in particular wouldn’t lay off.  Everybody thought she was the shit.  I wonder if her heart was rotten by nature or nurture, because she seemed quite unloved.  I had really wanted to be her friend, even as she picked on me.  But I kept supplying ammunition in the form of “poser” behavior.  She got meaner and meaner, pretending to acquiesce and then upping her brutality a notch or two.  She may have invented cyber-bullying–after one particularly worthless session with an incompetent student counselor, she started new AIM profiles just to pick on me using everything we’d discussed.

I smoked weed whenever I could, but even the local dealers were shitty to me.  They stole my money and sold me bags of stems instead of bud.  I would be empty-handed at parties.  Nobody from my high school wanted to hang out with me unless I had drugs.  Sometimes I could find acid from older kids who were above the bullying I was experiencing.  Those were especially weird nights though.  Then those friends graduated and the abuse only worsened for me.

I learned to smoke cigarettes.  I snuck out a lot to do dumb shit with people I didn’t even like.  I applied for boarding school.  I begged to transfer to a school where my friends were.  I just wanted to be a weirdo with weirdo friends.  I just wanted to be safe.

Later, I would discover ketamine.  I wouldn’t share it, but instead guarded one baggie with my life for months.  K could help me get through a rough school day without noticing all the bullies.  I would do small bumps in the school bathroom.  I even heard a rumor that somebody thought I’d been crying in there, cuz sniffling, which is something I actually don’t remember ever doing, but I was relieved they didn’t assume I was doing drugs.  I needed that medicine, in those days.

My father would regularly repeat to me that “Everybody had a hard time in high school” which in turn made me wish that I was getting a real education, because that argument isn’t viable.  My brother seemed to be doing just peachy.  Must school be a horrifying rite of passage?  I wondered what my father, a white, heterosexual cis-male who’d attended exactly the same high school, went through to make him so jaded toward his daughter’s very real, isolating pain.

Teachers bullied me, too.  The boys’ gym teacher, who I had very little interaction with, referred to me as “Paint Chips” which I didn’t understand.  He politely explained, “You must have eaten them as a child.”  I was still a child.

One teacher didn’t like that I was smarter than she.  She and I would get into it often in class, most notably about the fact that “persons” is a word.  This particular argument, and sad excuse for an educator, prevented my entrance into Advanced Placement English my senior year.

Luckily, neurotypical English was taught by somebody awesome.  Somebody who’d been through some shit and saw me going through mine.  Luckily, he wasn’t the only one.

I also had a mother who saw my pain clearly and let me see my real friends as much as possible.  She took me to hang out with groups of university women whose power and sexuality was just budding in the most beautiful ways.  They loved me like the little pet I wanted to be to them, and I learned a lot just by being present in those Vagina Monologue days.  Mom would drive me home after and treat me to yogurt parfaits.  We’d talk.  Literal life-saving.

This was long before the “it gets better” movement and well after I’d closeted myself, but there were constant reminders from all different kinds of women I admired who could promise that life would change.

And here, here is where my tears begin.  My gratitude for those women knows no bounds.  I want them to know how dear these memories are to me, and how related to life over death those experiences truly were.  It gets better.  Everything does, even when the world is burning around us.  We have each other.  We have sisterhood.

I have no sympathy anymore for any person who identifies as a woman but isn’t actively, emphatically supporting other women.  Any woman who drags another lady for her looks/sexual choices/money-acquisition/truth can catch this mouth calling her out.  I have no patience for any moment in which feminist speech is stifled (or less than intersectional).  I have no time for women who don’t bother to lift up their sisters.

Sisterhood is magic.  Pain has made me the brave, independent weirdo babe I am today, but I couldn’t have done anything constructive with any of it were it not for the midwifery of those who’d come before.  We are all we have, and we are everything.

References, II

Berlin is definitely an Amelie moment.  Not my first time living alone in a new city and I don’t plan on finding love via photo booths.  Nonetheless I am certainly on some “walk alone noticing all the beauty, put your hands in the beans at the market, and smile at the idiosyncrasies of your neighbors” routine.  Also, quietly but earnestly trying to make the world a little more beautiful and magical wherever possible.  And a little bit lonely, but doing just fine.

Does a friendship die when two people are no longer able to communicate clearly to each other their feelings or intentions?  Are those moments of incoherence, defensiveness, frustration all part of a swan song?  Perhaps things are being clearly communicated, but the friendship was already incapacitated, mutual understanding in a flat-line.  Maybe it’s that relentless, high speed drama wears down a love, especially if it means the friendship becomes solely a resource to vent issues and seek comfort, but from which no advice is appreciated.  This seems like cardiac arrest; the cholesterol built of demonstrable patterns and habits going back over years.  Maybe yeah, maybe the friendship went comatose a long time ago.  The misunderstandings and frustrated communication seem only to be attempts at cutting through a long-term disconnect between humans.  Perhaps it’s time to consider going off life support.

jotted-downs, requests for responses

New fake band:  He Who Ha-has and the Who-hoos

The internet is a vast wasteland of people explaining to their friends a lot of things they already know.  Echo upon echo.  The world outside our screens needs more oomph.  Social media cannot possibly lead to social justice.  (File under:  hellishly understated necessities of revolution.  See also:  why can’t I make new friends anymore?  Additional references:  fragile masculinity, defensive whiteness, performative ally-ship.)

Fantastic Beet Salad and Where to Find It (Now in restaurants near you)

Fuck all holidays, the one this week especially.  If you need to buy gifts this season, please spend your money on marginalized humans in small businesses.  Or, if you’re like me and have something against physical stuff, you can donate to someone hungry.

Explicitly stated physical attraction + generous, personal friendship = ???  Pretty sure the answer is romance but please correct me if you’re familiar with a different result in this equation.

Audre Lorde should be canonized as Our Mother of Holy Intersectional Feminism.  If you’re reading this and there are other authors who seem to vie for this particular sainthood, please oh please share them with me!

Speaking of:  an entire drag show of male bodies dressed in high femme and one of these deep voices–which you know belongs to a person who is proud of his body by day, has no trouble walking down the street without being harassed, makes a full wage when he works, definitely put on all that makeup just for fun, not because anybody said he was ugly otherwise, and has full permission to do whatever else he wants with his body–says, “Down with the patriarchy!” and there is literally not one woman represented on the entire stage, so what the fuck is that proudly hairy, muscular dude even saying.  If anybody wants to discuss the taking up of space by white cis male queerness, I am here (and hear) for it.  Like for real, please talk me down.  If I’d had a tomato that night I’d have thrown it.

brother,

I haven’t been an email person for a long time, so when I had the space in my life to read everything that has gone unread, I figured I could try.

Predictably, I tossed nearly all of it without reading.

But I listened to every heretofore unopened weekly song.  I devoured the poems.  I loved the videos.  Highlights for me were your inexhaustible humility, the squirrel at Mom’s cottage, the white shirts on the clothesline and you take one at the end, the sunset at the beach (of course), every single foggy video, and Sophie’s yawn with Arlo before “You’re the Farthest I Go”, which I think just popped up automatically after a weekly song.

I know you are an amazing artist.  I trust your music to be great, and it delivers to a part of my heart that only our family–including its additions–can touch.  Sometimes I get weary because your compositions can make me feel the absence of our family so acutely, but most of the time it’s like getting a hug from Mom.  And so I depend on it.

Reading these old emails though it was the poems, the other songs, that really got me.  I miss you, my brother, and when I miss you I wonder what nuggets of wisdom you would quietly, passionately share in whatever circumstance I find myself.

Thank goodness for these posts.  I spent all morning yesterday listening to that old Chance the Rapper song about being ready for the blessings.  I have gone down rabbit holes full of Yeats and Rilke and a ton of people I’ve never heard of.

I have been learning about reading being fuel.  Not for art or writing or any particular avenue.  Simply fuel for life, like food.  I think a lot of the qualities I admire in you and Sophie and other friends stem from the reading you all do.  I have come to agree with you that Netflix is the devil in this way.  Books have made me feel less alone in Germany, where I can count all of my friends on one hand and still have fingers left, than I ever felt in D.C.

I thought you might like to know these things about your sister.  I don’t need a response now or ever, but I wanted to tell you a little bit about why I admire you, and how sometimes your teachings take time to sink in.

I love you brother.

“I can’t be non-nonogamous because I get too jealous.” – basically everyone

I am married to non-monogamy.

And I am so, so uncomfortable about the potential of being replaced, cast aside, left alone.  I am so scared that sacred moments will be shared in other ways.  I am greedy for the time my loves spend with others.  I want it.

I have two partners. I left them both in D.C.  I chose to go out on my own.

I must be a pretty frustrating person to love.

Both of my loves are spending time with new people.  I am not.

Here in wild, queer Berlin, I haven’t met anyone who strikes my fancy. I see people, but I haven’t met them.

These two amazing people I love, however, have both been busy.  Others have noticed they are amazing.

Others are in the spaces my body has been, was, am afraid to hope will be again.

I feel so much more alone when these two individuals aren’t sharing with me the feeling of missing an us.  I am terrified.

The fortieth day is my loneliest day, brought on by their back to back dates (neither of their firsts, by the way).

I am beyond uncomfortable.  I wonder how I can stand it.  I wonder what I’m doing now that I’ve so idiotically put myself here.  What is wrong with me, I wonder.  What have I done to myself?

I am free.

So is he.

So is she.

And we are all amazing.  We each deserve the world.

The price I pay for this freedom–this knowing that my loves will live the lives of their dreams and I will not hold them back, nor the other way around–for this freedom I pay the price of discomfort.

They will answer when I call.  They will remind me of our love.  It will be untouched, the same love, unadulterated by the living of life.  I will ask for, and I will receive, all the reassurances I need.

I will be uncomfortable for longer than I’m comfortable with, but we will all be unrestrained.  Liberated from invisible bonds of possession, one to another.  We belong together, but not to each other.

I love them so much.  I am quite scared.  I remain uncomfortable.  These are the prices of freedom which I will gladly, repeatedly, always pay.

It becomes a housecleaning project of the brain.  I go through this again and again.  The house doesn’t only need to be cleaned once, or even just twice, but regularly.  Jealousy is like this.

This work, I hate it.  I could wallow in my egotistical slouch all fucking day and forget the cleaning I have to do.  Who cares, if I’m alone anyway.  Self-pity is a satisfying loop.  I regularly hang out there when I get new information, just to digest.

In the end I will have to be uncomfortable for at least a while.  Instead of letting it all build up until dust bunnies of desire are stuck in all the cracks.  The grime of unanswered questions like a film I could scrape with my fingernails.  The cobwebs of unspoken needs all strung about around my skull catching all the positive thoughts where they should have been flying free.

I will clean.  And I will be happy I did.

Because freedom is all I want, and need.  For my thoughts, my heart, my body.  And for my loves, their hearts, their bodies.

Truly, I want this for the world.

So far, so good. (updated 26Nov)

Walkaway, Cory Doctorow.  Another favorite! Highly recommended.

Things Fall Apart, Chinua Achebe

The Left Hand of Darkness, Ursula K. LeGuin

Oryx and Crake, Margaret Atwood

Their Eyes Were Watching God, Zora Neale Hurston. Favorite! Necessary American reading.

The Enchantress of Florence, Salman Rushdie

The Penelopiad, Margaret Atwood

Sexing the Cherry, Jeanette Winterson

“Poetry is Not a Luxury”, and “Uses of the Erotic”, “The Master’s Tools Will Not Dismantle the Master’s House” — essays by Audre Lorde and hiiiighly recommended.

“The Veiled Woman”, “Linda”, “Mandra”, “Marianne” — short stories by Anaïs Nin. I loved Mandra the most.

“The Second Bakery Attack”, “Samsa in Love”, “Birthday Girl”, “A Folklore for My Generation: A Prehistory of Late-Stage Capitalism” — Haruki Murakami. I needed a big think after most of these, and I loved it.