pride

Wednesday, June 11th, 2014 11:35 pm
darkoshi: (Default)
At work, a corporate diversity email was sent out in honor of LGBT Pride month. I thought the sentiment was nice. It was similar to other ones we've gotten for African-American History month, and Hispanic-American pride, etc.

I heard a co-worker a few cubes away, however, joking/scoffing at the email. Saying she sometimes wished she could unsubscribe from all these corporate emails. "When are we going to get a heterosexual pride month?" Something dismissive of transsexual people. And then something like "I don't think we have anyone (LGBT) on this floor, do we?" (simply in a curious questioning tone).

The way she said all this didn't sound hateful to me; I could believe she doesn't really have anything against gay people. (And she probably has no experience with real trans people.) But it also sounded like she doesn't get it.

I started thinking that I could tell her that if she wanted to celebrate pride in her heterosexuality, that's fine. But the reason why LGBT people need Pride marches and such, is to counter-balance the shame, fear, and stigma they've grown up with.

Personally, my gender-neutral trans-ness and asexuality is mostly invisible to others, and I haven't encountered any such stigma myself. It's not something I feel a need to have pride in, nor is it something that I've ever felt bad or ashamed of.

But for gay and trans people who haven't been so lucky and who have faced hatred, bullying, and mocking during their lives, who've felt the need to hide their identity from others, the *pride* is necessary simply to offset that weight of negativity that they've encountered. It's necessary, simply to be able to feel good about themselves. And it's a way to share camaraderie with others.

It's not the same thing to be told, "you're gay and that's ok now, but don't flaunt it". Because not flaunting it can be interpreted as needing to hide it, as any expression of gayness can be interpreted as a flaunting thereof.

Anyway. I wasn't really planning to tell her all that; it simply crossed my mind. Then I thought, she's just reacting to an experience she's not used to; she'll get over it. Someday she'll get used to these kind of things, and that's part of the point of them.

Then I had the idea to send her an email telling her that yes there's someone LGBT on the floor, that I'm trans though probably not in any way she is familiar with. At that thought, my pulse started racing, and I could hear and feel the blood whooshing in my head*. I quickly decided that I couldn't compose any well written email in such a mental state. So I went out to lunch instead.

*Similar to what it used to do in school/college, whenever I seriously considered raising my hand to ask the teacher a question, or to comment on something. That's a big reason why I didn't do that very often; it was so very nerve-wracking.

I do however often feel that I'm not trans enough to call myself trans to others. That they'd say I'm not really trans. They'd deny my identity. (Or laugh and start thinking of me as weird.) They can't even conceive of it. So why even tell anyone?
darkoshi: (Default)
This video appeals to me on so many levels: the rocky desert scenery, the upbeat whispered German lyrics, the wiry agile black-clad and black-hatted individual, the stunning imagery, the androgynous people, the glint of a slender metal blade.


Video title: IAMX - "I Come With Knives" - (Official Video)
Posted by: IAMX Official
URL: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nt0MkotVIEc
darkoshi: (Default)
Lana gives a long speech. I wasn't planning to watch the whole thing*, but it was so entertaining and touching, that I did.


Video title: Lana Wachowski receives the HRC Visibility Award
Posted by: Human Rights Campaign
URL: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=crHHycz7T_c


And her hair is beautiful!

* I was initially intrigued by the following quote from the speech (between 12:34 and 12:47) which a fellow androgyne pointed out:

". . . transition. Parenthetically, this is a word that is a very complicated subject for me because of its complicity in a binary gender narrative that I am not particularly comfortable with."
darkoshi: (Default)
There is a discussion on one of my mailing lists about the differences between the words 'androgyne' and 'genderqueer'. To me, these words are basically synonyms, and I identify as both. To me, both of these words have positive connotations, even though their "mental flavor" is slightly different to me, based on my experiences with the words, and my experiences of people I've come across online who've stated that they identify as one or the other.

The mental flavor I get from 'androgyne' is more mellow, mature, laid-back, non-confrontational, at peace.
The mental flavor I get from 'genderqueer' is more youthful, energetic, confrontational, colorful.
These mental flavors have even been affected by this recent mailing list discussion - I cannot say for certain whether the flavors in my mind were exactly the same before.

In the discussion, this statement from wikipedia was quoted:
"Furthermore, genderqueer, by virtue of its linkage with queer culture, carries sociopolitical connotations that androgyne does not carry. For these reasons, some androgynes may find the label genderqueer inaccurate, inapplicable, or offensive."

In the discussion, some people agreed with this statement. They feel that 'genderqueer' is strongly correlated with having a political agenda, even if it's simply because the term includes the word 'queer', and apparently that is a "strongly loaded" word.

Apparently, the word 'queer' also has different connotations to me and these people. Coincidentally, someone on my LJ friends-list also yesterday commented on usage of the word 'queer', which made me feel that their interpretation of the word was also different from mine.

The interesting part of all this is how even when people may agree on the basic definition of a word, they may disagree strongly on the "connotations" of the word. A person's connotations with a word are based on their own life experiences - how they've heard the word used, and in what contexts, and by what people.

What follows sort of builds upon thoughts I've put down on my Philosophy of Gender page.

How a person identifies with various labels depends on the connotations the person has of those labels.

My gender identity is strongly affected by the connotations I associate with gendered words. For example, I know that the main dictionary definition of "woman" is simply "an adult female". I acknowledge that I *am* an adult female. Yet, I disdain being labelled a woman, because of the other connotations I have of the word. If it weren't for those other connotations, I probably wouldn't mind being called a woman, any more than I'd mind being called an adult female. (I don't have as many connotations for the word 'female'.) Part of my disdain of the word is because I don't feel the connotations apply to me, and part of my disdain is because I don't want other people to assume those connotations apply to me, simply because I am an adult female. Part of it is how I feel inside, and part of it is how I want others to think of me.

Yet the latter part of this also depends on what connotations other people have for the word "woman". Their connotations may or may not be similar to mine. So even if other people label me as a woman, it doesn't necessarily mean the same thing to them as it does to me. For some people, it may just mean that I am "an adult female" without necessarily indicating anything else. They may view me as an adult female with various good and bad characteristics; they may view me as unusual as compared to typical females, but still as female and therefore a "woman".

It may seem unnecessary to some people, to have a lot of different words for describing a person's gender as separate from their physical sex. If one acknowledges that every person, male or female or intersex, can have any combination of qualities, in spite of there being statistical differences between males and females when taken as a whole, then perhaps there is less need for words which distinguish a person's gender from their sex. If one doesn't assume that a particular adult female has a certain set of qualities simply because they are an adult female...

The problem is, that I think most people *do* assume differing sets of qualities for women overall, and for men overall, even if they acknowledge that deviations can and do occur. I believe this, because I know that even I *MYSELF* make these kinds of assumptions. When I find out that someone is male or female, it automatically affects my mental flavor of that person, even if I know very little else about them yet.

Thinking of those kind of assumptions galls me, which is why I prefer to state my gender as other than "man" or "woman". It is a way to clue someone else in, that perhaps I deviate from their assumptions, and perhaps they shouldn't assume anything about me based on my sex. It is also a way for other people to clue me in, that I shouldn't assume anything about them based on their sex. If I find out that someone identifies as an androgyne or genderqueer, it affects my thinking of them, based on the mental flavor I have of those words... I still make vague assumptions about the person, but they are different assumptions than otherwise.

If I find out that someone is female and genderqueer, I will assume that they are probably not into typically "feminine" things, and that they may be into some typically "masculine" things, and vice versa for someone who is male and genderqueer. Yet this is just a starting point for visualizing the person in my mind. I know that any given genderqueer person may be into various masculine and feminine things, just like any non-genderqueer person. (How I and/or other people define "feminine" and "masculine" would be a whole 'nother discussion.)

If I find out that someone is androgyne or genderqueer, without me knowing what their sex is, my mind sometimes still tries to determine what their sex is, as a way of interpreting things they say.

For example, I was watching a video log of a person who I knew identified as androgyne, but I could not tell if they were male, female, or intersex. They mentioned, in regards to their gender, something from their childhood, and my mind tried interpreting it in terms of the person having been a boy or a girl... was this a boy admiring a girl, because "he" admired and identified with the girl's qualities, or was this a girl admiring a girl, because "she" was attracted to females in a lesbian or heterosexual FTM way?

So, my mind still stereotypes people based on their sex, even though in the case of genderqueer people, it stereotypes them partially based on stereotypes of the *other* sex. So my mind still tries to find out a person's sex as a way of aiding in visualizing and categorizing the person.

.

Should I just call myself a "woman", and not care about what assumptions other people have of me based on that word? When people get to know me, the assumptions would slowly be replaced by actual impressions. Does it matter what their initial assumptions are?

Do I choose to identify as something other than "woman", in order to feel more special and unique? Or am I actually different enough from a "typical" woman, that it makes sense to tell people that my gender is something else?

(no subject)

Saturday, August 30th, 2008 10:24 pm
darkoshi: (Default)
My guyfriend is an old fogey. He thinks blue is not a good color for hair. Sigh. And I was feeling enthusiastic about it this morning. But that made me cry. (Why am I in a relationship with someone who doesn't think colorful hair is cool? He must have been pretending to like my hair the last time I colored it, 2 years ago... or maybe I just remember it that way, because I liked my hair then, and I remember my impressions, not his. How much else which is important to me, does he not like?) After a while of crying, I realized that I hadn't been crying much in recent times. Although I felt oddly bad yesterday evening too.

Memory of rope. Like everything else, ambivalence.

I've got tiger-stripes today. Tomorrow they will be blue. Old fogeys notwithstanding. Growl.

.

I am an androgyne. That is my word for myself. My thought of myself. Other people probably see me as female, woman, girl, weird person, or whatever. That is their word for me. Their thought of me. It doesn't matter. I am still the same person. I am still me. Their words aren't any less right for their minds, than my word is right for my mind.

Some cultures use the same word for green as for blue. It is one color to them, different shades. Yet that does not mean that they cannot see a difference between something which is green and which is blue. Although the difference may not seem as prominent to them, as to people from other cultures who have different words for each color.

.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W1QZGMm6lDU

The person who did this video caught my attention yesterday, due to the very cool outfits and hair she has in some of her other vids. This vid, which I watched today, impressed me too, in spite of it not showcasing her. She made the vid while rollerblading through an abandoned neighborhood... it seems creepy, how empty the neighborhood seems and how neglected and rundown the empty houses are, and how many of the doors aren't even locked. It bothered me, the idea of her trespassing into these empty houses.

The first-person perspective of rollerblading down the streets though... oh my, that looks like fun!

After watching the video, I did a search, and found out that this neighborhood had been abandoned over the course of nearly 2 decades, while the neighboring airport took over the land, for a new runway. Yet after all this time, there are still empty houses standing. And these empty houses have become victims of graffiti and vandalism and arson, in addition to neglect. It seemed such a sad thing... to imagine the people who used to live there, having moved away, and then being witness to their old neighborhood and homes transforming into this sorry state.

re: Venus/Mars

Saturday, October 13th, 2007 01:48 pm
darkoshi: (Default)
I'm an androgyne. I have my very own well AND a cave!

(no subject)

Saturday, March 31st, 2007 09:27 am
darkoshi: (Default)
Forestfen just brought up the issue again of me not liking having breasts, and how I *should* like having my breasts be noticeable, because breasts are pretty and breasts are pleasurable, and men this and women that... and during this I ended up exclaiming, "I am not a woman, and I am not a man; I am an androgyne!" hehehehe...

She had me repeat the word because she didn't recognize it, and then she repeated it a couple of times to herself, as if intrigued. Before continuing on about how people's bodies are nice, and how they should like them, etc., to which I just respond, "Uh-huh... uh-huh... uh-huh...".

.

Ever since I turned on boot-logging a few days ago, by adding "/bootlog /sos" in my boot.ini file, I haven't had any problems with my startup. Oh well. Guess I'll just keep the bootlogging turned on then, since it seems to prevent the problem.

(no subject)

Saturday, January 22nd, 2005 12:54 pm
darkoshi: (Default)
it's such a feminine beard. or maybe such an androgynous one. but the hairs are starting to be a distraction. i'm curious as to how wododu will react to it, if at all. and i also don't want to get rid of it before seeing him, because then i wouldn't be sure if i was doing it because i felt like it, or because i was worried about what his reaction to it would be. i think i would be disappointed in him if he had a negative response to my cute little beard.
darkoshi: (Default)
ho! for the first time while eating okra, i noticed how wonderful it is to eat the little tops off first! cute yummy little things that come right off by a gentle tug of one's teeth... like... like... little okra tops!

and what is it about cilantro that makes it taste, not like lemons, but like lemon dishwashing liquid? but i think i'm finally getting over that, finally beginning to appreciate the cilantro flavor itself... without thinking that the dishwashing liquid must have fallen into the food.

i didn't know that Saipan was a part of the U.S... well, sort of.

this black nail polish isn't nearly as startling to me as the cornflower blue one was. it's not even weird, really. it's just... black. it would probably be more impressive if my nails were longer. and pointier. or maybe if i was wearing black clothes.
heh. with the cornflower blue, the next morning, after stumbling out of bed and into the bathroom, seeing those blue nails woke me up with a "whoa!"
oh, and picking your nose with bright blue nails is weird, i tell ya.
oi, maybe i shouldn't have written that.
ahem - "carefully cleaning one's nose out" with bright blue nails...

while wearing nail polish, i'm noticing my hands do this annoying thing, as if i'm afraid to touch anything properly, as if i'm afraid that doing so would ruin the polish, ie., "ruin my nails". how... ucky. how not like me.

the other day in the bathroom at work, i was turning and caught a glimpse of myself in the mirror, and i could just ...see... an earring on my left ear. a ring-sized loop one. then i immediately began thinking, hey, that would look pretty cool...

but, putting a hole (or multiple holes) in my ear(s)...?
i don't know about that.

and now i was just thinking it would be nice to have a hermes-symbol necklace or pin or something...
what is happening to me???? i'm turning into a girl!!
accccckkkkk!!!!!!!!!!!

no. this androgyne's growing up and becoming... dang, what's that word?
curious? exploratory? ermmm. nope. there's another word, dangit.

and someone seems to have just removed a post of theirs. i was reading it on my friends page and then went to open the comment page, but the page was no longer there. well, friend, the post didn't bother me...
darkoshi: (Default)
my god/dess is the trickster
life is a cosmic joke
(a bad one!, you!)

and one of my other names is bellatrix

was doing a google search today and the page summaries on this first page of results was just weird.
like something mischievous got into google's cache and jumbled it all up.

there's someone at work whom i see every not so often
(ze doesn't work in my area)
ze intrigues me... dresses like a guy but seems certainly to be female bodied.
i wonder what zir gender identity is...
could it be an ftm person?
or even someone somewhat androgyne like me?
today i saw zir pass by outside the room i was in,
and ze's hair was cut short, nearly bald!
(wow! like i've had mine a few times...)
i wonder if ze ever sees me and wonders?

even though i sometimes wear "male" clothing,
somehow i don't feel it gives such a distinctive "male" impression...
but perhaps that's just my viewpoint?

isn't that just like me,
to notice someone from a distance and wonder about them,
with no inclination to approach or speak to them...
what could i say,
"you intrigue me. do you mind telling me what your gender identity is?"
whew. what a mouthful.

hmmm. i like the newfound te/tai/ta pronouns
but my previous preference ze/zir seems more widespread.
so which shall i use?
te wouldn't be so good for that story of mine,
considering the main character's name is Tee...

i've managed recently to have a fantasy
where the characters, androgynes, had breasts.
the genitals were still retractable though...
a sassy character, sort of like a multi-talented drag queen...

age...
i'm usually a younger partner in these fantasies.
inexperienced. naive. that's how i feel in real life.
even if i'm this old in the fantasy,
my partners are at least a little older.
imagining a sexual encounter with someone younger than me is odd.
it's hard to imagine someone younger as having those qualities...
experience, confidence, empathy...
even though i'm sure most real people, including people younger than me,
are much more experienced and confident than i am.
maybe it's just hard imagine someone younger being interested in someone older...
erk. although that's what it is in my case, isn't it!
okay, maybe it's just hard to imagine a younger dominant-type person
being interested in an older sub-type person...

if i'm someday 80 years old, (ugh)
will i still feel young and naive?
do we always feel this way?

::whisper::
no, no... i'm not a self-absorbed psycho...
i'm just a... self-absorbed psycho...
oh, oh...
at least i'm not drowning others in my pit of self-absorption.
right?

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