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Authors: Amber J. Keyser

The V-Word (11 page)

BOOK: The V-Word
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II.
 Via Wikipedia: Cisgender and cissexual (often abbreviated to simply cis) describe related types of gender identity where individuals' experiences of their own gender match the sex they were assigned at birth.

III.
 Both in the sense of “fret” and in the sense of “drag around with the teeth, as of a dog or other carnivorous animal.”

IV.
 Yes, we actually talked like this.

V.
 By that I think I meant touching below the waist.

VI.
 Sex. Or maybe birth control?

VII.
 As an adult I am not a fan of the phrase “make love”; it seems cheesy. At the time, I thought it conveyed the deeply meaningful nature of the activity.

VIII.
 Again with the cheesy.

IX.
 I think I got this engineering-tinged phrase from a late Robert A. Heinlein novel—which, by the way, I do not recommend as a source for understanding interpersonal relationships—but I can't swear to it. What I meant was using a condom.

X.
 Yes, I really did address future readers in my teenage diaries. I apologize.

XI.
 Feminist health guide focused on helping women understand and have agency over their own bodies. Already a classic by the time I encountered it.

XII.
 Why wasn't Robert invited too? Maybe because, despite Ursula's overall progressive views, birth control still seemed like something that I, as the person in the relationship who could get pregnant, should handle.

XIII.
 
What To Expect When You're Expecting
being a standard reference book about pregnancy.

XIV.
 Spermicidal foam, that is. It came with a handy applicator, which you'd think would mean it'd be easy to use.

XV.
 Just to contemplate it, I hasten to add, not to stash it away and shoplift it. But I neglected to write in my journal that I put it back in the package before leaving the store, and I'm giving you the unaltered record.

XVI.
 For some reason I am quoting here from the Beatles, “Everywhere It's Christmas.”

XVII.
 The condom, aka.

XVIII.
 This is followed by a marginal comment: “No, I won't. It's not safe and I'm too forgetful.” I'd learned from Ursula that it was extremely important to take the pill every day and I wasn't sure I could manage that. Plus, there was a lot of fear about potential side effects. So I didn't go on the pill; we kept using both condoms and foam.

XIX.
 Definition via the Geek Feminism Wiki: “ . . . the artificial division of the world into things that are ‘masculine' or ‘for men' and things that are ‘feminine' or ‘for women.' One of the starkest ways to think of this is to consider the phrase ‘opposite sexes/genders' (as opposed to ‘different sexes/genders').”

XX.
 It was certainly not just “my own idea,” but it was a new idea for me.

XXI.
 Sex and gender are not synonymous, but I didn't know that yet.

XXII.
 I did, eventually, and they were supportive.

XXIII.
 At the time, “the gay lifestyle” was a frequently used derogatory phrase, not unlike “the gay agenda.” I'm not sure what all exactly I imagined it to encompass.

XXIV.
 A lesbian coming-of-age novel first published in 1973 by Rita Mae Brown.

XXV.
 It was hard for me not to conclude that feeling any sexual desire at all meant that I was a slut. Admitting to myself that my desire was not restricted to one gender seemed to mean I was especially, worrisomely excessive and out of control.

XXVI.
 Again, I was underinformed about the complex nature of gender identity; one of the issues I now have with the word “bisexual” is that it suggests that there are (a) only two sexes, and (b) that sex and gender are synonymous.

XXVII.
 A set of six anodized aluminum rings: one each in red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and purple, designed by David Spada in 1991. Freedom rings were described by Lindsy Van Gelder in the
New York Times
as “a way for gay people to flaunt their wholesomeness.” But to me, it felt transgressive and a little dangerous to put them on.

XXVIII.
 I can't remember all of them—the shirt was dense with text—but I recall “How long can I stay in this phase?” “I'm a Kinsey Pi,” and “Political lesbianism—not my idea of fun on a Saturday night.”

XXIX.
 The genius comic that Alison Bechdel did for many years before she got broader recognition for her graphic memoir
Fun Home
.

XXX.
 I still haven't seen it; it's a cult film with aliens that feed on the pheromones released through heroin usage and also orgasms. Much dramatic New Wave fashion is involved, and apparently at least one instructive lesbian sex scene.

XXXI.
 It did, but our relationship rapidly became fraught and complicated, which was pretty much the theme of my romantic and sexual life through most of my twenties.

XXXII.
 It feels both inclusive and concise.

Over and over in these essays we see women striving to understand themselves, to explore their sexual selves, and to find their own truth. Up until now, we've heard from women who do not question their womanness.

But just as sexual orientation can be fluid, so can gender.

Gender identity goes beyond the physical. It's the way we perceive ourselves on a spectrum from maleness to femaleness.

When gender—the truth of how we view ourselves—does not map to physical traits, the task of coming into our own as sexual beings can be much more challenging, as you'll see in Alex's story.

11
Iterum Vivere
, to Live Anew
Alex Meeks

I
lost my virginity eight years
after
the first time I had consensual intercourse.

I know this flies in the face of everything we learn about the meaning of virginity. It's not supposed to be a lizard's tail, regenerating once it's gone. But the real world doesn't always fit into neatly defined boxes. Our lives and experiences don't always follow the rules.

I grew up in Appalachia in a double-wide trailer in the woods surrounded by farmland. My childhood was, for the most part, unremarkable. My father worked long hours doing hard physical labor. My mother was a part-time beautician and full-time mother of three. My brothers and I spent the days exploring our vast deciduous playground. I would come inside after a long day of hard play, bruised and scraped and dirty. Looking back, I suppose I could call myself a tomboy. But in those days I was just a little boy, no “tom” needed.

I knew from an early age that I was somehow different from all the other little boys. I liked my hair long. I colored my fingernails with markers, which the teacher always made me wash off. I played the flute, loved to bake and sew, and preferred cats over dogs—things that shouldn't be gendered but are in small towns across America. My nightly prayers always included a plea to God that I would wake up a girl.

I rarely had any interest in school yard romance. When I did it was because I thought I was supposed to, not because I really wanted to. As my classmates and I grew older, shows of romantic longing seemed to become compulsory. And as high school approached it became very clear that if I didn't show interest in finding a girlfriend, something was wrong with me. I knew I wasn't like my peers but I tried my best to keep them from seeing that. I found a date to my eighth grade promotion dance, held in our school cafeteria. I played the part. I gave my date a wrist corsage, walked into the dance with linked arms, slow-danced to the best country music of the late 1990s. I kept my hands well above my date's hips and danced just close enough to her not to arouse any suspicion that I didn't really want to be there. But it felt all wrong.

Then came high school. Suddenly most of the other boys were participating in a race to have sex. I found a girlfriend and convinced myself that I loved her. We spent long hours on the marching band bus holding hands, cuddling close. Eventually that led to making out on the dark trips home, hiding our heads from the chaperones as best we could. We progressed to awkward groping, exploring each other's bodies under the cover of a Marching Warriors blanket. Our relationship lasted the length of my sophomore marching band season before we broke up. She claimed that she wasn't ready to have a boyfriend and that we were moving too fast. I pretended to be heartbroken but in reality felt relief.

Our breakup lasted until the next fall. After a long trip home from a football game, we decided that it was time to finally take the plunge. We parked behind an isolated church, got into the backseat, and immediately we fell into each other. We ripped off our clothes, kissed each other deeply, and before I could process what was really happening, we were each having our very first penetrative sex. It was sweaty and awkward. Kenny Chesney was crooning on the radio. It felt fantastic in the tactile sense but I was emotionally detached from the experience. After we finished, we got dressed, and she drove me home in complete silence. She transferred to another school a couple of months later, and we never spoke again.

Everyone at my school seemed to suspect that I was queer. Even after word broke that I'd actually had heterosexual sex, people knew I wasn't straight. I got teased and bullied by the other kids, mostly by the athletic and popular types. One boy in particular—a pudgy, acne-riddled member of one of the less successful sports teams—was relentless. I did my best to avoid interacting with him, yet somehow my very existence was enough for him to seek me out. If I was going to be queer, then he wouldn't let me be happy.

But then, one spring evening as I was leaving a late jazz band practice, he approached me in the boys' room. As he slowly moved close to me with balled fists, I thought I was about to get the beating of a lifetime. I started shaking, and just as I started to cry, he kissed me. It wasn't a romantic kiss. It was barely even a lustful kiss. But finally, after years of simultaneous denial and hope for a moment like this, it was happening.

Neither of us spoke a word as we went into the farthest stall from the door. With only spit and the lubricant from his condom fighting the friction, he thrust himself into me. The pain was immediate and intense. I didn't think sex was supposed to feel like this but I had limited knowledge of the mechanics of anal sex. Maybe it was supposed to hurt the first time. I'd always heard that was true for a girl's first time being penetrated so why would it be different for me? I found it difficult to stay quiet enough not to get caught but that proved irrelevant because it was over almost as quickly as it began.

For the second time, I thought I had really lost my virginity.

For the second time, I feigned joy, all the while feeling detached.

Over the next several years, I had sexual encounters with a number of folks, both male and female. Accepting my queerness made my sex life better but something still felt wrong. I went away to college, and on a small liberal arts campus far from home, I found the language to understand what was so different about me. I learned that transgender people really do exist, and not just as drag queens or fetishistic transvestites paraded on the trashy daytime television shows. In this brand-new world, I learned that even though my birth certificate says
male
, I didn't have to be someone I'm not.

I came out as trans during my first semester on campus. As my understanding of myself grew and my identity evolved, I found myself in a community that embraced me for who I was. When my friends' parents would meet me and later ask whether I was a man or a woman, my friends often replied
Does it really matter?
or
That's Alex Meeks.

But while my social circle began to recognize me as feminine or transcending gender, some things still weren't right. I felt like partners were having sex with me as they would with a man and I was not bringing my true identity into the bedroom. I only knew how to have sex
like a man
. I didn't know how to view my genitalia as anything other than masculine. Even when I slept with chasers, people who fetishize trans bodies and experiences, I still felt that I was being viewed sexually as a man. I felt doomed to eternal disconnection from my body, emotionally absent as I experienced physical intimacy and pleasure.

But then, two years after I graduated from college, I met Drew. My roommate and a friend visiting from out of town were at a dive bar in the small town where I lived, and they invited me to join them. We were enjoying cheap beer and stimulating conversation when this beautiful man walked right over to our table and sat down across from me. Until my roommate introduced us, I hadn't realized our friend had brought a roommate along for the trip. Drew was the kind of attractive that made it hard for me to speak. We talked about the mundane sorts of things people discuss while hanging out at a dive bar, but whenever our eyes met, we held each other's gaze ever-so-slightly longer than normal in a friendly interaction. He reached his leg out under the table and slowly began massaging my foot with his.

Our small group walked from the bar to a diner down the street and he reached for my hand and innocently held it, throwing the occasional smirk and a wink. At the diner, we continued our game of footsie. Mundane conversations evolved into more personal dialogue as we discussed the intricacies and nuance of queer sexualities. I was surprised when Drew revealed that he was also trans while discussing how our sexualities evolve as we grow and change as people. I felt a brief moment of jealousy. Although I had been living as a woman in many facets of my life for years, nobody was ever surprised to learn that my gender identity differed from what I was assigned at birth.

After we ate, four of us went back to my shoebox of a basement apartment—Drew, his roommate, my roommate, and me. We piled on the pullout bed in the living room, drinking beers and watching cartoons. Before I really knew what was happening, Drew kissed me. Our roommates kissed. After a few minutes, they went elsewhere.

BOOK: The V-Word
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