I suppose this works as a follow up to the post I wrote the other day. The news of the day (well, really the last couple of days) is our public introduction to Caitlyn Jenner. The first moment I saw the cover and looked at Caitlyn I thought to myself, "She looks amazing!" What I saw was a woman who looked comfortable and confident in her body. When I watched the interview with Diane Sawyer, I saw something different, a person that looked uncomfortable. Perhaps this was partially projection on my side, but looking at the two side by side, there is a difference.
The downside to such a public transition is the very public voice that begins to emerge. Of course, in my news feed I see many comments of support. When I click on the various articles and links and look at the comments on them, a different voice is seen. People refusing to use the new name. Refusing to use the correct pronoun. People describing this as disgusting and against God's Will. And, of course, those who see this as nothing by a stunt to get more ratings.
My first experience with transgender folks was back in the late '90s. I was working for USWest at the time and one of my co-worker's husband was beginning to transition. As a male, he struggled with depression which fueled an alcohol addiction. He felt trapped in a life that wasn't right. He loved his wife, but hated his body and who he was. My co-worker had taken the job at USWest partially because she needed the pay it offered, but also because of the medical benefits it provided her spouse. These benefits included hormones and surgery.
This co-worker was the first I'd come out to at work. I was out in my private life and USWest had an LGBT employee organization that gave me the courage to be out at work too. After I told her, she had someone that she could open up to about what she was experiencing with her spouse. I didn't know really anything about transitioning. I especially didn't understand why someone would want to. I was raised as a boy and always felt comfortable with all of my bits and pieces. I couldn't really wrap my brain around the idea, but I lent a sympathetic ear.
The hardest part for my co-worker was that she wanted to get her spouse out of the house. Living in Helena, her spouse was terrified of going out. Of the looks and the comments. I left USWest and started managing a movie theater. It became their special treat with one another. They'd come during the week, when we didn't have many customers. They knew that I'd make both of them feel welcome. The first time I met my co-worker's spouse I was confused. I didn't know what to say or how to act, but I smiled and thanked them for coming in. I keep using the word spouse because that was how they preferred to recognize each other.
I understood immediately why her spouse was afraid to go out. She had a very masculinized body, even after being on hormones for quite sometime. She told me on one their nights out that she hated that all anyone saw was a man in a dress. I told her that I didn't see her that way and she told me I was sweet. But it was true. I didn't see her as a man in a dress. I saw her as a woman. With tears in her eyes, she kissed me on the cheek.
After I moved to Missoula, I had the good fortune of meeting other people who were in various stages of transitioning. I still didn't understand it, but I supported them. I made a few stumbles, mixing up pronouns or deflecting my own insecurities and lack of internal understanding with my usual off-color remarks. One particular moment of stupidity on my part came when I asked a friend if she planned to have surgery. She said she wasn't sure and my brain hit a speed bump. Until then, I thought the end goal of transitioning was complete transformation. I made a remark, which I won't repeat here, that ended up ending our relationship. It wasn't my intent to insult her or hurt her. I reacted without thinking. It has been years since it happened and I still feel utterly ashamed of it.
The first moment of understanding happened when I had my first complete physical examination from a doctor. I was thirty at the time, which probably sounds odd that I was that old before having a physical. I was never involved in any athletics or other activities which would require it and I had never thought to actually schedule an appointment to have one. After the urging of my husband, we agreed to do it together. Our doctor's office let us set up back to back appointments with our doctor and he examined us together. I was the first one of us to have to "turn his head and cough," and that was when it happened. He couldn't find my testicles. I was horribly embarrassed in the moment, especially when he looked up at me and asked why I had never noticed that I was different, given that I am a homosexual man and likely had seen other men. I figured everyone is a little different and just chalked it up to genetics. He eventually found them, but was concerned and ordered an extra set of tests.
When my lab results came back, I met with the doctor again. He explained that normally a male should have a testosterone level of between 300 - 1000. Mine was 60. Another round of tests looking at the pituitary gland and other areas that could affect it showed those levels as normal. He said it was possible that I was XXY. We could run tests to confirm it, but they'd be expensive and my insurance wouldn't cover it. This visit was the first time I had heard the term intersex and he used it to describe me. He wasn't convinced that I was XXY as I lacked many of the tell-tale body signals for it, including the fact that I had quite a bit of body hair. Before meeting with me, he had contacted an endocrinologist and showed him the test results and the recommendation was to treat me as if I was XXY and put me on testosterone replacement.
I remember trying to reconcile myself as intersexed. Up until that moment, my understanding of myself was that I was born male, I was raised male, I felt male. I had a rough time growing a beard, but had long attributed it to the Native American genes I'd inherited from my father. I had some struggles at first, but resolved that I was male. There was no question in my mind about this at all.
This changed a couple of years ago. It was a particularly icy winter day. As long as I can remember, I have been terrified of icy conditions, always afraid I was going to slip and crack my head open. I got to the bottom of my stairs and slipped on a patch of ice landed on the right side of my butt. After a couple of failed attempts, I struggled to my feet. I walked around the corner of my building to my car. As I stepped off the curb, my foot found another patch of ice and down I went, landing the same way as I did before. I was frustrated, cold and wet as I pushed myself up. I drove in the early morning darkness to work. I noticed I was running late, I tried to walk quickly and carefully towards the office doors. I saw the glimmer of another patch of ice and figured I would try to get to the get around it, but missed the snow covered ice patch in from of me. Down I went, but this time with more speed and force. Like the previous two times, I landed on my right side. This time was different. As I got up, I felt like I had taken a swift kick to the groin and my stomach was in knots.
I told the security guys about my fall and had to write up an incident report. I reported it to my supervisor and she gave me the Worker's Compensation information. I told her I was certain that it wasn't necessary, but took it anyways. The whole day was one of general pain, as anyone who has been kicked can attest.
I didn't realize anything was wrong until I got home and started a shower for myself. I saw the dark bruise along my thigh from my wallet chain. I could see each link in the bruise. As I started to wash up, my mind became aware even if I didn't want to be. Two things were missing. They might be different from other males, but I knew where they should be and they weren't there. My testicles had vanished. I was too embarrassed to insist on going to the ER, figuring a trip to Urgent Care in the morning would be ok. I was in shock. I couldn't really think. The next morning, the doctor confirmed they were not where they should be. After a trip to radiology to get an ultra sound, I was told by a student technician, a regular technician, and then a radiologist that they couldn't find both of them. The radiologist did find one, but not where it should be. Returning to Urgent Care, the doctor said that they may have retreated and the trauma may have caused swelling. He gave me some NSAIDS and sent me home. I dubbed this whole even "Finding Nemo," only we still hadn't found them.
I scheduled a follow up with my doctor for a few weeks later. They had moved, but still hadn't returned home. The doctor felt around and eventually found both of them but was unable to get them to go back to where they should be. He let me know that both of them were dislocated, something I didn't know could happen. It is rare, but can (and clearly does) happen. My doctor's initial assessment was that since they seemed to drop down to regulate temperature, it could be left as is. We could also set up surgery to pull them down and stitch them into place. The last option was to have them removed, since they weren't doing their normal job anyways. He cautioned that if they stop regulating temperature, it may lead to testicular cancer, at which point removal would be the only viable option. To date, I haven't had any surgery.
The accident brought back up the questions I had about my sex. Now, part of my external was missing. It created a good bit of dissonance for me. Inside, in my mind, I felt male. Outside, in my body, I felt distinctly not male. Given their size, I was surprised that it could feel so different, but it did. Over the years I have questioned myself if I'd feel more male if I had them pulled back into place. Or should I have them removed and see if replacement would work. Since I haven't done it, I don't know, but the veil had been pulled back for me. I realize that this isn't quite the same for transgender folk, but I started to understand. The accident dropped my testosterone level even lower (putting it at 40). I felt externally more akin to the doctor's diagnosis of intersex. But, that isn't who I am inside.
My mind started to settle when I took a class on Gender, Race, and Class. Added to this, I also took a class focused on Queer Theory. Through these classes and by reaching out and talking to my friends who are transitioning, I started to consider sex and gender differently. I realized that I could be intersex and male. That the bits didn't define how I, or anyone else, had identify or express themselves. I can be masculine most of the time and have my feminine moments and still be male. People transitioning don't need to have surgery. The goal, at least as I have come to understand it, is to be happy and healthy and be who you are supposed to be. And, ultimately, to have the world see you for who you are.
I have to thank all of my friends of all sorts of genders. I know I haven't always been the quickest learner. Sometimes, as much as I'd like to just be able to understand and empathize/sympathize, I need to experience some part of it. All of you have been wonderful about answering questions, especially when I have felt awkward asking. I have always felt like we have grown into a culture that is too afraid to ask personal questions. Sometimes the answer, isn't any of our business. And I am always ok with the answer of "None of your business, Will." But, for me at least, the easiest way I can understand to question. To take the answer and mull it over and take into me all of what I can of it. Sometimes, it leads to more questions. Other times, it clicks and I get an "AHH GOT IT!"
I decided to write this after seeing so many hurtful comments out there about Caitlyn and others in transition. To me it seems odd. As we grow up, we change. For me, I have changed names a few times. I was Cody for a while (and still am to my family). I have been Bill. Most of the time, anymore, I am somewhere between William and Will. And when I am especially Irish, I am Liam. I am not the same person I was when I was 6. Nor am I the person I was in my twenties. I can't even say that I am totally the person I was three years ago, before I started school. At no point, was I ever met with resistance about my changes. No one ever told me that it was disgusting that I had changed. Nor was it unnatural. Or against God's Will. Now, admittedly, these types of changes aren't the same as people who are transitioning. And most people, looking at me, wouldn't know that I am classified as intersex. But, I feel like people should accept the changes people make in themselves. It takes a good deal of courage to be who you are. Love them. Accept them. Support them. Even if you don't fully get why they might have changed-- because life is too short and precious to fill with hate.
Showing posts with label Family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Family. Show all posts
Friday, June 5, 2015
Tuesday, December 24, 2013
'Tis the Season
Christmas is probably one of my favorite
holidays and has been since I was a little kid. I guess most kids that
celebrate Christmas enjoy it. The big dinner, all the cookies and candies, plus
the gifts. But for me, it wasn't just about that. It was quite a magical time,
as clichéd as that seems now. Anything was possible. And it was the one time
each year where I felt important, loved and connected with my family.
Most Christmases started out the same. My parents would ask me what I wanted for Christmas. "An Easy Bake Oven," was my usual response. I really wanted Santa to bring me one, because I knew they were a little bit more than my family could afford, but I really wanted one. Mainly so I could make treats for people.
After the usual question, came getting the tree. At our house, we always had a fresh tree. Dad would go out and find it. I thought he was going out into the forest to track down the perfect one and I wasn't actually disappointed when I found out that he was really just going to one of the little tree sellers that are ubiquitous during this time of year. We would dig out the ornaments from storage and I would take time to pull out all of my favorites and make sure that we had hangers for them. There were various ones that I made during school: a pine cone swirled in glitter to make it look like a little tree, various ones made of inedible dough in various shapes and painted or colored, school pictures. There were also the old ones that my mom still had from when she was a little girl. Every year there were fewer of those, as they were often made of glass and I wasn't as dainty as I should have been with them. We would also get a new ornament each year and usually get a few generic colored ones just to round out the tree. Steven or Mom would get the lights on the tree and then it was my job to decorate as high as I could, with my Mom and brother getting the top areas. And then we would tinsel it. And to finish it off, a bit of water and some ammonia to keep the cats way from the tree and the skirt to cover the stand up.
Buying presents came next and happened around the twentieth. Either my parents or grandparents would give me some money, somewhere between twenty and forty dollar to Christmas is probably one of my favorite holidays and has been since I was a little kid. I guess most kids that celebrate Christmas enjoy it. The big dinner, all the cookies and candies, plus the gifts. But for me, it wasn't just about that. It was quite a magical time, as clichéd as that seems now. Anything was possible. And it was the one time each year where I felt important, loved and connected with my family.
Most
Christmases started out the same. My parents would ask me what I wanted for
Christmas. "An Easy Bake Oven," was my usual response. I really wanted
Santa to bring me one, because I knew they were a little bit more than my
family could afford, but I really wanted one. Mainly so I could make treats for
people.
After
the usual question, came getting the tree. At our house, we always had a fresh
tree. Dad would go out and find it. I thought he was going out into the forest
to track down the perfect one and I wasn't actually disappointed when I found
out that he was really just going to one of the little tree sellers that are
ubiquitous during this time of year. We would dig out the ornaments from
storage and I would take time to pull out all of my favorites and make sure
that we had hangers for them. There were various ones that I made during
school: a pine cone swirled in glitter to make it look like a little tree,
various ones made of inedible dough in various shapes and painted or colored,
school pictures. There were also the old ones that my mom still had from when
she was a little girl. Every year there were fewer of those, as they were often
made of glass and I wasn't as dainty as I should have been with them. We would
also get a new ornament each year and usually get a few generic colored ones
just to round out the tree. Steven or Mom would get the lights on the tree and
then it was my job to decorate as high as I could, with my Mom and brother
getting the top areas. And then we would tinsel it. And to finish it off, a bit
of water and some ammonia to keep the cats way from the tree and the skirt to
cover the stand up.
Buying
presents came next and happened around the twentieth. Either my parents or
grandparents would give me some money, somewhere between twenty and forty
dollar to get five gifts. When I was very small, I would go with my Mom and
brother to get gifts. I'd buy Steven's gift while I was with Mom and then he
and I would dash off to find something for her. Books were almost always the
perfect things to get both of them. Mom would either get a Shannara book (if
there was a new one out), one by Danielle Steele, or some trashy romance novel
(I had no idea what was in them, but I would find ones that looked like the
ones she usually read). Steven would get a horror novel or some book he had
pointed out a week or two before. Dad was easy to shop for, usually soap on a
rope and some socks. Grandma and Grandpa were tough. I never really knew what
to get them and I would tirelessly try to find the right thing. Eventually, my
Mom would suggest something like slippers or a set of different flavored jams
and I'd agree that would be good.
As I got older, Christmas shopping became the one time every year where I was free to wander off alone in the store. I insisted on it, because I didn't want to spoil the surprise of the gift. Although I love the idea of presents being a surprise, I still struggle with keeping them that way. Steven and I started out own tradition of telling each other what we got for the other and then seeing who could act the most surprised. It couldn't be over the top campy surprised either. We had to be believable because we were afraid that Mom and Dad would figure it out and make us stop doing it.
Once
all of the presents were wrapped we put the ones for each other under our
wonderful tree and keep the ones for Grandma and Grandpa separate. It was
usually a good idea. The cats seemed to take out their dissatisfaction with the
ammonia and not being able to play with the tree out on the gifts. If they got
a big enough piece off of one of mine, I would try to figure out what it was.
My parents got wise to this and started doing the Russian doll trick with the
presents for both Steven and I.
On
Christmas Eve, we would go up to Unionville, where my grandparents lived with
our gifts in the trunk and Steven and I pressed together in the back seat of
the family Chevy Citation. One year, as we drove up and I stared out the
window, I swore I saw a sleigh and some stuff in it. By the time I tried to get
Steven's attention, it was a blur behind us and no one believed me that I saw
it. I still don't know what it was, because it was gone when we went back to
town. Every time I drive up that road, even as an adult, I try to figure out
where it could have been, because there just doesn't seem like there would have
been a place for it.
I loved the way my Grandparents decorated for Christmas. Grandma would take the Christmas Cards she received and use them to decorate their small artificial tree. Instead of lights, they had a spinning lighted color wheel that was aimed at the tree. It was just beautiful. We would have some dinner and I would tell myself I was going to try a green olive, but I never did. Once we ate our fill, it was time to pass out the Christmas presents. We started the tradition of naming one family member to be Santa. This person was responsible to grab each present and hand it directly to the person who it was addressed to. The role of Santa alternated for a while, but eventually fell to me. By the time I was twelve, this was literally the best part. The thing I looked forward to the most. I loved grabbing a present and giving it to the person and watching their face light up. When I came to one for me, I would get a little awkward and open it, or I would try to just put it aside and find another one I could give to someone else.
My
favorite gift that I gave to someone was after I was grown and moved out of the
house. By then, Grandma had passed and my parents were living with Grandpa up
in Unionville. Growing up, my mother had very few picture of me from when I was
a baby. My Father kept them after the divorce and wouldn't part with them. Once
he and I started speaking with one another in my adulthood, I asked him for the
pictures or at least the negatives or something. I really didn't know what I
looked like as a baby. And he was nice enough to send them to me. I had a set
of them developed and got nice wooden frames for them. I wrapped them and
brought them up on my yearly trip to Unionville. When I gave them to her, I
just stopped and watched as she ripped the paper off. One tear and she saw the
face and she started crying and shaking and needed a moment to get through the
rest of it. There were four pictures that she had thought were lost. It was
wonderful knowing that she had them again.
After
presents, the family would get into two cars and drive to Saint Peter's Episopal
Church. We would try to get there early enough to get a good seat. Midnight
Mass there was always so amazing. Often included a large choir, brass and
percussion, piano, organ, and there were so many lights. The carols and hymns
were my favorites to sing. When I was young, I would often find a way to fall
asleep during Mass, which probably worked out for the best. Little boys in
suits trying to sit still when they are full of energy are not the easiest
things to keep contained. As I learned how to settle down, I was able to stay
up through the whole service and loved every minute of it.
Whether
I started my slumber at church or not, sleep usually came pretty easy for me.
But Christmas morning was even cooler than Saturday mornings and I would be the
first one up and waiting for everyone else. Once I was in my pre-teens that
meant I was responsible for making the coffee for everyone. I learned not to
wake my family before they are good and ready to wake up. Think waking up a den
of bears early from hibernation. Coffee only saves you a little bit. So usually
I would just sit and watch TV (Christmas parade of course). Once everyone was
up, we would pass out gifts. For some reason, it took me longer to get my
parents to do the Santa thing at our house. Once I was able to get them to do
it, I was designated permanent Santa, which was fine by me.
Christmas
also marked the second holiday each year that was celebrated with Turkey
dinner. Mom would start cooking usually while we started passing out gifts. It
was an all-day process to make the Turkey, stuffing, jello salad, mashed
potatoes and all the rest of it. Just like Thanksgiving, we would eat our fill
and spend the early evening in a food coma. If anyone got a new board game, we
would play that after our senses returned to us.
Since
I moved to Missoula, I haven't been able to travel to Helena for Christmas.
Typically, I work the day before and or the day after and making the trip in
the snow is precarious at best and I am not a good driver. Instead, I have
hosted a number of holiday get-togethers with my family here. These have ranged
from Secret Santa or White Elephant exchanges to our annual tradition of China
Buffet for Christmas dinner. I love being able to spend this holiday with the
people I love and sometimes complete strangers. There have been a few instances
at China Buffet where Britain and I have welcomed someone that we saw sitting
by themselves to our table – just to make sure they weren't alone.
Whether
you celebrate Christmas or not, I hope that this year you are able to spend the
day with family. Christmas, at least to me, is not just celebrating the birth
of Jesus. It is celebrating hope and light in a dark time of year. It is about
family and making sure that we do what we can to take care of one another.
There is so much hate and intolerance in the world and this is a time of
loving. It can be a hard time of year for many people and the rate of suicides
are highest this time of year. Remember that your actions have consequence and
reaching out to a loved one or a stranger can be the one thing that saves their
lives.
Nollaig
Shona Daoibh (Happy Christmas to all).
Most Christmases started out the same. My parents would ask me what I wanted for Christmas. "An Easy Bake Oven," was my usual response. I really wanted Santa to bring me one, because I knew they were a little bit more than my family could afford, but I really wanted one. Mainly so I could make treats for people.
After the usual question, came getting the tree. At our house, we always had a fresh tree. Dad would go out and find it. I thought he was going out into the forest to track down the perfect one and I wasn't actually disappointed when I found out that he was really just going to one of the little tree sellers that are ubiquitous during this time of year. We would dig out the ornaments from storage and I would take time to pull out all of my favorites and make sure that we had hangers for them. There were various ones that I made during school: a pine cone swirled in glitter to make it look like a little tree, various ones made of inedible dough in various shapes and painted or colored, school pictures. There were also the old ones that my mom still had from when she was a little girl. Every year there were fewer of those, as they were often made of glass and I wasn't as dainty as I should have been with them. We would also get a new ornament each year and usually get a few generic colored ones just to round out the tree. Steven or Mom would get the lights on the tree and then it was my job to decorate as high as I could, with my Mom and brother getting the top areas. And then we would tinsel it. And to finish it off, a bit of water and some ammonia to keep the cats way from the tree and the skirt to cover the stand up.
Buying presents came next and happened around the twentieth. Either my parents or grandparents would give me some money, somewhere between twenty and forty dollar to Christmas is probably one of my favorite holidays and has been since I was a little kid. I guess most kids that celebrate Christmas enjoy it. The big dinner, all the cookies and candies, plus the gifts. But for me, it wasn't just about that. It was quite a magical time, as clichéd as that seems now. Anything was possible. And it was the one time each year where I felt important, loved and connected with my family.
As I got older, Christmas shopping became the one time every year where I was free to wander off alone in the store. I insisted on it, because I didn't want to spoil the surprise of the gift. Although I love the idea of presents being a surprise, I still struggle with keeping them that way. Steven and I started out own tradition of telling each other what we got for the other and then seeing who could act the most surprised. It couldn't be over the top campy surprised either. We had to be believable because we were afraid that Mom and Dad would figure it out and make us stop doing it.
I loved the way my Grandparents decorated for Christmas. Grandma would take the Christmas Cards she received and use them to decorate their small artificial tree. Instead of lights, they had a spinning lighted color wheel that was aimed at the tree. It was just beautiful. We would have some dinner and I would tell myself I was going to try a green olive, but I never did. Once we ate our fill, it was time to pass out the Christmas presents. We started the tradition of naming one family member to be Santa. This person was responsible to grab each present and hand it directly to the person who it was addressed to. The role of Santa alternated for a while, but eventually fell to me. By the time I was twelve, this was literally the best part. The thing I looked forward to the most. I loved grabbing a present and giving it to the person and watching their face light up. When I came to one for me, I would get a little awkward and open it, or I would try to just put it aside and find another one I could give to someone else.
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