Tuesday, August 17, 2021

Goth/Matrix night

It was the best and most impactful night of my life!!! 
The night before I got into a really bad fight with Gabriella and it left me feeling really insecure. I was already feeling insecure about my gender and who I am but she made me feel like shit for being more masc. 
It was a horrible night. But i knew something huge was coming, that when i went to the club last night i was going to meet my "white rabbit"...like from the matrix. The matrix is actually an allegory for the trans experience and the awakening which happens. 
Anyway, mom and I went out shopping yesterday because she felt bad for me and I got this flowing dress that really showed off my cleavage. I felt hot in it and with my short blonde hair, it was my MOOD. it was perfect. 
I got complimented so many times on my dress and my hair...so many times. It's what I needed. And everytime someone misgendered me, I corrected them. "No, I'm a trans man and these are my pronouns. I'm just a very girly man." And they'd just hug me and be so accepting of me. 
I danced all over the dance for in a way i never had. It's like this dream we always had of going to the club together and dancing and forgetting all of our problems and not caring what people thing and just letting all the negative things wash away into the ground with every movement. It was like a movie, what I'd always wanted to experience. I even danced with other people I didn't know which usually I'm too shy to do. This one guy whose really a good dancer was having so much fun with me and he thanked me for dancing with him!! I didn't think my body could take it. I'm sure you were there because I'd been feeling this moment come for so many years, it was my dream to feel this way. Completely me...trans and beautiful. Then, one of the djs brought me to meet her trans/nonbinary friend who was tucked away at the corner of the club. I felt like I was meeting someone really special and she said, "Meet Bunni." I'd met my white rabbit. Bunni had a white rimmed had on and looked so fucking magical. I was blown away by them. We talked for a long time about the trans experiences and they told me about ways to have a passport as an ID & how to travel by plane without getting strip searched.
I did my hair this way to match Switch from the Matrix who is trans. 
And two days before I wrote in my journal, "transrevolution". That's what I feel I am a part of. That night there was a very tall trans woman and she a bit older. She seemed shy because physically she still looked very manly. I immediately became her best friend and we danced all night and talked. She told me about her love who lives in Denver and it was really amazing. Then, right as the night was ending. There was this gay guy who came over to me and was just going into detail about how much he loved my hair. But he kept misgendering me so I told him I was a trans man. 
Then it lead into a half hour talk of how he'd always thought he was a trans woman but never felt safe to admit it to him and lives with a very conservative family. He talked about how depressed he's been because of it. He said I was the first person he ever admitted this to and it just changed his life. We got each others social media accounts and I'm going to keep checking in with him. 
I gave him resources to help him but I'm so proud of him!! 
I told him that's why I'm so fucking flamboyant about it. Because I want to support those who are afraid. 

Thursday, August 12, 2021

Pronouns & punching up vs. punching down humor

It’s up to allies, and cisgender allies in particular, to learn to start respecting the pronouns we’re asked to use. If someone tells you they use they/them pronouns, you should practice referring to that person as “them,” because that’s what they asked you to do. If someone you’ve known your whole life as a “she” suddenly starts asking you to refer to them as “he,” you make an effort, and do so. You will almost certainly make mistakes. That’s understandable. Apologize and move on. But being an ally means putting your own comfort second.


Why Stating Pronouns is Important

         Trans, non-binary, and other gender non-conforming groups have introduced cisgender people to the practice of stating pronouns during introductions. For someone who has never had to question their pronouns, it’s not always a routine thing to do, and often we need reminding to do it. This just means when you meet someone new, you say something along the lines of “Hi, my name is Gena and I use she/her pronouns.”

         For people who are cisgender, this might sometimes feel like stating the obvious. But here’s why it’s important: It’s not for you. And sometimes, it’s important to put cis-privilege to use in some way that actually contributes to equality, instead of overpowering the conversation. So even if introducing the habit of adding pronouns to your “Hello my name is” routine is a little awkward at the beginning, that’s okay. You’ll get used to it. Eventually, normalizing using pronouns every day will make it so that when people who are not cisgender use them, they don’t “stick out” as much.  

What this means is if there is a group of ten people introducing themselves, and only one of those people states personal pronouns in their introduction, that person sticks out a bit, inadvertently being spotlighted. They want their pronouns respected, but that doesn’t mean it needs to be obvious to everyone in the room that they are not cisgender. However,  if everyone in that room says their pronouns in the introduction, that one person blends right in, and doesn’t need to be isolated.

It’s worth noting though, that some people don’t feel comfortable stating their gender pronouns publicly, and just because you state yours it does not entitle you to everyone else’s. Usually, asking is okay! But if you’re concerned about outing someone, do so in a private environment when possible.

Some people’s internal identity might not exactly match their external presentation (as you perceive it). However, being referred to as the pronoun they feel most comfortable with can go a long way to improving their day, and does very little to inconvenience yours. Plus, it might increase their respect for you, and maybe even their quality of life a bit. When you use someone’s preferred pronouns, you’re acknowledging that you have respect for who they are as a human being. So, if you see someone’s social media has “they/them” on it, you know how to refer to them. It goes beyond “Hi my name is…”. There are lots of other places that we can normalize pasting our pronouns in so that people who don’t identify within traditional binary gender norms don’t have to stick out.

 Places to consider adding your pronouns

Work or school email signature

  • Social media bios (Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, etc)

  • Business cards

  • “Hello my name is” tags at events or conferences

  • Before you do a presentation (e.g., “Hi, my name is Thomas Edison, I use He/Him pronouns, and today I’m going to talk to you about this cool new invention of mine called the lightbulb”)

In sum, if everyone states their pronouns clearly from the start, not only does it reduce the chance that someone ends up being misgendered, but it also lightens the onus for those outside the binary. Inclusion happens slowly, and sometimes in the form of your Twitter bio.



Punching down vs. punching up humor 

Humor has long been used as a positive social tool, helping to bridge gaps between communities, share information, and understand the world. However, it has the potential to negative as well. Jokes at the expense of the LGBTQ community, which are often labeled reductively as “gay jokes,” can be funny. But they are often discriminatory and destructive, serving as a reproduction of oppressive social norms that have haunted the LGBTQ community for generations. Jokes at the expense of the LGBTQ community are just one example of the negative potential of humor, but this is connected to a larger struggle.

Collective liberation is the recognition that all of our struggles and identities are intimately connected, and that working together is necessary to create a better world. It is the belief that every person is worthy of dignity and respect and that, within systems of oppression, everyone suffers. What’s so funny about that? And what does it have to do with media, comedy, and non-LGBTQ people making a joke at the expense of the LGBTQ community? The answer is something that is often described as “punching down.”

The ideas of “punching down” and “punching up” are useful in understanding how to tell a joke about a vulnerable identity or community. The distinction between the two allows for a nuanced discussion about these kinds of jokes, rather than applying a blanket ethics of "good" or "bad" and calling it a day. As is often the case, the distinction comes down to social privilege. Jokes at someone’s expense can be funny-- this piece is not meant to be prescriptive. However, it is crucial to consider the context and consequences of a joke. Punching down might seem harmless, but it has far-reaching and dangerous implications. 

One popular framework that describes the ways that a joke that punches down can perpetuate discrimination is the discrimination pyramid. The discrimination pyramid is often used in the social sciences to describe the ways that attitudes create beliefs, which create verbal expressions of biases (including bigoted jokes), which eventually serve to further interpersonal and social experiences of violence and oppression. Punchlines don’t have to be at LGBTQ people’s expense in this way--they might be about LGBTQ people. Calling attention to the jacked up systems that keep LGBTQ people unequal can still be funny. While this might seem to have a lot to do with the content of the joke itself, it's also important to consider who is telling it.

Punching up can be understood as a subversive act by a vulnerable person in the face of violence and oppression. But the same joke told by someone who is not subject to the kind of oppression the joke references radically alters its meaning. Not everybody is the same, and we need to acknowledge that we all move through the world differently.

The bottom line is that it just isn’t all that funny to perpetuate systemic oppression. This statement isn't oppressing the cisgender or straight people of the world by asking them to take a second of their time to think about the consequences of their joke, and how their identity figures into those consequences. It’s lazy to do otherwise. Jokes that punch down are both a symptom and reproduction of kinds of oppression that do not apply to the person telling the joke.

The LGBTQ community is no stranger to people punching down at us. Trans women, for example, have been the butt of jokes in the cis, white dominated entertainment industry for as long as I can remember. Bisexual+ (bi, pansexual, fluid, queer, etc) people, also, are often the butt of jokes by both straight and gay people, contributing to a larger problem of exclusion and erasure that keeps bisexuals+ at higher risks for poor physical, emotional, and social health. Understanding the nuances of discrimination isn’t easy, but being mindful and open to criticism is a good starting point. 

Understanding punching up and punching down allows us to critique jokes that perpetuate discrimination, while also allowing room for jokes at the expense of those who would perpetuate oppression. LGBTQ people punching up takes back agency from their oppressors, furthering the possibility of a livable life for all vulnerable people due to our collective struggle.

Comedians, writers, and media professionals have a responsibility to acknowledge their position in relation to the subject of their content. Punching down doesn’t solve any problems, it just creates them. We can do better. I promise





Friday, August 6, 2021

queer experience

Cloud Atlas 
Matrix
27 years old, when I came out as nonbinary/trans but almost killed myself