Male Like Me

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{I made this comment on a board I frequent. Reposted so I'll remember it.}

[TW: abuse, violence, sexual assault]

Something seems hollow and inauthentic about my experiences as a male. I guess because I never really believed or embraced the gender; I was just pushed into it and barely went along to avoid the consequences of nonconformance. I hated being male and generally disliked other males for reasons far beyond the various manifestations of gendered violence. So when I speak poorly of the experience, there's a hefty grain of salt that needs to go along with it. But, nevertheless:

I hated being male so much. You can't be pretty or desired. You can't break down. You can't be emotional, unless you're angry. You hide all your pain, you joke all the time, and you present or you get swallowed.

Men are disgustingly violent towards women. But they're also profoundly violent against each other. I had "friends" my entire life hit me, constrain me, pinch me, jab me, pin me, take such pleasure in my pain. Whether it's inane competitions in video games, whether it's physically dominating me, whether it's "anything you can do, I can do better." Because they're always proving themselves. They're always clawing, always jockeying.

And when they're embarrassed, when they're defeated, when they're laughed out, when they're humiliated it's stored. And just like my father and so many others do, they let it out upon those who can't or won't fight back [so so often women]. They dominate you, show they're in control, let out every negativity upon you until it's clear that at least they're better than shit like you.

Such violence is gendered, but I know women and girls act it out, too. I was always surprised at the stark contrast between my slumber parties and my sister's: In hers, her disparate friend groups would divide into camps, literally demarcating sections of the house. Some who were acceptable to other camps could cross lines, could flit around, but the politicking was as passive-aggressive as it was still violent. In my slumber parties, guys just hit each other and let out all their aggressions in plain view. There were no politics. Just assertions.

All of this is to say that masculinity needs the deconstruction and liberation significant portions of femininity gained via feminism. Because when girls can cry and boys can't, the boys find other ways to express their pain. So much of their violence was the result of other violence; cultural violence saying they needed to prove themselves, modeled violence showing no other way to be, personal violence with every hurt every person inflicts upon another.

Hurt begets hurt, violence begets violence. My father was molested and never spoke about it, perhaps the biggest hurt in a life of them. He hated himself. He found himself in a point in life where everything was misery, where he fervently believed he was unlovable, where there was simply no hope. So he dominated his family, casting a blanket of fear over us with his very presence. My sister was the one whose hurt was so angry, who hit and screamed and clawed at me, my mother. And I internalized and used the violence to hurt myself. But it all trickles down.

That's why feminism, why social justice can't just be about one group. It's all or nothing. One person's hurt becomes everyone's hurt, one way or another. And masculinity is just one place where there's so, so much work left to be done.

Your Knowing Makes Me Real

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Am I an emotional exhibitionist? I sometimes wonder. My refusal to filter into “appropriate” settings is really problematic, but something inside me insists upon it. As if I, and all the experience that encompasses, cannot exist in a vacuum. It’s a reverse solipsism: I don’t exist except in your head.
Or perhaps it’s moreso because I know whatever fall-out may result is thoroughly hypocritical. People have “led lives of quiet desperation” for as long as there have been people; I just find it distasteful that so many do it so quietly. Is my “exhibitionism” so crass because I am not quiet? Surely it is not the very fact that I feel the way I feel, for so so many others do. It is just that I will not avoid it. My main fear, actually, is for you. The burden of action/inaction, the burden of witness, the sharing of a burden which by all rights I ought to carry alone. Certainly, you can choose to skip it entirely. But that’s another guilt all the same.
You cannot help me. Or at least you cannot do more. And part of me wants to disappear entirely, to scour myself from all visibility to spare you the worry, the pain, the shared burden you take on simply by virtue of knowing. I don’t know how to mitigate it. I don’t. Just as my pain is thoroughly upon me to negotiate, your burden is for you. And I wish I could both be heard and not hurt. I really do. And I am so sorry, so so sorry that this is a tension I so unsuccessfully tread. Please do not hurt on my account. Please do not worry on my account. I am as I have been and will continue to be; the only difference is your knowing. And your knowing makes me real.
But still. I am so sorry. Disengage or leave or veer away if you need to. Please. Please.

So much the more

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I don't want to talk about it anymore, talk anymore. I have always wanted to talk before, always talked for talking is all the only I could do. But now I can't even talk, can't even say, can't ar-ti-cu-late the questions. Because there are no questions. There have always been questions with no answers. Now there are answered questions, and I have no reason to ask anymore. I have always searched for the answers, always struggled because if I reach harderfasterstronger I believed I could touch you for as long as I needed.

But my arms aren't long enough. And you are too far away. As a matter of physics, as a matter of natural law we, I, you cannot be what who we want need. The answer is not in that ether waiting to be snatched like a lethargic firefly in the dusk on a breezy summer evening with you wrapped in me and smiles and eyes and everything in us. No. The answer is that the arm cannot stretch so far. Or the firefly explodes and your bloody stump yearns for when you didn't reach so far. No. The answer is not in the words. And whatever you say feel is so far from what I'm not.

I want to drift unmoored, to be cut
from the cord that ties me to this.
I want to dissipate and be that emptiness.
Because there are no more words.
There are only
more and more and more
So much the more that
I
can never be.

[TW: Suicide]

When I was a sophomore in college, I would spend hours just researching ways to kill myself. It's trickier than you might think, if you want to do it in the way that is least traumatizing to others and most likely to kill you instead of dropping you in a painful and, more importantly, expensive limbo.

-Overdosing is notoriously ineffective. Whether it's bleach or pills, they can wreck havoc on your internal organs while still not killing you.
-Gun shots are particularly grizzly for the person who finds you and obtaining them can be problematic with the confrontation involved in a background check/purchase process, a particular obstacle for the average depressive. [fun fact: on average, women attempt suicide more often, but men actually commit it more often because men use lethal methods like gun wounds and women tend to overdose].
-It's difficult to gauge how effective falls can be, even if you can access a high enough point.
-Jumping from bridges into water is likely to make your body difficult/expensive to find [not to mention the pain of being paralyzed and then sinking into water to be drowned over the course of a fear minutes].
- Hanging has to be done right and can often be rather painful. Attempting to break one's neck is ideal instead of simply relying on asphyxiation, but if the cord snaps or something goes awry you can be injured enough to be significantly inconveniencing without actually succeeding.
-Cutting one's wrists can take awhile and requires particular fortitude to consistently inflict self-harm.
-Carbon monoxide poisoning via one's car is another physics problem, generally necessitating a garage or at least semi-sophisticated tubing.

In short, if there was a button I could press, I'd be long dead. But my own aversion to pain, particularly in the risk pain inherently has in potential long-term damage causing one to be a barrier to one's loved ones, and my own tired depression largely prevented me from ever attempting anything suitably lethal. When I did finally decide to try to kill myself, in September of 2006, I drove to an empty downtown parking garage at 3am, took a few sleeping pills, put a plastic bag over my head closed with a rubber band, and waited. My breath made it moist and uncomfortable, the bag probably porous for all I know. The pills, of course, in the dosage I took them, weren't effective. And my adrenaline kept me too widely alert to everything to even believe I'd be successful. When the moistwarmconstriction just seemed like it would keep on going forever without ever working, I took the bag off and sat disgusted with how I failed so pitifully even at this. I tried again, with the same results. And that was that.

This was while I was in counseling, while I had supportive friends, while I'd been thinking of suicide for years. I was probably even on antidepressants at the time. I call it a suicide attempt because I was genuinely committed to attempting suicide, but my precautions deterred success. I shot myself in the foot instead of the head. So to speak.

I didn't give up on it, though. And although there have been long periods without suicidal ideation, it's never really left. Nothing, aside from stable romantic love, can calm me like thinking about suicide can. The idea that if I can just end it all if I do anything too terrible, if I'm too much of a burden or a waste, if I'm just too tired to bother anymore is incredibly comforting. It's the satisfaction of not eating all day without the negative effects upon my work/capabilities.

In the past few months, I've been researching again as a coping mechanism; the "exit machine" on wikipedia seems quite promising. Next time, I'll use a similar method but with some adjustments. Pills are too unreliable to be effective at knocking myself out; what I need is gas [helium or hydrogen, specifically]. Helium gas pumping into the right kind of plastic bag securely fastened will knock me out quickly. The lack of oxygen either via the helium or because I'll be encased in the bag should asphyxiate me to the appropriately fatal degree. I imagine there's some risk of brain damage at being deprived of oxygen and then being saved, which merits some consideration. Exit International suggests manipulating the helium release  on the cannister so one can control the amount released, ensuring consistent gas delivery. I'm not really sure I'm up to that or if it's entirely necessary. But it's comforting to have in my back pocket all the same.

[Addendum: I am honest because I need to face the demons swirling inside me, which I force by making what most might keep private public. I honestly don’t mean to alarm or elicit concern.
I’m at no greater risk now than I’ve usually been. And there’s very little that can be done or said to change that.
I don’t really like it. But it’s just how these things work.]

More Waiting

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I’m presenting as Dylan tomorrow for my grandfather’s 90th birthday. They’re the only people I’ve not come out to, mainly because my father thinks me coming out to them would kill them:
“You do what you have to do. But have a responsibility because they’re my parents.”
I wish I could adequately convey what he does to me. The petrifying, melting, violence that just being with him is. It’s actually convenient he’s written me off after I’ve transitioned; I don’t have to worry about seeing him much. He looks at me with this profound sadness, as if he knows that now, truly, I will never amount to anything, never do enough to make his own life worthwhile by proxy.
I hate presenting as Dylan. I hate it, in part, because it’s so easy. I wear baggier pants, no bra, the same oversized t-shirts I wore then. Voila. That it is so easy is crushing. As if all that separates me from being male is a type of shirt. As if I really am fooling myself. As if I’ll never be who I need to be.
And looking at myself, I can easily see that I won’t. Dylan stares back at me at will, and the entire past few months just seem like one giant charade. Do I pass? Do people just give me the benefit of a doubt?
I realize this, too, shall pass. That someday I can have a career I will enjoy, I can have a self I like, I can have the love and life I want. Or at least I can keep trying with very good chances. But goddamn if I don’t look at myself in the mirror, seeing what I’ll see all day tomorrow, and think that nothing’s worth the wait.