11 April 2020

Personal Introspection: 11 April 2020

You wake up one day and find you're lost
in a sea of obscurity.
But these are waters you now realize
You've always been treading.
Gain notoriety or toil in mediocrity
We're all statistics, either way.

24 November 2019

Poem: Love and Desire: A Redux l 24 Nov 2019

No tempered steel
Pulled out of the heat
Can match this intensity
So sweet
Of poignant love
And lasting lust
These hours of longing
This desire to suffuse.

What more do you need...
I’m not one for flaunting.
And I’ve accomplished a sense
Of belonging
I have a confidence
In the strength of my knowing.

And love is not a word
Fully known by anyone:
Not poet, scientist
Activist or clergy.

You complain of abstract meaning?
What do you make of this:

I need you
I want you
Don’t try to own or overcome.
Simply gently join with me
For all eternity.

05 October 2019

Personal introspection | Memory | Being an Individual (5 Oct 2019)

When I was a kid, I loved watching raindrops rolling down the car window. It looked like they were having a race, except they'd all win, joining the collective rain puddled at the bottom of the window pane.

Life is a lot like that. We start out as individual raindrops, slipping and sliding blithely along. Then race to blend in and before we know it, we're gone.

At some point, I started cheering for those raindrops who took a new course, who darted sideways instead of down.

Inevitably, they'd reach the edge of the window, gather their watery skirts about themselves and leap. Maybe they landed on another window or the pavement for a new adventure. Maybe they landed on a leaf and slid down to the ground to nourish life. Or maybe they landed on the edge of a flower petal and gathered all the power of the sun to help make a rainbow at the end of the storm.

There might be comfort in being with the crowd, but real satisfaction in choosing your own path.

21 September 2019

Personal introspection | Self-discovery | Gender (21 Sept)

I read an interesting article that was shared in one of the Facebook groups I am in. The article is about non-binary people and how many experience a form of dysphoria. This got me to thinking (what doesn't, on average??).

Terms like non-binary, gender queer, genderfluid, gender non-conforming, etc. have different meanings but tend to be used interchangeably. And I think that because such a small number of people seem to identify in these areas of the spectrum, or are known to, there is either too little information about them or conflicting information that makes trying to explore these aspects of my identity frustrating. It makes me give up on trying to find what's been written and studied and experienced by others, and just go back to trying to understand myself, outside the context of others. Which can be good in some ways but frustrating in other ways because it can make one feel alone.

Secondly, some of the viewpoints shared by the group the article author surveyed resonated with me. The off and on again feelings about body parts that are used to identify gender. The realization that many times, my feelings about my gender are mental and emotional and physical. For years I went back and forth in my head about whether I wanted to be a male or wanted to have more of the emotional and physical attributes society associates more with masculinity than with femininity.

The only thing I could really define is that I could not and did not want to overtly demonstrate a lot of the emotional and physical attributes society associates more with femininity. I was and still am comfortable with a more masculine physical appearance in terms of dress and grooming. The older I get and the more I allow myself to explore who I am, the more I realize that I am fine being female with the appearance and behavior that makes some people call me a man. I hold within me a fluidity of the characteristics, behaviors, and traits commonly associated with both genders.

If I could live my entire life over, I know in my heart, in the fibre of my being that I would be a gay man. I don't know how to explain that without boring others more than this post probably already is, but I have no doubts that I was a gay man in my past and either loved very deeply but lost it, or never found that type of love, because when I see love and relationships between gay men, a part of my heart, mind and body aches with profound loss and longing.

Most days I barely think of myself in terms of a gender at all because of the fluidity inside of me. If "Me" was a gender, that is what I would say I am. There is no one else who has the gender I have nor does my gender stay the same even for myself because it changes daily, minutely even, based on any number of factors. Where the woman ends and the man in me begins or vice versa, I cannot define and don't see the need to. That I have decided to dress more for the man in me is purely because of the comfort, confidence, and calm it provides me. Dressing in what society sees as more feminine usually makes me feel under confident, uncomfortable and anxious. But the woman in me, that femininity, is as strong or as muted as the masculinity in me, depending on any number of factors.

There are days when being called "she" or "ma'am" annoys me. A large part of me enjoys being called a man though I don't want to be one 100% of the time. When I am mistaken for a man, I don't usually mind it at all. I know I am not a man, but I like that others see the masculinity that I am comfortable wearing (physically and mentally). Part of me gets amused and a bit annoyed when I tell others that I am mistaken for a man and they say that they can't understand that or that whoever made such a mistake was blind. I think partly when they say that, it's good-intentioned: They think I am upset that others did not identify me as a woman. In their minds, that's the normal reaction to being "mis-gendered". The idea that a person can hold both genders inside themselves fluidly is so foreign if someone has grown up always seeing a binary inside themselves and assuming it is there in others as well.

But the times when someone sees ME and doesn't define me in terms of he or she or attach strict gender norms to me or judge me because I do not demonstrate the gender they expect or the gender they see or know me to be, that's when I truly feel SEEN.

Because it seems to me anyway that there is so little known or reliably known about these identities on the spectrum or (probably more likely) these identities are so individual to the people who have them, much of who I am I have discovered for myself through a lifetime of introspection, journaling, and discussion with a select few who found a way not to judge me or dismiss me.

I am not sure I would describe how I feel about my gender as dysphoria. It's simply me. Is it hard to understand? Yes - for many people and even for me sometimes. Would I change it? No. Even on the hardest days, when I feel alone and like some bewildered flower trying to grow in a grey cracked jungle of conformity, and I entertain for a moment what it might be like to be binary, my heart, body, and mind reject it like something we know instinctively as bad for our health or well-being.

02 June 2019

Pride 2019 - A Poem to Commemorate the Stonewall Riots

The Stonewall Riots sparked the LGBTQ rights movement 50 years ago. This poem attempts to capture that momentous event up to now, Pride Month 2019. It's dedicated to every person who has helped the cause along the way and to each ambassador of Stonewall for all they represent to our community. Happy Pride!!!


It starts...

The stillness within
The indignation without
An initiation of movement
The murmur of thought

Building like lightning
Across the mind
Above the embers of the heart
A desire a want a spark

Bursting into phoenix fire
Bolstered by love and diversity
A tapestry of hands and hearts
Touching believing hoping

Rising to be noticed
At last to be seen
Respected accepted
We exist we strive we yearn.

Standing on many shoulders
Remembering what has gone before
Still much higher to climb
Dreaming of what is to come

But in this moment this breath
Reveling in the spread of color
Our symphony our spectrum
Our community our pride...

Never ends.




26 May 2019

Poem: The Darkness Behind Me (26 May 2019)

How special to know your identity
To wear it with impunity
And walk tall among society
Confident of your gender singularity.

But there is living inside of me
More than the average duality
Rather a spectrum of she and he,
The places between this binary.

Though I present with masculinity,
And the body carries a certain femininity
The mind lacks this polarity
And sees gender as a fluid continuity.

We have a picture in society
Of gender as a simple binary
Not to mention the ignoramy
Of heteronormativity.

But a rainbow lives inside of me,
A fluidity unable to be free
Because some walk tall in society
Confident we must all have gender singularity.

You're the darkness behind me
The shroud of demanded conformity
An exhausting solidarity
That says I must bottle my fluidity.

Can you open your mind to gender plurality
And the beautiful spectrum of sexuality?
Because you can still walk tall, in singularity,
While accepting gender and sexual multiplicity.


25 May 2019

Introspection on 25 May 2019

But while the Earth covered herself in forest and clouds, Humans chose metal and mortar, and we've been regretting it ever since.