Femme Friday – Saminta T. Williams

Saminta is a lesbian femme who is featured in Curve magazine in a beautiful article highlighting her wedding to lesbian stud/dom, Charlotte R. Williams. From the article:

“Lesbian visibility is important in bridal and lifestyle imagery because being a triple threat in America ain’t easy,” says Saminta.

“We need more images of our community for the next generation and those to come. Besides—we are currently here, we been here and we gonna be here in the future, and we deserve the same respect and positive representation as anyone else.”

Deep gratitude to Saminta for sharing her special day with the lesbian community. Congratulations to Saminta and Charlotte! May their years together be many and fabulous.

http://www.curvemag.com/Lifestyle/As-Seen-In-Curve-The-wedding-Of-Saminta-And-Charlotte-2441/

Every Friday, I showcase a queer femme goddess. I want to feature you! Write to me at thetotalfemme@gmail.com and let me shine a spotlight on your beautiful, unique, femme story! If you’ve written a femme story or poem or song, oh, please let me post it! New Femme Friday feature starting fall 2018: Books from which queer femmes can draw inspiration. What are your trusted sources of light and love? Please share!

 

At the Total Femme, my intention is to post three times a week: Meditations for Queer Femmes on Monday, Pingy-Dingy Wednesday on Wednesday and Femme Friday on Friday. Rather than play catch-up in a stressful fashion on those weeks when life prevents posting, I have decided to just move gaily forward: if I miss a Monday, the next post will be on Wednesday, and so on. Thank you, little bottle of antibiotics for inspiring me in this! (“…if it’s almost time for the next dose, skip the missed dose and continue your regular dosing schedule. Don’t take a double dose to make up for a missed one.”)

 

 

 

Published in: on August 30, 2019 at 11:35 AM  Leave a Comment  
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Pingy-Dingy Wednesday – Latino Outdoors

It’s hiking season here on the East Coast, and I am feeling my oats! Time to get out there and tromp about… Inspired by an article in AT Journeys, and feeling stroppy about the way outdoor activities of all kinds wear white faces, I’ve been focusing on outdoor organizations of color here of a Wednesday.

Latino Outdoors, you get one pingy-dingy! Thank you for your work decolonizing nature, the innovative way you connect people and healthy ideas, your commitment to social and environmental justice, and your beautiful outings!

http://latinooutdoors.org/

I’m a typewriter whompin’, card catalogue lovin’ white girl from back in the day, and I yearn for a time before the covers of trade paperbacks were all squidgy, so you can imagine that I don’t actually understand what a pingback is. I do know that it can in some way be part of spreading the love, and since that’s what I’m all about at The Total Femme… every Wednesday, I pay homage to the laughter, love, and inspiration to be had elsewhere online.

At the Total Femme, my intention is to post three times a week: Meditations for Queer Femmes on Monday, Pingy-Dingy Wednesday on Wednesday and Femme Friday on Friday. Rather than play catch-up in a stressful fashion on those weeks when life prevents posting, I have decided to just move gaily forward: if I miss a Monday, the next post will be on Wednesday, and so on. Thank you, little bottle of antibiotics for inspiring me in this! (“…if it’s almost time for the next dose, skip the missed dose and continue your regular dosing schedule. Don’t take a double dose to make up for a missed one.”)

 

Meditations for Queer Femmes – Solid State

Now that my final chemo treatment is completed (Aug. 14 was Blessed Numbah Six!), now that I’m starting to crawl out of the dismal realms of chemo country, I here and again find myself skirting panic (or sometimes not). Cancer panic, that is; panic that the cancer will return. Turning to The After Breast Cancer Treatment Survival Handbook compiled by Margit Esser Porter for comfort, it is disheartening to see how many entries there are by women who have had one, two, and even three reoccurrences of cancer, breast and otherwise. I mean, fucking hell! Just about now, still weighed down by post-chemo yuck, rough enough all on its own, it’s torture to think I might have to do this again at some point in the future.

Butterfly babies, marvelous femme fancies, you don’t have to have had cancer to fear insult and injury to your solid state. To be alive is to roll the dice, no matter how hale and hearty or challenged by any of the millions of things that can affect the living. Genetic, environmental, cultural, familial; we are walking always in great uncertainty, and we all know stories like the one a friend told me recently about her dad. He was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s, and when she started doing some research, she realized that throughout his life, her dad had done everything recommended to prevent dementia.

Reading the aforementioned book, published in 2000, I had occasion to be deeply grateful that my treatment for breast cancer comes in 2019, when so much more is known about my particular configuration of the disease. The kind of tumor I have was, not so long ago, considered particularly tricky, but now there are extremely effective immunotherapy drugs that make my prognosis much more positive.

From another book I just finished reading, the historical novel In A Dark Wood Wandering by Hella S. Haasse, here is the main character, Charles d’Orléans, just as stuck in his time and place as we are: “Must he always allow himself to be ruled by others, was it his fate to be goaded along just those paths which he did not want to take?” In 1410, for a nephew of the King of France, life was indeed circumscribed by position, the political climate with its endless machinations for power, not to mention the usual vagaries of personal constitution, natural disasters, and illness. And yet, Charles still managed to write some of the loveliest poetry in the French language*, which he did while imprisoned in England because of his political importance. He was able to devote himself to his art in a way that he probably wouldn’t have been able to manage without this enforced solitude.

We are accustomed to finding fault with everything in our life, something capitalism and its minions encourage. It’s difficult not to focus on the negative in this time of endless acquisition and disheartening world conditions. Even when there are victories, we find ourselves saying, “Yes, but…” as if the only thing that matters is total perfection, as if there is never a right time to celebrate, relax, and congratulate ourselves on the hard, positive work we’ve done. As if that isn’t an utterly important part of the cycle.

Today, my sweetest of solid state queer femmes, spend half a mo’ focusing instead on what being alive today affords you, gifts you, loves on you, surrounds you with. Think about opportunity and gorgeousness. As simple as a paean to pluots (first sold in 1989), as complex as gratitude for being alive at a time when your work on climate change has the chance of having immediate and dramatic impact, today there is unbelievable beauty and bounty, completely dependent on this Right Now.

My loves, you are blessed to be alive in this pulsing, glittering moment. Breathe deep. Notice. Accept and dive and delve into gratitude.

I am right here on my knees beside you.

 

* one of his poems is even included in Jean Orizet’s Les cent plus beaux poèmes de la langue française (The One Hundred Most Beautiful Poems in the French Language

Every Monday, I offer a Meditation for Queer Femmes in the spirit of my maternal grandmother, Mimi, who was fabulous, kind, and wise and from whom I inherited her Meditations for Women.

At the Total Femme, my intention is to post three times a week: Meditations for Queer Femmes on Monday, Pingy-Dingy Wednesday on Wednesday and Femme Friday on Friday. Rather than play catch-up in a stressful fashion on those weeks when life prevents posting, I have decided to just move gaily forward: if I miss a Monday, the next post will be on Wednesday, and so on. Thank you, little bottle of antibiotics for inspiring me in this! (“…if it’s almost time for the next dose, skip the missed dose and continue your regular dosing schedule. Don’t take a double dose to make up for a missed one.”)

 

Femme Friday – The Language of Emotions: What Your Feelings Are Trying To Tell You by Karla McLaren

Ooh, I haven’t done a book in a while! My darlings, this is a good one! If you find yourself jumpy and afraid, even though things are going well and you keep trying to tell yourself it let it go; if you are robustly chanting the Warrior Spirit Prayer of Awakening thus:

MAY ALL BEINGS BE GRANTED THE STRENGTH AND DETERMINATION AND WISDOM TO EXTINGUISH ANGER AND REJECT VIOLENCE AS A WAY

and still finding yourself supremely pissed off all of the time, do take a look at Karla McLaren’s fascinating and extremely sensible book about emotions. Thank you to my sweet friend Miel Rose for recommending it when I was trying to find a healthy way to work with grief!

“The socially accepted view is that there are good emotions and bad emotions,” she says. “These categories have a bit of interplay, but basically, good emotions are the ones that make us easy to be around, while bad emotions are the ones that shake things up.” Food for thought, right?

And, she says that strong emotions help provide “protection, deep cleansing, and strengthening of the psyche” as well as increasing “people’s ability to stay focused in their own bodies.” Trauma, our cultural training and so much more keep us away from our innate understandings about the purpose of emotions, but this book guides us in opening back up to our own human wisdom and offers a gentle, profound healing path.

Deep gratitude to Karla for this lovely book!

Every Friday, I showcase a queer femme goddess. I want to feature you! Write to me at thetotalfemme@gmail.com and let me shine a spotlight on your beautiful, unique, femme story! If you’ve written a femme story or poem or song, oh, please let me post it! New Femme Friday feature starting fall 2018: Books from which queer femmes can draw inspiration. What are your trusted sources of light and love? Please share!

At the Total Femme, my intention is to post three times a week: Meditations for Queer Femmes on Monday, Pingy-Dingy Wednesday on Wednesday and Femme Friday on Friday. Rather than play catch-up in a stressful fashion on those weeks when life prevents posting, I have decided to just move gaily forward: if I miss a Monday, the next post will be on Wednesday, and so on. Thank you, little bottle of antibiotics for inspiring me in this! (“…if it’s almost time for the next dose, skip the missed dose and continue your regular dosing schedule. Don’t take a double dose to make up for a missed one.”)

 

Pingy-Dingy Wednesday – Outdoor Afro

I love Outdoor Afro so much. One of our human birthrights is to honor the out-of-doors, to be able to find sustenance, succor, rejuvenation from Mother Earth and all her wonders. For all the usual fucked up reasons, this birthright is often shown and offered mainly to white people. Outdoor Afro defies this idea that “Black People Don’t Camp” and wisely and enthusiastically addresses the fact that “[f]or black people, feeling welcome and safe in the outdoors isn’t a given”.

Outdoor Afro, you get one pingy-dingy! Thank you for the beautiful work you do, for your open-hearted, gorgeous, sacred connection with the out-of-doors, and for the love story that you write every day!

https://outdoorafro.com

I’m a typewriter whompin’, card catalogue lovin’ white girl from back in the day, and I yearn for a time before the covers of trade paperbacks were all squidgy, so you can imagine that I don’t actually understand what a pingback is. I do know that it can in some way be part of spreading the love, and since that’s what I’m all about at The Total Femme… every Wednesday, I pay homage to the laughter, love, and inspiration to be had elsewhere online.

At the Total Femme, my intention is to post three times a week: Meditations for Queer Femmes on Monday, Pingy-Dingy Wednesday on Wednesday and Femme Friday on Friday. Rather than play catch-up in a stressful fashion on those weeks when life prevents posting, I have decided to just move gaily forward: if I miss a Monday, the next post will be on Wednesday, and so on. Thank you, little bottle of antibiotics for inspiring me in this! (“…if it’s almost time for the next dose, skip the missed dose and continue your regular dosing schedule. Don’t take a double dose to make up for a missed one.”)

 

 

 

Meditations for Queer Friends – Never Enough

For a long time, I owned a non-fiction book called, Never Enough, something about the state of the current U.S. culture, or maybe about dieting; I can’t quite remember. It came on a lot of moves with me, but I never ended up reading it. Finally, I gave it to an academic friend who was working on a project we both thought might benefit from this particular book. Just this past week, browsing the bookshelves in a local Goodwill, I came across this same book and started laughing. After I gave it away, I didn’t miss it, didn’t give myself a hard time for never reading it – the title was enough for me to think about. And here it was again: NEVER ENOUGH. I laughed to see an old friend; I laughed because I know more and more each moment how truly enough there is.

How do we find ourselves in the onslaught of information? The siblings in M.V. Hughes’ wonderful autobiographical trilogy beginning with A London Child in of the 1870s have very few books, but they make the most of them. They memorize Alice in Wonderland and use Lewis Carrol’s brilliance to enhance their own imaginations and ideas about the world. As related by Jan Morris in her book, A Writer’s House in Wales, the publisher Rupert Hart-Davies used to say, when people asked him if he’d read all his books (thousands and thousands), “No, but I’ve used them all.” And Jan Morris again, in her early 90s, writing about her beloved library in In My Mind’s Eye: A Thought Diary, makes good and wonderful use of all of her books (thousands and thousands), from just admiring them, to pulling them down and browsing here and there, rereading them, keeping a beat up copy of Montaigne’s collected essays in the car to read when stuck in traffic jams, to using one particularly huge atlas to prop up a wonky table leg. Similarly, though I never read Never Enough and probably never will, the idea suggested by the title has informed my own thoughts for years about what it means to be human, to be alive right now, in the age of FOMA (Fear of Missing Out) when one must grapple with the interminable, siren calls demanding one’s attention nownownownow.

We often hear, “Be you, girlfriend!” or “You do you!” which sound well meaning but can often be used sarcastically. But who else can we be? It just seems so awfully hard to get there. And yet, we possess the ability to be us, it’s a human birthright. Anyone who spends time around young children knows that each individual child is drawn to certain things, is able to pick out areas of interest despite what must be a totally bewildering morass of information coming at them every minute. For my elder son, it was construction machines, for my younger, farm animals – as soon as they had found those areas of interest, they never wavered. Of course, things get more complicated the older you get, but that homing instinct must always be present, if only we can quiet ourselves down enough to listen for it again.

Even if we know and begin to honor our own unique and individual interests, it can be hard to stick with them. People we respect, movements we believe in, school, the media and on and on give well meaning or casual advice that can derail us for years. Personally, I had the distorted voices of my parents ringing in my ears for decades, pushing me in directions that were often the exact opposite from those in which I actually wanted to go. The curse of this only child! But I expect most of we queer femmes have similar voices, and they are awfully hard to ignore.

My examples here are mostly from books, femme bookworm that I am, but you, bodacious and delicious femme sisters have your own beacons in the chaos. Jan Morris is joyously and tenaciously herself, happily detailing her touchstones from literature, travel, family life, connection to animals (particularly her dearly departed Norwegian mountain cat, the inimitable Ibsen), to history, and on and on. Whether or not you agree with some of her thoughts (and I don’t), she is solidly, beautifully, inimitably herself, and this is immensely heartening. Inspiring.

Gorgeous ones, we do not need to wait until we’re in our 90s to be us. Femme angels, born to bless this world, listen through the noise and find those most beautiful tones that make up your one and only and unique song. Take joy in who you are. Be proud. No one else has your particular talents, your way of interpreting a situation. No one else can offer the amazing and inventive interpretations of the here and now. Gather your femme bravada around you, spread your love, be you.

Let me see you shine!

Every Monday, I offer a Meditation for Queer Femmes in the spirit of my maternal grandmother, Mimi, who was fabulous, kind, and wise and from whom I inherited her Meditations for Women.

At the Total Femme, my intention is to post three times a week: Meditations for Queer Femmes on Monday, Pingy-Dingy Wednesday on Wednesday and Femme Friday on Friday. Rather than play catch-up in a stressful fashion on those weeks when life prevents posting, I have decided to just move gaily forward: if I miss a Monday, the next post will be on Wednesday, and so on. Thank you, little bottle of antibiotics for inspiring me in this! (“…if it’s almost time for the next dose, skip the missed dose and continue your regular dosing schedule. Don’t take a double dose to make up for a missed one.”)

 

Published in: on August 19, 2019 at 4:45 AM  Leave a Comment  
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Femme Friday – Soothing and Uplifting Eye Candy from the Days of Yore

Some beautiful photos to feed your queer femme soul here in the last few weeks of summer!

Deep gratitude to our ancestors, who loved each other, and who took pictures of their sweet and sexy selves to document that beautiful queer love!

https://metro.co.uk/2018/01/11/amazing-intimate-portraits-illustrate-lesbianism-ages-7222581/?fbclid=IwAR0wk82AlkhPfLSOhBMRy0s3qWvbrteMPSpu25O-v9ggTuLtiZEPXz-bPis

Every Friday, I showcase a queer femme goddess. I want to feature you! Write to me at thetotalfemme@gmail.com and let me shine a spotlight on your beautiful, unique, femme story! If you’ve written a femme story or poem or song, oh, please let me post it! New Femme Friday feature starting fall 2018: Books from which queer femmes can draw inspiration. What are your trusted sources of light and love? Please share!

At the Total Femme, my intention is to post three times a week: Meditations for Queer Femmes on Monday, Pingy-Dingy Wednesday on Wednesday and Femme Friday on Friday. Rather than play catch-up in a stressful fashion on those weeks when life prevents posting, I have decided to just move gaily forward: if I miss a Monday, the next post will be on Wednesday, and so on. Thank you, little bottle of antibiotics for inspiring me in this! (“…if it’s almost time for the next dose, skip the missed dose and continue your regular dosing schedule. Don’t take a double dose to make up for a missed one.”)

 

Wednesday Pingy-Dingy – The Tiny House Warriors: Our Land Is Home

“Nobody can know the full consequences of their actions, and history is full of small acts that changed the world in surprising ways,” writes Rebecca Solnit in the chapter, “On the Indirectness of Direct Action” in her book Hope in the Dark: Untold Histories, Wild Possibilities. The Tiny House Warriors are building tiny houses smack in the middle of the illegal Trans Mountain Pipeline Project, the trajectory of which crosses unceded Secwepemc Territory. The houses might be tiny, but the resistance is not. From their website:

Investors take note, the Trans Mountain Pipeline project and any other corporate colonial project that seeks to go through and destroy our 180,000 square km of unceded territory will be refused passage through our territory. We stand resolutely together against any and all threats to our lands, the wildlife and the waterways.

Tiny House Warriors, you get one pingy-dingy! Thank you for not and never ceding, for speaking truth to power, and for “building something beautiful that models hope, possibility and solutions to the world.”

http://tinyhousewarriors.com/

I’m a typewriter whompin’, card catalogue lovin’ white girl from back in the day, and I yearn for a time before the covers of trade paperbacks were all squidgy, so you can imagine that I don’t actually understand what a pingback is. I do know that it can in some way be part of spreading the love, and since that’s what I’m all about at The Total Femme… every Wednesday, I pay homage to the laughter, love, and inspiration to be had elsewhere online.

At the Total Femme, my intention is to post three times a week: Meditations for Queer Femmes on Monday, Pingy-Dingy Wednesday on Wednesday and Femme Friday on Friday. Rather than play catch-up in a stressful fashion on those weeks when life prevents posting, I have decided to just move gaily forward: if I miss a Monday, the next post will be on Wednesday, and so on. Thank you, little bottle of antibiotics for inspiring me in this! (“…if it’s almost time for the next dose, skip the missed dose and continue your regular dosing schedule. Don’t take a double dose to make up for a missed one.”)

Meditations for Queer Femmes – Etiquette

I’ve been taking part in the Provincetown Library’s Reading Challenge, and for one of my challenge books, I read: the Student’s Book for Emily Hunter’s Christian Charm Course: A Course for Girls Giving Methods for Improving the Outer Appearance Along with Spiritual Instruction for Developing the True Beauty which Comes from a Heart surrendered to the Lord Jesus Christ (first published in 1967; my copy from the most recent printing in 1984).

Setting aside a great deal having to do with evil Christian malarkey, heterosexism, racism, and just plain fuckedness, I was struck by two messages of a more positive nature. One: it matters how you act in public because you exist with other people. Two: it matters how you feel about yourself on the inside, and that, in turn, leads to the necessity of being connected to something positive that is larger than yourself.

There is nothing at all wrong with these two messages, and this admittedly seriously twisted book got me thinking about etiquette. I believe that the usual attitude this day and age among most hip-happening folks, young and old, is that etiquette is completely ludicrous and out-of-date. No one but snots and snobs care about which fork to use or when to wear white. Didn’t Gloria Steinem famously and fabulously say, in response to a worried question about what woman should wear posed by a reporter referring to Madonna-obsessed young women tripping about wearing lingerie on the outside, “Women should wear whatever the fuck they want!”? Of course she did and of course they should!

But perusing Mrs. Hunter’s tactics for staying neat, clean, and healthy on the outside along with her tips on how to pay attention to spiritual needs gave me an odd sense of comfort. Again, if you ignore the sinister aspects of the book, what is at the bottom is an earnest desire to impart adult wisdom to young people, wisdom having to do with how to meet the most basic human needs. Wisdom having to do with empowering young people with the practical knowledge that they are in charge of their physical and spiritual well-being. If you know how and when to wash your hair; if you have some expert guidance in taking stock of your physical appearance so that you can lovingly and with care find ways to look and feel your best; if you understand how to take a break from the mundane and pray or meditate or otherwise bring yourself into alignment with whatever it is that connects you to the sacred, then you are beginning to discover tools that will serve you for the rest of your life. I am all for children and youth having these tools.

Personally, I had little guidance in this arena. I had to put things together myself, from books, from friends, from the media, and my education around taking care of my body and showing on the outside what I was feeling on the inside (and what was I feeling on the inside, anyway??) was spotty to nil. Forget any kind of spiritual education, not even some kind of regular church experience to embrace or push back against – my rabidly atheist father made sure I internalized early on that religion is the opiate of the people and there’s nothing out there.

It may be old fashioned, but I am in favor of teaching etiquette to children and youth. I am in favor of giving children and youth information about different ways human beings nurture their physical and spiritual selves so that they can find a way to do so for themselves. Methods differ, but the basic needs are the same.

I just spent a lovely, leisurely time writing thank you cards to people who have been kind and helpful to me during this long and difficult summer of chemo. Turning my mind and spirit over to gratitude offered me respite from the dread I am feeling about this last chemo treatment coming up and about what the future will hold. Will the cancer be gone? Even if it is, will I get it again sometime down the road? I can really work myself up, especially in the middle of the night. Sitting down and saying thank you reminds me that, with practice and changed attitude, I can turn my heart in a more positive direction – the direction I’d much rather be going. It’s not easy, it’s not perfect, but it’s better than freaking out all the time. This is something that helps me, and there are many, many lovely practices out there, centering kindness and serenity and love, that don’t try to get kids to do something just because they’re scared that if they don’t they’ll be steeped in sin or otherwise be displeasing to the Lord Jesus Christ (dear Mrs. Hunter, I am afraid that I’m looking right at you).

We queer femmes have our own wonderful, queer perspective on etiquette and how to care for ourselves and for others. I know that you have your rituals, your prayers, your affirmations, and your meditations; your cleansing dips in the ocean or walks in the garden or moments of bliss; your love and your kindness and the way you touch your friend on the arm and the unbearably sweet way you smile into your lover’s eyes. Beautiful, spiritual, generous femme sisters, you model health and well-being to other queers and to the world.

I am grateful. I am grateful. I am grateful.

Every Monday, I offer a Meditation for Queer Femmes in the spirit of my maternal grandmother, Mimi, who was fabulous, kind, and wise and from whom I inherited her Meditations for Women.

At the Total Femme, my intention is to post three times a week: Meditations for Queer Femmes on Monday, Pingy-Dingy Wednesday on Wednesday and Femme Friday on Friday. Rather than play catch-up in a stressful fashion on those weeks when life prevents posting, I have decided to just move gaily forward: if I miss a Monday, the next post will be on Wednesday, and so on. Thank you, little bottle of antibiotics for inspiring me in this! (“…if it’s almost time for the next dose, skip the missed dose and continue your regular dosing schedule. Don’t take a double dose to make up for a missed one.”)

Femme Friday – Aisha Johnston Continued!

Last week, Aisha was remembering her interactions with a Butch/Femme community, where she and her love found themselves fitting in less and less. Here is the conclusion of her essay.

Jo soon started to experience similar levels of misfitting within their part of the community. Recently, Jo has found that they identify heavily with the concept of dandyism (Urban Dictionary has recently started defining a dandy as a charming androgynous person of [any] gender) and, realistically, probably would have identified with it much earlier if they hadn’t been trying to manifest the masculinity that is “required” when claiming a Butch identity. Jo is a fun, floppy, flamboyant Enby (non-binary, NB) that exudes the perfect combination of all sides of being human, within and outside of the gender binary. The fact that they love to dance, that when they get excited their energy is hard to contain, that they love singing along to Broadway and Barbra Streisand — none of these things take away from their masculinity, to me, but because they weren’t the rough-and-tumble, stereotypical Butch, they weren’t accepted by their peers in the same way that I wasn’t accepted by mine. Jo still does all of the “manly” things a Butch would be happy to boast about; mowing the lawn, building things for me, chauffeuring their little family around in their SUV — but also does an amazing job at keeping our home clean, doing our laundry and most of the other day-to-day domestic duties that would be considered, by some, as the “woman’s” jobs.

Spoiler: I find them exponentially more masculine (and sexy) when they’re doing the domestic things, I won’t lie.

The gender role expectations in the Butch / Femme community are too much akin to the toxic masculinity versus female submission that exists in the heteronormative world to be a comfortable space for me. In taking time for myself, especially over the past three months, I have been unpacking a lot of my emotional baggage as well as childhood trauma and abuse that continued, essentially, until I met Jo. I was preened, throughout my childhood and adolescence, for a cis-hetero life. My femaleness was something my narcissistic mother not only used against me as a weapon but also to fuel a strange type of trauma bond so that our femaleness (something that she believed was invincible) was the main thing holding us together. I was enabled to stay in unhealthy relationships, one of which was extremely toxic, where my femaleness was taken and victimized repeatedly, and my “sworn protector” did not and would not acknowledge or bring to my attention that I was being abused. Whether it was sexually, or I was being humiliated for whatever reaction was deemed “what a girl would do”, my femaleness was always on the chopping block, simply for existing. I was fed to a life full of predatory cis-men and manipulative women, so I grew to hate men for what they did to me, and to hate women for doing nothing to stop it.

Looking back, if I had had one person sit me down and ask me whether or not I was gay, my life would have been completely different. My coming out as queer was nothing special; I came out at 24, after having had a child at 18 and gotten married at 23 (with different, but both, men) and none of my family members were even remotely surprised. Meanwhile, I felt like realizing that I was almost exclusively attracted to trans masculine people (well… Let’s be real, one person in particular, hehe) was like falling into an ice bath after being asleep for 3 days. I couldn’t believe it hadn’t occurred to me before, that if I was triggered by both cis men and women due to prior trauma, that I would find my person in someone who wasn’t either sex but exuded the qualities of both, and every space in between. I slept with both men and women when I hit adolescence, because I couldn’t figure out where I was genuinely happy, but my first love interest was my best female friend in elementary school (who was a tomboy), my first “relationship” was with a fellow older, female choir member (who cut their hair short and went by ‘J’ instead of their given name) and I would often openly disregard any friends’ suggestions at “boys I should date”. I expressed dissatisfaction in every cis-hetero relationship I was in, and no one thought to inquire as to whether or not I was actually straight.

Now that I’ve discovered that information for myself, thank goodness, I’ve had the opportunity to sit with my limited memories of my growing up, a person who has experienced more than a life’s fair share of discrimination due to their gender presentation, and an endless world of online information. This has given me the chance to evaluate my own space and gender in a safe environment, with someone that has done their own exploration and work into figuring out what it means to not fall into the socially “acceptable” binary. I’ve come to realize that the word “woman” doesn’t sit right in my heart, stomach or brain and that when I’m not in relation to someone or something else, I don’t feel like a woman by default. This was a realization that also quickly revealed why I had never and could not identify with ‘Femme’.

There are times when I feel more feminine, and see myself through a more female lens; when I look at my son, there is an automatic, biological, ‘you came from me and only women have babies so I am a woman’, for example. I know that sounds almost caveman-esque, an obvious connection to a little human that literally came from me, but when I generally feel more like a floating entity than a person, these moments are incredibly grounding, for the most part. When Jo and I are intimate or sexual with each other, I usually fall into a more feminine headspace (though this isn’t always the case; I’m sure there are times where my thoughts about Jo could be considered far more ‘masculine’ in their grit and animalistic nature), but in contrast, that could also be perceived more as a dominant / submissive dynamic than a masculine / feminine one.

There are times where I feel more masculine, but one main difference in these moments is that I usually end up almost observing myself from the outside, whereas I tend to feel more present when my femininity is at the forefront. The times where I lean more towards masculinity are generally when things get stressful in our day to day life; Jo recently had, arguably, one of the most severe depressive crashes they’ve had in our time together. During those few days, I felt like I could build us a cabin, beat up everyone that was causing us problems, fix our car, remodel our kitchen and carry Jo around in my pocket, while also wanting to erect a literal barricade around our house so that I could protect them. Being strong, big and protective, for me, also means being distant and a little disconnected — behavior that I have observed from every single one of the important men in my life.

Most of the time though, I find myself sitting somewhere in between the lines, which is why I’ve struggled with connecting myself to ‘Femme’. I feel like I flex and flow, my inner gendered behavior seems to be ever-changing and evolving as these yin and yang moments come and go. I think I may start referring to my different sides as my yin and yang, because even calling them masculine and feminine feels derogatory and wrong, considering I don’t feel like those qualifiers really even begin to cover the different sides of me that I’m discovering and exploring.

The idea of masculine and feminine counterparts, to me, seems like old news. I understand that the Butch / Femme culture has been making an attempt to flip the tables on gender roles for years; butches, doing all of the things men can do and being all of the things men can be, in whatever capacity that entails, challenging the role and necessity of men in our society — while femmes, on the other hand, support and love these people in all of their masculinity while also reestablishing what it means to be a lesbian; essentially, queer women can be masculine of center, or dykes, if you will — but there is also a completely separate squadron of queer, female-bodied women that are owning and championing their womanhood and femininity, by refusing to dampen their femme-ness to ‘fit in’ to a standard of what lesbianism looks like to the small and narrow-minded.

The unfortunate thing that I’m observing now that I’m viewing the world through a new, entirely non-gendered pair of glasses is that, in the effort to shatter the glass ceiling on gender expectations and roles, while simultaneously trying to maintain the old fashioned, old school chivalry, dynamic and attitudes that we all love so dearly about the culture, the B / F world seems to be getting stuck in the Mean Girls or Boy’s Club type of exclusivity and elitism, along with the (sometimes near-invisible) undercurrent of misogyny and patriarchy, as well as baseline gender inequality in general. Femmes spoke horribly about Butches, and Butches either lashed out in anger or disappeared in quiet submission. Meanwhile, all of these people were there because they wanted and needed a community, yet spent the majority of their interactions pushing against the very people they wanted to connect with. Jo and I are two really interesting, genuine, kind people, and the people we’ve met who fall into this spectrum generally see that about us, as did the folx in our B / F groups. The problem was, once people started realizing that we didn’t fit into the boxes — Jo, not Butch enough, and me, well, you know — for some reason we immediately became off-limits, like not having a hard blueprint of your gender expression was a communicable disease; heaven forbid you catch the non-binary!!

I realize my perception of this world might be construed as pessimistic or negative. I also acknowledge that a huge part of my views on gender, roles, etc. are skewed and heavily influenced by my history with trauma and abuse. I love Butches, I love Femmes, I love what they are trying to accomplish and I feel so proud of the friends I have that are shattering societal expectations every day. Jo and I used to identify with these people, at least on some level and used to consider ourselves part of the community. I don’t blame the fact that no one considered us there, on any one individual. During our time in these groups, it broke my heart to know that so many of the people I spoke to were excluded or cast out of their queer communities because they were trying to ‘be hetero’, but in the same breath, were exclusionary to my partner and I because we each were so obviously not trying to be.

I guess the point I’m trying to make in a long-winded, drawn-out, rambling sort of way is that we’re quickly coming up on an age where these things aren’t going to matter — or at least, I’m hopeful of that. We have been exposing ourselves to a community of people, all who ID as non-binary, that has been endlessly rejuvenating and restorative. These people make up the most beautiful mix of folx I have ever seen — some are stunningly, beautifully androgynous, as you would expect from a non-binary community — but there are also a startlingly high number of folx who present very much in a certain way, but are finding that, regardless of their outward presentation, they feel neither one way or the other when it comes to their gender. These people have been some of the most accepting, open, wonderful people we have met in trying to find a community online and in person, and I just hope that at some point we will all be welcome in spaces that make us feel like we fit, not because we look or act like we should be there, but because we heal from our wounds much more quickly if we have a community of people to care about us.

I believe that we’re going to get there because I’m watching people I know come into themselves each and every day. We are going to be the ones to flick the first domino, the queer folx that have experienced a level of hostility we don’t want the next generation of gaybies to experience — if there’s one thing we all have in common, whether you’re gay, queer, Butch, Femme, however you identify — it’s that we’re all wounded, and we need the community as much as they do. Like I expressed earlier, if I had been fortunate enough to have an older, queer person in my life to reach out to me when I was a budding, but closeted, young queer person, my experience with my gender and my journey would have looked completely different; instead, my queerness came into being through trauma, pain and a lot of undue damage and now, the only way I’m finding that I am able to recover from those things is by speaking and sharing with as many other queer folx as I can. If we build this community now, we’ll be helping the up and coming LGBTQ+ community, but I promise you, we’ll be healing our own hearts, too.

“We are pitted against each other in order to keep us from seeing each other as allies. Genuine bonds of solidarity can be forged between people who respect each other’s differences and are willing to fight their enemy together. We are the class that does the work of the world, and can revolutionize it. We can win true liberation.”

– Leslie Feinberg

Aisha (like Asia) is an unassuming person, happily partnered and living her best life with her beau and their 8-year-old son in a quiet, queer-friendly theatre town. A writer, baker, and chronic pain warrior, she currently runs a casual blog, All Queer For Takeoff, with her partner, Jo, where they discuss all aspects of living as queer folx, from family issues and struggles to what happens behind closed bedroom doors (wink). She is musically gifted, playing a variety of instruments including, but not limited to, the french horn, piano, guitar and ukulele, and also loves to sing. True to her Pisces nature, she is both fluid and solid and can easily get lost in her own current of thought. Aisha loves to read, is an avid horror buff and craves adrenaline-inducing experiences (roller coaster buddy, anyone?). She loves baking, chilling out by a campfire or on a cozy couch and playing video games with her beau(s).

 Every Friday, I showcase a queer femme goddess. I want to feature you! Write to me at thetotalfemme@gmail.com and let me shine a spotlight on your beautiful, unique, femme story! If you’ve written a femme story or poem or song, oh, please let me post it! New Femme Friday feature starting fall 2018: Books from which queer femmes can draw inspiration. What are your trusted sources of light and love? Please share!

At the Total Femme, my intention is to post three times a week: Meditations for Queer Femmes on Monday, Pingy-Dingy Wednesday on Wednesday and Femme Friday on Friday. Rather than play catch-up in a stressful fashion on those weeks when life prevents posting, I have decided to just move gaily forward: if I miss a Monday, the next post will be on Wednesday, and so on. Thank you, little bottle of antibiotics for inspiring me in this! (“…if it’s almost time for the next dose, skip the missed dose and continue your regular dosing schedule. Don’t take a double dose to make up for a missed one.”)