Wanting Not so Much as to Transition

Last week I went out with a friend to Rough Trade in Silver Lake and purchased another set of leather gear. I had a cheaper one, fake leather, this was the real deal. I needed to go to purchase leather arm bands for a Halloween costume and had invited Ben to come along. The store itself was great, the service perhaps a little too friendly, but I was happy with what I had purchased. Butch, masculine, hot, all these words ran through my mind while I flexed into the mirror of the dressing room. The attendant was quick to compliment my body hair and was letting me undress in the middle of the store to try on more gear, a stark contrast to the local store in Long Beach that hadn’t let me try on a harness without a shirt on. Ben seemed a little underwhelmed with the attention he was getting at the store, or perhaps had wanted to join in. I wasn’t sure whether the attendant was his type and I didn’t know how to tell him I was just playing along to see if I could get a discount or freebies.

Yes, I have no problem admitting I am that sleazy and available.

We left there and after a quick detour for ramen, headed to the Eagle with our gear under our street clothes. I had let him know that I had been there recently and stuck with my friends, most of the guys seemed these unapproachable packs of white, hypermasculine alphas. The vibe this night was different, a slightly more diverse crowd but largely still crowds of friends sticking to each other and not leaving much room for strangers to approach. We fell into the same pattern until a handsome stranger came our way. There’s nothing exciting coming next though. I learned Ben is even quieter than I and at some point we both let the conversation drop and the handsome stranger wandered away. Moments passed when I realized I should have asked anything to have kept the conversation going. These moments in the bar happen quicker than on the work site, where I can leave space to gather my thoughts, although there the contractors have to let me talk.

I had been angling to go to Puteria in downtown LA and Ben eventually agreed that would be the better spot. We headed out and drank and danced till the shirts came off and our harnesses were on display. It was the point of the night that other guys were taking their shirts off and we weren’t the only ones with light gear on. By the end of the night, back at his place and in his own way, Ben noted that he was somewhat jealous of the attention I had received. I was serving masculinity, muscle bear top, short king. I was disturbed to discover one of the guys I had made out with was looking for masc4masc on Grindr and had written an article on how to attract a masculine boyfriend.

All this over attributes I’ve either been forced to adapt, for ease of work purposes, or never had any control over, the copious amounts of body hair.

Yesterday at the gym I had what I saw someone on Twitter summarize as trans thoughts and I wondered what all the guys I talked to last weekend would have to say about that. When I had brought it up in prior sessions of therapy my current therapist hadn’t seemed to care? Maybe she hadn’t noted it down or I just hadn’t given it the weight. I had told her, “I wished I had been born a girl, so that these grown men and women would have treated me as a child rather than a young man.” In the context of our conversation regarding childhood trauma, it seems easy to imagine she had other topics to cover. Recently I mentioned these thoughts and she discounted them, perhaps didn’t catch them again. It’s not that I believe she’s uncomfortable with the topic but it does seem like she doesn’t have much experience with trans individuals. Not that I want to transition…

I was stoned and adding music to my playlist and I remembered Laura Jane Grace in Against Me!’s lyrics, “You’ve got no cunt in your strut/ You’ve got no hips to shake…” and “A fucked up kind of feminine.” A wave of emotional resonance passed through me, the weed doing its job to inhibit my emotional guards. The next second, an unease and queasiness emanated from my stomach and I thought to myself, “I thought I was over this.”

Lately I’ve been trying to accept the parts of my personality that come from the traditional way I was raised, full on Mexican machismo. My mother still won’t admit to it, but there’s a reason I’m able to get along with my conservative, old school coworkers. These are men, we are men, and we’re working together to complete construction projects. Grunt! No feelings! Anyone who gets overly emotional gets mocked, although I’ve gotten worked up and shown the range of feelings stemming from anger that are appropriate for men. I’m sadly more scared to join our design teams because there are more women and I don’t know how I’ll fare there and stay closeted. It’s not too hard to dodge relationship questions, because again, these are traditional men. Most of them are easy to set off on a rant about their wives and just want sounding boards. I’ve even stopped trying to lose weight and have focused on just gaining muscle and fat, getting bigger and heavier. The last break through at therapy was that it was totally ok to throw down to defend myself. My words not hers, but the more clinical way she put it isn’t as funny.

So I was surprised to still be imagining myself as a woman, desiring my body to be lighter and curvier in their way. In the past I know I have recoiled at the attention I got from other men, hidden myself from the male gaze. Lately though, I had been feeling more comfortable in that spotlight, had been defending myself from unwanted touching and had even experienced a resurgence in my libido. So again, why now?

Perhaps more terrifying was the thought, “What if this never goes away?” What if I will always find myself desiring to have been born a woman. To the questions of what superpower I would want, I have often answered shapeshifting and mentioned wanting to be able to switch between man and woman. Flight was the other frequent answer, to fly rather than run from my problems. Often too, I have lamented that I wish I were a lesbian, with all its implications. I see the chasm I could cross but like a green light across the lake, I will not reach it.

I don’t want to undergo an expensive process and find myself regretting it, desiring the ability to pass again as a straight man when necessary. Look at today. I have walked about 10 minutes away from where I parked, perhaps more actually because the entire time I was looking at my phone, chatting away with my cousins. I will walk back through downtown Los Angeles to my car, drop off my laptop, and go get myself into trouble. I couldn’t do this so easily were I woman. My costume for this adventure? My work boots, business casual attire, a jean jacket and my virility. It’s not that I won’t be fucked with if I stupidly walk into Skid Row, it’s that I am not scared to wander around on my own.

Also, the body hair will be really hard to get rid off… And there’s a lot of that!

Gender Confusion

I have been struggling with my gender lately, even though I still find myself defaulting to masculine presentations. I have previously mentioned that I experienced dysphoria in response to trauma and to being treated as a grown man since I was young. That dysphoria felt more like a resentment of girls, who are in these specific instances, treated better than young boys of color, to my own sisters who were protected by my parents in ways that I hadn’t been. I discussed this type of dysphoria recently with my sisters, acknowledging that they felt resentment toward our parents for being overprotective of them, but pointing out that they down right neglected me at best, or unintentionally put me in harm’s way. This feels different, maybe just as reactionary though.

Earlier in the week I was listening to the Savage Love podcast. I was listening to the host, Dan Savage, respond to what sounded like a joke call from someone who claimed to be a “half-breed” with “Aryan preferences.” It absolutely sounded like a prank and if it isn’t, I feel bad for the caller who is not able to find pride in her non-white background. He pointed out that even if calls are fake, they sometimes pose interesting hypotheticals and after all, every call is just a hypothetical scenario for everyone but the one caller. The way he frames the rest of his response, while logically sound, is perhaps not as forceful as I’d like to hear from him. He reassured the caller that while ultimately, no one can make you sleep with someone you don’t want to, that you should interrogate your desires and really acknowledge the difference between your own desires and what society has handed to you. It felt like he answered with a bit more hem and haw than this, but I had a flash of desire, I pictured my naked body, a little leaner but without a penis, instead some sort of pubic mound.

I wasn’t sure what to make of this mound and listened to another caller describe the dysphoria they have been feeling. As they said those words, described their discomfort in their own body, a sense of unease came upon me. I recalled how I had selected something like non-binary on a new dating app I had downloaded, well new to me, and how that somehow felt more appropriate than selecting man. But as I was jotting down these feelings, noting them down on my phone, an old friend came up to me at the gym and we lifted together for a while. I pushed the feelings aside and let something new in, this sense of comradery to be lifting together. I let him talk and wondered what to make of this, how I had been feeling disconnected from my male body until someone I had known, intimately, came up to me and suddenly I was partially back into my maleness.

This feelings have been ebbing and flowing but I still default to maleness.  At this point it feels like the default for me because I was born male and have “masculine” features. Case in point, I am worrying about a circuit party I’m going to later with friends, well… somewhat friends and the first one I’m going to. I stay active, but I’m not fit enough to feel totally prepared for the event. I know, I know, I’m perpetuating unrealistic expectations of what our bodies should look like in the gay community, but this feels like the one place where I’ll have to prepare myself for stares and looks of “You don’t belong here.” If I’m lucky, it’ll be just that. If we’re both lucky I’ll stay quiet if it raises to remarks…

Returning to my male body though, the hairiness of it may be enough to help me “fit in.” I’m trying to convince myself that I’ve never really cared enough to fit in, which is true and not. I never cared enough about fitting in because I just kept my head down and assimilated, even though in my heart and soul I didn’t care for it. It’s just what was easy. So too in this moment, I’m hoping that my body is enough that I can just enjoy the evening. I’m not going in with expectations that I’ll get laid or that everyone will want to be with me, no, what I want is to roam and enjoy myself but not have to justify my presence there. That’s where I’m trying to convince myself that I present in such a way that I’ll be left alone.

And that feeling… that feeling that I can relax and just allow my “natural” masculinity to protect me, is conflicting with prior feelings I had had of dysphoria. I am wondering of course, if in the same way that I wrestled with my sexuality when I was younger, if the same will hold true now as an adult. When I was younger, I felt very off put by the labels gay and straight, as I didn’t fit into either well. I know there are times now that I’ll default to gay when I don’t feel comfortable around people (gay or straight), if I even feel comfortable enough to acknowledge sexuality. Even as I explore gender expressions, will I still default to “he/him/his” just to make it easy on the general public? Will I end up then, in the same way, only able to acknowledge myself as a whole person in queer spaces… In time those queer spaces may grow, but that isn’t the present I live in yet.

I didn’t want to make this a separate post because it is so inconsequential in the long run. The people at the circuit party looked exactly as I expected: muscular, hairless, white bodies. A handful of people of color were around, but not enough brown skin for my tastes. I’m sure the people were lovely, but it was so loud that I couldn’t hear anyone talking and didn’t try to raise my voice above the steady thump of music. The bass in the beat shook my body delightfully and I stayed near the speakers, letting the vibrations pass through my body. I went back and forth on whether to stay or not, on leaving before my friend and his friends got there. Eventually, they did show up but the place kept getting more and more crowded and that made me uncomfortable, the casual ways that other’s near naked bodies touched mine. I understand that other people might enjoy that, might find a sense of community in that, but I couldn’t bear it. I have been to plenty of nude beaches now and have gotten more comfortable with my own body in that way, but I still can’t handle people brushing up on me. None of it was mean-spirited by the way, I do want to make clear that everyone seemed lovely, on drugs and alcohol, but lovely. It just felt overstimulating to have so much casual contact on my bare skin. My friend showed up with many other friends and that was ok… One of his other friends took it upon himself to move the group around and that was fine, there was just lots of checking in which I knew would annoy me if I stayed, because I was not having a good time and was trying to hide it. My friend didn’t pick up on it and he even invited me to the next one. Recently, out at dinner, I told him how I actually felt and why I had tried to hide it more that night, didn’t want to bring the mood down but I wasn’t comfortable. His friends were nice enough and with them I felt included, but the recurring thought was, “Do I actually want to fit into this?”

I knew I was too high for the event. Too in my head and too critical and too observant and too anxious. No one was distasteful in any way, there were no disgruntled looks as I had been worried about, but I couldn’t stop the question repeating over and over. For me, the answer is no although I’m glad I went and have reaffirmed lessons I’ve learned about myself, time well spent, but wouldn’t go to another. Similarly, I’m posting this update to move on and let my mind drift to other topics at hand. 

On LGBT Representation in the Media – The Queer Films and Movies of My Youth

Nowadays there’s not much stopping me from consuming any and all media with LGBT characters except taste and preference. Queer characters have begun to pop up in many different shows, some geared toward children and age appropriate. Today, we’re far removed from the nights I would quietly stay up, way past my bedtime and try and sneak an episode of The L Word or Queer as Folk. By some miracle of packaged channel subscriptions, my parents had bought LOGO TV without being aware of it. I couldn’t openly watch it, but if I stayed up late and made sure to cover all the open spaces in my door frame through which light and noise could filter out, I could sneak an episode or two, the volume barely above a whisper.

I couldn’t have been much older than twelve, the apartment in my memory was not where we lived during my later high school years. So much of what I saw flew over my head though, probably a consequence of the low volume and of being more preoccupied listening for movements from my parents’ room. When I went back to rewatch as a young adult, I realized just how much I hadn’t picked up on the sex, drugs, and problematic behaviors of the casts of both shows.

At the time, these two shows were more or less all I had as far as explicitly same sex behavior. Occasionally Will and Grace would enter the rotation, but it was on too early for me too hide from my parents. So, I was left with content aimed exclusively at adults. Movies were no different either and through the magic of the Internet, I found a way to view those too without my parents finding out. I was thirteen when Brokeback Mountain (2005) came out, I remembered streaming it many times over the winter break, quietly sobbing into my pillow over the drama of those bisexual cowboys. Around the same time, my parents had gotten a copy of Y Tu Mama Tambien (2001). Brokeback Mountain was all over American news and hungry as I was for queer media, it was easy to learn about it. Y Tu Mama Tambien I only heard about because of my parents. I recall reading the back cover of it and Amores Perros (2000) and thinking nothing of either film, except that Gael Garcia Bernal was very handsome. My mom saw me reading the covers though and reacted, “Deja eso!” She warned me not to watch either of the two. I tell you, the only reason I remembered to watch that movie was because of her.

Those years I spent much time trying to find queer media without alerting my parents. I’d known for years that I liked boys, I recalled registering a desire to hug a boy in my fifth-grade class and knowing I could neither act on that nor tell anyone about it. The confusion at the time wasn’t why I was drawn to him, but if I was that way, why was I still crushing on the girls in my class? I didn’t want to be them or hang out with them, but I still liked them. Without realizing it at the time, I was most drawn to films that showed characters whose sexuality was not so fixed. There are many examples of gay films where the formerly straight character ends the film fully in love with a man, or a boy if it was a younger, coming of age film. That’s not what I’m referring to though. The films I came to enjoy, that still stand out in memory now, are those that acknowledged sex, gender and desire as something between two people, irrespective of gender and stated preferences, although they weren’t all necessarily positive.

Honorable mention goes to Plata Quemada (2001) and A Home at the End of the World (2004). Plata Quemada, as problematic as its representation of bisexuality remains, was one of my favorite films. Of the three main criminals, one was gay, the other bisexual, both together and stereotypically men, macho, killers and thugs. There was something about seeing queer characters being not just problematic and messy, but violent and angry that appealed to the troubled young man I was. Unsurprisingly, the bisexual character at one point cheats on his partner, but if it hasn’t been maid clear, these protagonists were not meant to be role models. A Home at the End of the World was a film I could only watch once, maybe I rewatched it to understand what had just happened. From reading a plot summary these many years later, I hadn’t understood the plot at all, but I saw what I understood then as some sort of polygamous arrangement, a love triangle consummated. From the plot summary, it’s not clear that that ever happened, but I was a very young teenager and far too naïve to understand anything.

The movies I want to wrap this discussion up with are Different for Girls (1996), Chasing Amy (1997). and Bedrooms and Hallways (1998). Although these are not queer films of the aughts, there is no conceivable way I watched these the years they came out, rather, I would have viewed these in the aughts, through the magic of the internet and hidden from my parents. Bedrooms and Hallways remains a treat, I found it recently on YouTube and rewatched. In my youth, it painted a picture of these cool late 20, early 30 somethings who were still figuring themselves out. It has the typical storyline of straight men discovering their sexuality later in life, funnily enough through a men’s emotional support group. There’s an effeminate gay best friend, Darren, who, despite his rather slutty vibe, is focused throughout the film on going steady with his somewhat boyfriend. What I treasured at the time was that the very handsome lead, Leo, and spoilers obviously, Leo spends the film stumbling around figuring himself out as a gay man but ends the film wrapped in the arms of a prior girlfriend. Darren finds the two, asleep post coitus on the couch and says, “God, just a phase” before wandering off to his room. As the film ends there, it’s not clear what becomes of the friendship or relationship, but, surrounded by the messiness and fluidity of all their friends, it’s hard to imagine this as a friendship ending event.

By contrast, in Chasing Amy, it seemed that a character’s bisexuality was more threatening to their lesbian friends. I don’t mean to draw this distinction as a stone’s throw at lesbians, implying that they are less accepting of bisexuality. I am not a woman, so I don’t have any experiences with women’s acceptance of bisexuality now, but I have been on many dates with gay men that ended after admitting I do find women attractive or having the wonderful experience of reminding a boyfriend that I did indeed tell them I identify as bisexual exactly because I am worried about rejection further along in the relationship. It seems, even as far back as the 90s, that the Europeans were more accepting than the Americans. In Chasing Amy, the three leads are a straight man, Holden, his very jealous best friend, and a woman they had gone to high school with, Alyssa Jones, played by the beautiful Joey Lauren Adams. Alyssa is seemingly a lesbian, and a quite promiscuous one at that, until she meets Holden. They kick it off and at a certain point she informs Holden that she’s essentially lost her friend group, previously shown helping her put together material for a comic convention, because they feel she’s been lost to the straights. Although at the end of the film they are no longer together, so, presumably, Alyssa can go back to identifying as a lesbian and indeed she is shown with one of her prior friends at a comic convention, it is easy to imagine that they don’t all take her back. After all, bisexuals still face scrutiny from the monosexuals, gay or straight. Somehow, despite the strong implications that Alyssa gets around, the threatening relationship/sexual encounter is the seemingly stable one with an opposite sex partner. It’s easy to imagine that they felt Alyssa would disappear into her seemingly straight relationship, her rather lengthy past erased. Fluidity seemed reserved for the Europeans, the lesson was well learned from the films I watched at the time and relearned as a young man in the dating world.

The final film is special in my heart, as it cemented my love of a whole genre of music, one that most queer men seem scared to approach.  Different for Girls focuses on two close friends, Kim and Prentice, who grew up together, Karl and Prentice, but then lost contact. It is the earliest film I watched that had a positive portrayal of a transsexual character, although truthfully, I can’t recall caring too much about her transness. It wasn’t that the film didn’t discuss it, details abound, intimate discussions about the experience and even harassment that she experiences because of her sexual reassignment. It is just that I loved how she explained her masculine preferences as a youth. There’s a scene where Prentice is accusing Kim, questioning Kim’s femininity given that as youths they would often go to rock shows together. If memory serves, it was punk shows specifically, the implication that this was too macho for a transperson. With one gleeful laugh, Kim brushes the accusation aside as, “It wasn’t about that for me. It was about the energy and the movement of the music.” As she says this, I recall the lithe movements of her wrists and hands, raising her arms above her body as she mimicked a dance from before. Whether or not the movie’s language would hold up to our scrutiny now, 25 years later, the intent behind the film was beautiful. That moment highlighted the transformative and liberating power of punk and rock, decades before Laura Jane Grace of Against Me! would come out, and was always what I recalled when asked why as a queer man I liked rock, punk, metal the most.

Owning the Benefits and Costs of a Straight Passing Identity

I’ve been going back and forth on how to write this, because it feels unbearable to read, “I’m a masculine guy so I have a hard time in queer spaces.” I roll my eyes when I see this and think to myself, “This guy’s trying too hard.” However, I do need to acknowledge how I’ve benefited from people assuming I’m straight and most importantly, if I don’t accept that I make queer people uncomfortable then I won’t be able to work on attracting the kinds of friends I actually want. I know it’s going to be a difficult process working on expanding my identity to make those types of friends as well, but, it’s something that long term I would like.

At first, I was considering just writing about how straight passing and masculine I come off and poking holes in it, because to a straight man, no matter how much I pass, I’ll still be queer. That ignores that the benefits are so great to just having general strangers assuming my straightness and leaving me alone. I thought about starting here because of how much the gay community prizes masculinity and seeks straight passing men. Even in the super liberal city I now live in, I still routinely see “masc for masc” or other ways of stating that preference on the apps. Even the guys that don’t say that on their apps will still approach me in a certain way that makes it clear that they’re chasing after a straight passing fantasy. Although I’m unsure of my own masculinity, I have to acknowledge the conversations I’ve had with other queer men, which are really stupid in my mind but are these constant surprises when I say I don’t like sports, don’t drink beer, etc. 

I don’t think it’s particularly surprising to say that gay men share some of the same stereotypes around masculinity and sexuality that the greater straight community does. So usually after these conversations is my attempt at defending the identity I have in my head, which is that I’m just a huge nerd. Now, with how much STEM is being prioritized as a good industry to go into, I don’t think this is an undesirable trait. I just think I need to work harder on showing my comfort with being perceived as queer.

To that is the reality that I choose to play into the visuals of straightness and desire a straight passing public persona because I’m worried about being perceived as queer. My politics might be queer, but my perceived identity is not. Like most queer men, I’ve learned a bit about how to market myself and choose to market myself as straight passing. The hours I spend at the gym, the hobbies that are another form of exercise, and the constant dieting and mindfulness of what I’m eating is so that I can have a body that men desire and that plays up the natural traits I have that are tied to perceptions of masculinity, such as my body hair and broad shoulders. On top of the skin, the way I dress is still safely heterosexual, leaning into the natural traits which other men have chosen to play with in a way that approximates androgyny and femininity. For example, when I’m riding the metro into downtown Los Angeles, I make sure to wear a dark jacket on top of whatever floral pattern I have on, buttoning it up before riding through Compton and Watts and making sure it stays that way until I get to a gay bar; my pants and shoes, as I’m too cheap to buy more fashionable ones, have not been an issue.

I’ve been rewarded for this type of behavior. It would be one thing if this positive feedback loop was limited to awarding me sexual partners. However, it’s everywhere in my life. From the family members that applaud me for passing to the coworkers that are happy to read me as a particularly nerdy but straight engineer. Grossest of all is that in prioritizing the quickest and surest way to financial stability, I ended up in a straight, male dominated and heteronormative industry. In fact, I could be tempted to summarize that the only drawback is that I make other queer people uncomfortable.

However, there is a cost to maintaining that sort of identity. So many of the habits I’ve picked up have been learning how to suppress certain tells and emphasizing others, so that people can attach their own stereotypes to the identity I’m projecting. That stiffness isn’t something I’ve easily been able to just drop when I’m amongst the queers; as laid back as I am at home, I know that in crowds and public I get uncomfortable, but so much of that is a fear that I might be seen, a concern that someone will clock me and thus disrespect me. The clothing is not necessarily an issue, because it’s similar enough to things I could wear at work. But, when I’m looking longingly at someone at the bar who is freer than I, I am also analyzing what their identity costs them.

I don’t think it’s particularly ground breaking to say that feminine men have a more difficult time in general. I’ve given myself this platform, but the reality is that I need to take a step back here and have someone else really go through what their feminine identity has cost them. See, at the bar I’m just being superficial, wondering how much the nicer shirts cost, the clothes, the accessories. That’s what I had initially started off thinking about, the superficial costs of maintaining our identities. After all, we all have these accessories or shortcuts for identity, to signal how we’d like to be perceived and those all cost money. But, that doesn’t get at the missed opportunities and public scorn that feminine men might feel is more critical.

As the pandemic wanes and queer public spaces reopen, I have to task myself to keep in mind how I am perceived and work to change that. I’ll complain about it more in detail in another post, but I don’t want to continue dating men who are into me because of my proximity to straightness nor do I want to make friends that are constantly policing their gender expressions. Thus, in order to attract a different type of person I need to put in the work to present queerly.  

Coming out and Familial Shame

“Lo que mas me gusta de ti es que no se te nota.”

A while back, as my younger sisters were leaving behind their early teenage years, they asked me why I had never come out to them. “That’s easy,” I responded, “it’s cuz Ma kicked me out when I came out to her.” I caught them off guard with that response, because while it was that simple, there is also more to the story. From their perspectives (eight, nine and fourteen at the time), their older brother left the day after graduating high school to Mexico and just didn’t come back to live with them. I also wouldn’t put it past my mom to have told them that I was just tired of living with so many girls, as she alluded to many years later. Although I did want some space from them, the reality was that I felt that I was contributing by that point to the toxic environment, so when I was seventeen years old, I left home and didn’t return.

This isn’t a tragic story about running away and living in the streets though. After all, my mom had made it very clear my entire life that she would not hesitate to turn her back on me if I acknowledged who I was. By that point in our lives, my mom knew. Whether it was the gay porn on the family computer’s history, the way I pined in angst over specific male friends, or whether she had snuck into my room, found my journal or a library copy of some same sex young adult novel, I haven’t asked. Nor is our relationship close enough now that I feel comfortable finding out from her. Still, she had made it clear she knew and had an issue with it. So, before coming out to her, I made a plan for how I would spend the summer before college, as I had decided to come out to her toward the end of my senior year of high school. I asked an aunt in Mexico City if I could stay with her and my bio dad if I could stay with him in between college orientation and my move in date for the freshman dorms.

Of my actual coming out, I still look back on it as one of the worst days of my childhood and really one of the defining ends to that time. It has left an unmistakable mark on my relationship with my mom, the mostly single parent who raised me, and on all my relationships. After all, that day was proof that some love is conditional. Her response that day she saw as just something she had to do. Not only did she disapprove, but she insisted that I left her no choice, she had to protect my sisters by casting me out, lest I somehow spread “it” to them. I still remember the tears and melodrama, her struggling to breathe as if she were the one suddenly without a home. To this day, I struggle to have a relationship with her, because I know that if I had not gone on to be “successful” she would not speak to me. After all, now she can brag about her son the engineer. If she leaves out my sexuality, I can’t fully blame her, because even now, out of convenience I do the same.

But back then it was seemingly the worst thing I could have done to her. My rage at the time was that if she had not wanted to know, she should have continued to turn a blind eye. After all, I was almost done with high school and would be leaving soon. Perhaps the college admissions process had made her feel small, as I had largely done it on my own and she didn’t think to tell me to apply until admissions letters started arriving in the mail. I don’t blame her at all for this and she had made sure I was going to the type of schools that had guidance counselors that knew what they were doing. Perhaps it was that we were arguing so much in those days and she wanted to retaliate. So it is not difficult to see that my mom had been trying to push me to come out so that she could punish me for it as well and was doing what any bully would do, picking on things that make us most ashamed or that we feel are our biggest faults. 

Although I understand how this is rooted in shame, it feels so reductive to say my mom is ashamed of me or that I am ashamed of my sexuality. How I view myself now is tinged with modern thoughts, but back then, my vanity and arrogance helped me press onward in the face of opposition and yes, this is a defense mechanism, but it worked until it didn’t. It is more apt to say our entire culture is ashamed of queerness, on both sides of the border, and we were just two small people adrift in all of that. It would be easy to say this is just because we are Mexican and I have met many Mexican-Americans who would leave it at that. After all, the quote up top is from my aunt, one my mom’s cousins and only a couple years older than me, telling me at a party how she appreciated that I can pass for straight. Yet, it was a different cousin, my mom’s age, who accused my mom of homophobia and asked her to let my then housemate visit, mistakenly believing we were more than just friends. However, it is eminently more convenient to have most of my American coworkers assume that I am a prude with high standards, a bit of a nerd who has a hard time meeting women, than it is to have to deal with their discomfort at knowing that I am a sexually active queer man. Those who have found out and are not supportive, have no shame themselves in letting me know. Worse even are those coworkers whose prejudice blinds them to an obvious fact and who then drop the professional guise to relax into casual homophobia and expect me to agree with them. So, there is no letting America off the hook either or casting aspersions to Mexican culture as if it is a monolith. Or myself, because if I’m honest, professionally I’m still in the closet, selectively coming out to coworkers but also allowing them to assume that I am straight. 

Shame is a topic that I want to explore more. Both in how I was taught that being queer was bad as a child, how it has served me as an adult, and how I need to push it off to thrive as an adult. It just felt that coming out was where I had to start, because it marks such a difference between what is seen but not acknowledged and what once acknowledged lingers over every interaction out there in their hegemony. Because as nice as it is to believe that one day it won’t matter, that day is not today, and except in a few industries, it seems that we are all still encountering people who reward those who can pass more than those who cannot. 

I’ll leave it here for now, to gather thoughts on what the next post should be.  

Note: I tried to schedule this post to publish on March 16, 2021 at 6 PM. I apparently didn’t set this up correctly so I manually posted it and backdated it.