Short Hair, Perceived Femininity, and the Status Quo

May 17, 2011 03:10

(Before we start, I'd like to say that I'm sick and on cold medicine, so if there's anything that doesn't make sense, I apologize in advance. I'm trying to make a serious post here, but I'm not sure how well it's going to work out.)

Edit: Apologies. DW doesn't seem to want to cut this properly, either. *kicks it* I know this is long, and I would cut ( Read more... )

boring ver is boring, thinking too much, random musing, gltba, hair, family

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miss_melon12 May 17 2011, 21:23:28 UTC
Growing up, I lived with a mentally/emotionally absusive aunt. I spent most of my teenage years living under a rock because of her. I had no real concept of 'gay' or 'lesbian'. It was completely foreign to me, and I didn't understand it for the longest time because I was never, ever exposed to it. Transgender and such was even more foreign to me. I mean, I knew they existed. I had no problem with it, but I didn't know anything about it. It was mostly just something I didn't think about. High school was the most I ever encountered people, because I never left the house otherwise. I remember seeing girls with buzzed hair a lot. I even knew a girl who had buzzed hair, and I thought she was absolutely gorgeous. Even though she always wore gray, baggy clothes. There was something about her that I adored. It never once occurred to me that she was a lesbian, or that any of the other short/buzzed haired girls I encountered were. I just didn't associate short hair with lesbians ( ... )

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verloren1983 May 18 2011, 21:41:16 UTC
*hugs hugs hugs*

Out of curiosity, when did you find out that this stuff existed beyond abstract concepts?

That's so awesome that there was a circle like that at your school, though. I would've KILLED for someone to talk to in high school when I was still trying to figure things out- but I lived in Smalltown, USA, and there were already rumors about me. There were a lot of bigots in my school and I wouldn't have been surprised if there had been a Matthew Shepard kind of thing. NOBODY was out at my school. They didn't dare. As a matter of fact, I don't know of anyone in my original class except me that's out even now. (Though in my actual graduating class- yes, there's a difference, it's a long story- three or four guys came out shortly after graduation. It was a huge deal.)

Tangents are fine! It's still related. Not like you randomly started talking about jungle animals or something. :D

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miss_melon12 May 19 2011, 00:23:27 UTC
I kind of finally realized that these kind of things effected me when my ex was finally outed to me (via another friend.) And I wasn't surprised at all, because I'd walked in on conversations that made me think he may be gay. But I was always afraid to bring it up.

On a similar note to that, I'd been reading yaoi since I was 14, and I was so clueless that I was convinced for a little while that guys had a secret hole girls didn't know about. Something like that. It's pretty sad. So the concept of gay wasn't nearly as foreign to me as the idea that it existed everywhere around me. That was such a surprise.

But my school was surprisingly accepting of these things. It was a ridiculously diverse school, so I'm not surprised. I'm sorry to hear that your school sucked in relation to things like that! I was raised in Smalltown, but I moved to Bigcity when I was ten (when I moved in with my aunt), so it's not uncommon here at all. The city has a huge LGBT circle. I think?

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verloren1983 May 19 2011, 07:34:23 UTC
Well, those kinds of conversations are always awkward, especially if you don't know whether they'll maybe be offended or upset. I'm never quite sure how to bring it up either, if it makes you feel any better.

Secret hole. Oh man. XDDD

Yeah, well, it was what it was. In the entire high school there were about 400 kids, and I can recall less than a handful that weren't white- there was ONE black kid in the whole damn school, and he was a few grades below me. It was that kind of place. I think it had a lot to do with why I was "questioning" for so long. I needed to figure out everything, sure, but I was also afraid. Very much so. Where I am now isn't Bigcity, but it's better. I'm more or less out at work (I don't announce it, but I don't hide it, either, and more often than not people seem to know without me telling them anyway), and even though the current gay population at my job is just me and a bi girl, no one I've worked with has had a problem with it in a long time.

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miss_melon12 May 19 2011, 19:17:45 UTC
True.

My high school had a graduating class had a little over 400 people in it. Which was considerably lower than it started out in freshman year. There were a ton of people in the school. I can't even imagine what it would be like to only have 400 people in the entire school. I'm glad to hear that you're more or less accepted at work. It's always difficult to work with and get along with people who don't accept you.

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