Man, Part IX

Femininity is what I like about typical men. It’s a disappointing fantasy, like the ones where penises float away. But anyhow, get up and ask me a question! Feel her, feel her heartache as if someone were two people who can never choose the identification as he too. Feel her but do not look. I want to. Shouldn’t this be porn?

I know it. I fucking think about how he thinks it’s only me he desires. And I am this often enough. I need his other in me, for me. So keep it. Say it too. Be strong and present. How does it feel? I have failed people I love by accepting their silence.

I am close to something that is not altogether desire. Make him my own, further make him a woman, clearly gendered butch. Butch is a desire, say it real, and it becomes your heart. What choice is this? I am observing someone with the hardest center, blaming them.

I am not out as a wife. If I was able to say, if I say, while we are away, “trans men are constantly grave.” He’s something frustrated, naming “fluid,” “women,” “queer.” I identify a similar world, so impossible that I feel as if I am an it. And making it through writings of gender and desire. Just type in an asexual gender. I am really trying, but it would be selfish.

I am attracted to others’ hugs. I even want me. Perhaps I can want desire. Perhaps I don’t have to just reject men. I play with a clouding wall, time-locked. I am your Rorschach, but I have an inability to be her, I’m not gay enough and my heart is insufficient. Yet I am deeply gay with him. Some may not like it.

Someone wrote stories in which she can only hate a poet if she isn’t a woman. Just never when she is sharing a masculine secret. I too saw the possibility, not because I was cooler, or her source. Shatter. Define your expended heart. Is it gay? So say they say, that you are a kind man but too shallow; you don’t know what you want.

I have body issues. I have no center. Touch my name. Accepting these things, I tried, I tried to face being, and I would pretend I cannot ever say “man.” Somehow I’m still proud, nonetheless. These activities are a part of wrenching gender, revolting gender, so I am going to be him for a whole lot of life. I’m a blushing queer. I can be, not the struggles that I have rationally, harmed by gender, by truths, by heartache.

He has 21 eyes of masturbation and anxiety. He and his bodies are men in a feminine embrace because love is sharing. Let’s go man! Let’s not be disconnected at contact, be in this closeness. Boys, that’s when you blend into life with flirtatious certainty, between doses of foreplay, struggling over who is real — is it you or me? Shatter all bodies that matter.

1-10

Never outside of life to me, back deep and oral.
Harness nerves, work, and houses.
Accommodate exposure and insist it’s desire.

At a moment: they. Real distance.
Secretly I knew you’d recoil when your eye was love.
My affection is cooler than sexuality, more eloquent than hormones.

Issue rationality, need a woman, a way, to be the same?
A flirtation, a cover, and not men.
Make NOT not the only exposure to women.

When you learn the object of your closeness. When you learn you are a boy and are revolted.

Masculine 10
Feminine 6

I am kind
I am obsessed
I am longing
I am identity

I shouldn’t be trying these roles.
Be a friend, focus on the world, focus on sports.
Lie, fit clearly.

Look at what is between my legs. Look at the object and you are revolted.

Masculine 6
Feminine 10

One (trans)
Two (sexual)
I am so proud

Exposure I accept as shallow, strong, physical.
Porn is expended, upset. Torn up fatherhood. Sad desires.
Monitor my sham.

I manifest. Really! A man for a mom.

(Trans) Man 8
Woman (can’t can’t am)
Shooting and being on and on

I imagined other interests.
I feel an out loud orientation.
Be (trans) to (world) myself (in particular).

Attraction 1 – 10
Not all love is erotic
But want want want

Tissues of memories and stories I like:
Notice the A-men, the AR-men, the fishers of men.
God seems to have compromised?

“Normal”
2 Femme
Just Femme

I noticed even back then: control, insecure, reject the body.
His/her rejection her/his way came.
Look at who is between you and God.

Can’t “they” love, not quite, also “they”

I was unhappy?
I was porn?
I was born!

You can have anything so long as I wouldn’t say I saw.
I cannot. I can’t identify as harmed desire.
Blame your fluids, go to a woman, come at me with your ideas.

Femasculine 6
Auto-eroticism (look)
Validity 10

For someone, somehow, I am all orientations: a gender god

I will wander
I will heal
I will hold

do

Do it. Do it all from him
(he’s a vampire

If I had his fantasies they’d involve punishment
an alarm along the wall.

He walks in this way, angry to tell you now leaving
leave the very idea of being me!

She rides out something beautiful
— shatter on us —

A lesbian body can
demonstrate an idea: I must love him
Ignore
Acquiesce

But bring her out
)) this voice ((

Do it from him
Ignore a poet, adversary, wife
Be a (wo)man who takes care of his balls
Ride out something beautiful
As punishment

When you come
^
< .home. >
v
“I’ll be angry”

I hate the room
I cannot leave
.the very idea.

Your phone was expected to demonstrate
I am not what
I am her
This fantasy

If I had these dreams, wet with shame
you’d slice me open?

He walks into a role, an adversary, or a wife
an angry wo-man lives inside

He grunts as though he could make her through writing
–guess his limbs–

A gay body can
My hate is so tired: I must love her
Count
Build

He’s just a poet, a butch woman*
*just a body in that moment

He would be so hard under his daddy
(there is no erotic here)

The idea of me is every man in that moment
my sickness builds
/\ a boy /\

Her own pleasure is on us, shattered, angry and jealous

Tie me up and torture my manhood
Make me ashamed of the silences between us

I can overhear your puppet

I really want to love you,
even though ?this body?

Barophobia

///1///

I wouldn’t deserve sexual pleasure. Occasionally I’m totally naked — man-boobs, tiny cock and consequence. It’s not to say that I couldn’t peer out over his face, pretending to be him. Spooking him, I make my sex through his presence.

My muscles are made out of air and silicone. I find myself always at the edge, willing myself. The closer I can see his death, the more I worry about how he goes into the moment.

I’ll write a woman. Crush himself into a thousand hearts in the form of her. My dick isn’t real anyhow, so I’m absolutely stone. He seems lost in my body. It doesn’t matter; I can’t betray myself. Breathe against him (I can’t).

I’ve encountered him before — he gets the details enough to say “my body.” He keeps going, far higher than I wanted to go. I feel nothing, just look at the shape of thin air. He wants to know: Do you understand the fiction between poetry, experience and the self? The closer I relate, the more poetry becomes a distant shadow, a deeper closet.

\\\2\\\

He’s curious about his side and how it is that it feels these feelings. He’s not touching, just looking at his insides, releasing the currents. He worries about his knee and the heat radiating from his restraints. He constructs a hard shell around himself, telling himself he is irresponsible; impossible.

My body becomes an object of his experience. His hips dive into my throat. I feel endangered by his sex on my face. I am pretending to be flat chested, wondering how it is that he intrudes, so strongly that I can remember enough to trace out my story. What I will think in order to fly!

When we sit close, I remember I’ve never felt anything contacting my body. Sometimes I am just curious about your breath, your shoulder, your height, and how you live in your own skin. But it wouldn’t be right to look at you as an object. I won’t push you. Fuck me. Try.

I’ll just snuggle up in thousands of clouds. I’ll remember the sweet smell of heat that radiates from your head when you are sleepy. When its unrequited, you don’t have to fly. Just sit close, desire coursing through your arms. I’ll become a small ball resting on your sleeve, peering out at the moment. And when I fall asleep, you can touch my throat.

\\\3\\\

Just when I was resting my arms, you ask “what happened to flying? To the sweetness of riding the warm air?” I turn my back toward you, as if you are holding me. I can feel the man in my desire and he’s beautiful.

But I have to watch my back. If anyone learned how I want, even if they haven’t, they would want to know, “what are you seeing?” and “how can you be sure? Can you even see?” And my desire would do whatever it needs to do in order to pretend. I’ll move. I’ll let go of that. Anything for you to relax into your ability to know I’m yours.

Perhaps it’s all projection and it only makes sense in the moment. If I let myself, I’ll go absolutely mute. When you ask if I’m ready, I close my chest or light it quickly into his. I told you already, that is irresponsible and impossible.

I was resting my heart on the right to be heard. I fear that sensation because a poem, for me turns feeling into numbness. I said today, on edge barely breathing…
“…”
I remind him that I was resting so he bolts awake.

///4///

The more risk the more beauty. But I want to fly. Even when we are sleepy. Still I’ve never felt something like this. Still scared, absolutely mute. Take off your face and pretend you are ready. We will talk about rising. How I feel him be. Wouldn’t it be amazing, would it? Traveling up to blend with him. What I want is beautiful.

But what my body would betray. I look over my shoulder. Our shirts over our faces covered in sweat. You will read my sex as nothing in something. What I want is possible, not straight. I fly over the canyon. You say try. I want or don’t know what I said today, “what would I do?”

mistake

Steam rises from my calves
am I hot or cooked?
burn in/out my core

Blood rises to my head
press out the borders
of my flesh
remind me I’m alive
still feeling numb
angry at machines
and their capital

Blood pounds in my ears
mask the sounds
of his.my shame
cover me in my own fluids
still feeling helpless
angry at landlords
and their egos

Water trails down my chest
am I sweat or tears?
drain me in/out

I hear I’m about to make a mistake
I realize to        that mistake is
you                                            me
hide <> erase <> problem

I’m the best at collapsing make room for your insatiable
I don’t need                      fuck
you                                  myself
big dick <> little d’clit <> forever girl

Light flickers behind my eyelids
am I dark or light?
replay in/our danger

Shadow betrays my            frame outside my            brain
female                       male
show me you t-ts                               c-ck
whore                                              monster

Fog coats the mirror
what is my name?

I am a constant                                         temporary
state of                                                    amnesia

Elliot, Mike, Frank, David, Joe, Jack, J, J…
JJJJJJJ
is something

J…{}{}{}{}
Ja –~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Jac//?!

Wake up!

Please

I need       inside
you            me

when our lips speak together

The most generative theory I read in Prof. Hays Feminist Theory course in graduate school was Luce Irigaray’s essay-poem “When Our Lips Speak Together” from The Sex that Is Not One. It was the kind of text that I felt from within myself, not just one I wrangled with in the intellectual spaces of my brain. This got to me in a different way, and like poetry I could see myself reflected and refracted in it, shifting my interpretations with each read. I sensed I was a sex that was not one and found the possibility of myself in her critique of the gender binary.

If we continue to speak the same language to each other, we will reproduce the same stories…Get out of their language. Go back through all the names they gave you. I’m waiting for you. I’m waiting for myself. Come back. It’s not so hard. Stay right here and you won’t be absorbed into the old scenarios, the redundant phrases, the familiar gestures, bodies already encoded in a system.

I know I must. Getting out is survival. Irigaray’s critique is resonant with Rich’s: men have used language and philosophy to construct the subjectivity of women in their own image, and as a repository for all of their aversions and fears. (Western) writing about women, female, and the feminine, has silenced and erased actual women’s subjectivities and experiences. Women in poetry, stories and philosophy are not women, but mirrors and projections of male subjectivities.

As a feminist queer transman how can I use language against and between the gender binary, in generative synthesis? I’m turning it over and over in my mind, how these feminist thinkers and writers, in making space for women subjectivities, both gave me a sense of empowerment and a deep sense of alienation from my masculinity and male identity. I don’t know how to talk about it.

I am a mirror of a mirror, absorbing the projections of women’s fears about men, generated by men’s fears of women, my subjectivity defined as a choice, and a dangerous one (with questionable politics) at that. I’ve been feeling very alone in this journey.

Irigaray compels me in the way she tantalizes the reader with the possibility of authentic connection, a healing from split connections and fractured subjectivity. That the “you” and “I” that have been severed by gender, by fear, by power could actually be reunited. I find myself longing for such connection with another person, never realizing that it was a disconnection in myself that required care.

When you say I love you — right here, close to me, to you — you also say I love myself…This “I love you” is neither a gift nor a debt…This currency of alternatives and oppositions, choices and negotiations, has no value for us. Unless we remain in their order and reenact their system of commerce in which “we” has no place.

When I first read Irigaray I was lesbian-identified and the possibilities for authentic connection in the taboo of women’s sexual/love relationships with women seemed like my salvation. Maybe I could connect, I could reach, you, and thereby find myself.

But it turns out that’s not how love works, at least not the kind that doesn’t flame out in disappointment. Looking at the broader context of Irigiaray’s work more recently, I understand that she was not advocating lesbian separatism and in fact trying to make sense of how women, in a full empowered subjectivity, could engage in authentic relationships with other humans (including men). She later wrote a book called I Love to You where she articulates an alternative expression of love, between equal subjects. Her discussion of love in “When Our Lips Speak Together” used to read to me as advocating a total loss of one’s subjectivity in another person, a complete union in which there is no distinction between self and other, almost as if trapped in a feedback loop of blissful co-produced fantasy fulfillment. I read it differently now:

I Love You

Subject (writer) --> Object (fantasies / desires of the subject)

Male writers have constructed women in the image of their fear-desires

vs.

I Love to You

Subject (speaker) --> Subject (another person)

Love's existence is not dependent on the response of the loved

I’ve internalized the projections of others about who I am, who I should be, and who they need me to be. Coming out as a transman has broken their mirrors and my own need to find myself in the face of another.

trying to walk with a man

My poetic remixes are based on how I learned to draw as a kid by tracing. I rewrite the poem in my own words, with my own experiences, memories, and sensations, as a way to trace the feel the flow, style, rhythm and meaning.

Rich’s “Trying to Talk with a Man” has been analyzed as related to her divorce, a realization of the end of love, gender trouble, the intimacy of dead ends, projection, co-dependency, and war.

I was struck by this poem because it resonated with the explosive tendencies that have existed in my close friendships with other men. I walk a fine line between a longing for camaraderie, physical attraction, and a desire for platonic intimacy, all of which, alone or in combination, trigger my gender identity panic.

remix of Adrienne Rich, “Trying to Talk with a Man”

In these fields we are testing bombs
that’s why we came here.
Sometimes I feel safe under the canopy of trees
Free to submit to the force of waters that smooth stone away
I see it like I see myself in you
Partial, deep, alive, holding, ready to break open
We run breathless as the rain soaks our skin

What we’ve had to give up to get here–
whole LP collections, plays we enacted
we were heroes, looking through windows into some other life
my love letters, your suicide notes
sunsets across the frozen lake
we could pretend we were free as children

Coming out to these fields
we meant to find something we never were
driving among careless robins and cornfields
We use a language whose grammar negates pain
You swaddle me with familiar silence

Punctuated by the cries of tired toddlers
reminding us of the limits of our choices
everything we were saying until now
was an effort to blot it out–
Coming out here we are up against it

Out here I feel more vulnerable
with you than without you
Ghosts rise from the road into the sun
rainbows disappear from view
We talk of past lovers, indiscretion
describing our heartaches as if they happened to someone else

Sirens approach and you look at me like an emergency
Your dry heat feels like power
Ignore me and walk ahead
as stars in my eyes demand your attention
reflecting lights that spell out: EXIT
Talk softly, walk closely against me

We go on talking of the danger
as if it were not ourselves
as if we were testing anything else

lies, secrets, and silence

During college I picked up a copy of Adrianne Rich’s On Lies, Secrets and Silence at a Borders bookstore (remember those?) in Portland, ME. I used to meet up there with my boyfriend who worked full time at a factory making rubber seals for car doors. We could spend an entire Sunday pouring over books, magazines, and CDs despite the miles and life trajectories that were already pulling us apart.

The words in the title — lies, secrets, silence — struck something within me: someone was writing about what is not supposed to be uttered, what she has been told she should not say. The book felt important, bold, and expressive of my deep cynicism of humanity, which I mostly kept to myself. I felt like the world was keeping a secret from me, that there was some joke about gender and sex and love that I was not getting. Everything felt uncanny and inverted; I felt I was the only one who saw it.

In college and graduate school I tried to tackle issues of gender and sexuality on an intellectual and political level while avoiding them personally. But even academic writing was hard. I would hit a wall and hit it again. Writing about men and masculinity could break the writer’s block, but I was still constructing a voice based on an idea I had about how a woman’s critique of men was supposed to look, feel, and sound. I was still voiceless on matters I desperately needed to speak, write, and understand.

And here was Rich, writing about how language makes certain things unspeakable, and poetry makes them speakable again: “The victimization and the anger experienced by women are real, and have real sources, everywhere in the environment, built into society, language and structures of thought. They will go on being tapped and explored by poets…We can neither deny them, nor will they rest there.” She writes of the possibility linguistically and culturally, of women shedding a male consciousness, or false lens upon themselves, and creating an entirely new expression of subjectivity.

I read Rich’s chapter “When We Dead Awaken: Writing as Re-vision (1971)” with great interest because it was about rewriting, revision, and redefinition: “It’s exhilarating to be alive in a time of awakening consciousness; it can also be confusing disorienting, and painful.” I wanted that consciousness, to use language in a new way to undo the lies secrets and silences around me. The chapter analyzes how women writers have used detached tones, male subject positions, or reaffirmed men as sources of fascinating power and women as suffering from Love. I set about a mission: adopt an alternative subjectivity, as a woman who loves women, as a way out of this gender trouble and to cut through the repression and suppression that was suffocating me.

I made friends with some queer women, started playing in grrl punk bands, and eventually had my first crush on a woman. As I was writing songs about these experiences I found it was very hard to write about women, and I didn’t even approach trying to write about myself. I caught myself using heteronormative language that objectified and pacified women as objects of the male gaze. As remedy, in my early 20s I wrote a song Your Release, which was a self-conscious attempt to write love and desire for women differently, or at least to call myself out about the ways I had been writing about women as “a dream and a terror.”

empty and fragile my love
a dream and a terror you are
you fight in your chains I’ll come free you
with my words I’ll trap you back again
you are more than a dream
you’re a real and possible being (but I always found myself singing it as “real impossible“)

Rich’s essay opened my mind to the possibility that certain subjectivities (women) have not had a language with which to express themselves authentically, because as writers they had internalized (strategically and by enculturation) some other subjectivity’s ideas about the world and about themselves. I didn’t get very far creatively or personally in my attempts to find an authentic voice as a woman, but this crucial concept stuck: a class of persons can create a new language, new forms of expression, and new genres as a practice of liberation. I apply it now as a transman, as a person who has had to remain silent about my identity and my experiences, and as a person who has deeply internalized transphobia and self-doubt about my own memories.

I reconnected with Rich’s writing recently in my attempt to reconcile my lesbian feminist identity with coming home to my queer transgender male identity. My therapist suggested I read Rich’s Diving in the Wreck as a metaphor for my dive into a history of past sexual trauma that was happening in tandem with a rediscovery of myself as transgender. This time I found inspiration in Rich the poet, where gender is more fluid, multiple, and fraught, than in essays that address the political and cultural formation of a distinctive female consciousness.

I came to explore the wreck
The words are purposes
The words are maps
I came to see the damage that was done
and the treasures that will prevail

the thing I came for:
the wreck and not the story of the wreck
the thing itself and not the myth

I am she : I am he

I think my About page is probably the clearest expression of Rich’s impact on my writing process. The Markov Chains to me are the beginning of a journey, the deconstruction of language, the reversion to a child-like mind, in order to create the objects (silver, rot, fouled compass, and drowned faces) that I can mold into the voice of a subjectivity that is just now fully coming alive within me.

 

 

use

I can let people have used me
And more importantly, do(es) I think any love is a truer self?
Their fears and fucked up roles become the vibrations of me too

He wants intimacy,
what sweet sacred line between platonic affection and being held?

I want his split self in the bushes
/ nature
/ / / edge
making me his asset

How will you receive hir love and attention,
with that desire to control and so on?

I’m wrestling with the water
I don’t want to be completely available
I want to forget?
Does it matter?

He fuels confusion,
why do I feel like a trash tin?

I want to support his deepest desires
/ confused
/ / / worried
when he gets too neat

Why do I feel so humiliated,
because relationships (a) whither (b) blow up?

And so simple
/ cling
/ / suck
was it special

He told me he projected my true self onto me
More importantly, do(es) he feel controlled by affection, aspiration, desire in his legs?
I hold their better weaknesses instead of the hidden sides they cannot face

open

Come into my body with fierceness in your hands
I can be yours
Make me merciless and I’ll catch you
I can be your boy

Descend a ladder into the sound of my voice
I can be open
Let go at the knees and I’ll want you
I can be open deeply

Follow me without your clothes
I can kiss the fall
You are willing to be alive and inside me
I can kiss the fall of your defenses

We are willing to feel wanted
I can wrap you in leather and hands
Reach for me, press up my boy
I can surround you in chains

You might think it’s not possible to fall
Make my mouth a possibility
Fleeting gestures of soon to be
Break my desire, be strong

Break off your eyes
The lives we’ve made so far
Protected from accord
Call me down your mouth and will

Never let me off my knees
Kiss me where I fall
Come to me at once
Break off possibility too

Be my body
Hold your throat open
Let go in the way you want me
Never let me take you wrong

I’ll stumble all over over you
Get on my throat
Open me wide
Linger behind you

Bring your ladder to my door
Be here right now
Come in your clothes
Be my boy

Let me wrap you
Bind you here in my mouth
Surround me with your want
I will you