Trans Details

Today I got a haircut. It was a trim, really. My instructions were “asymmetrical Christian Slater”. My hairdresser did it. This is the most basic haircut I’ve had in over 20 years. Although it’s a very “normal” one, for me it is also groundbreaking. Being comfortable having long hair is complicated.

I remember dreaming about having a shaved head or some other punky hairstyle when I was young. I hungered for something impactful, vibrant, artistic and sculptural, something personally revealing like green spikes, or daring and artistic like modern-architecture-as-hairstyle. I had no idea how to ask for something like that. So much was wrapped up in it. I didn’t have the language or the confidence, and it was beyond me.

During my high school years I literally took an hour (or longer) everyday in the bathroom just pulling the front sections of my hair back with two small elastics. Over and over again, I would be practically crying in frustration and dismay each time I got them in because my hair was never “perfect”. Spoiler alert: perfect was 3000% unattainable. This was how I saw my hair, my body, my clothes, my makeup (if I bothered to do makeup, which was usually only when I couldn’t bear to look at my face without it), and any other sort of “styling” choice I made. I would never be recognized for or treated as the person I was inside, so it seemed the least I could do was try to pass as the thing people (and to some extent I) assumed I was.

Passing only intensified my anxiety throughout the years though. It reinforced others’ feelings of comfort, assuming I was cis/femme/girl/lady/miss/Mistress/mrs… Passing cis meant I was automatically interacted with according to femme/female social standards and codes. I’ve never wanted nor appreciated that. What were my options though? That was the world I lived in. It stank and I held my nose.

In my second year of college, at acting school, I was cast in the role of a woman with cancer. There was a scene where I removed my wig, revealing a head bald from chemotherapy. My hair at the time was quite long, halfway down my back. It was decided I would wear a bald cap during the show. I showed up to the opening performance having bic’d my scalp the night before, telling no one in advance of my choice. I was afraid. I felt liberated.

It was the first time I’d been given a get out of jail free card concerning the trappings of femaledom, especially within an industry which defines and judges people by how they look. I took it, and wow! So many unfathomable lessons were learned in the following days and months and years with not a strand of hair left to hide behind. It definitely proved a blunt and immediate crash course in understanding who valued me for being a “pretty girl” and who considered me an interesting human being.

My career as an actor for the past 30 years has been an opportunity to be seen as something more and other than I appear. It’s also a double sword complete with threats from the same industry—if I wasn’t passable or pretty enough I’d never work. I pierced my eyebrow on the last day of college in reaction to this. I’ve built an entire career self-producing and cultivating artistic collaborations, articulating all the queer and questioning things in my heart and mind instead of maintaining an artistic voice that appears “legit”. I’m not interested in playing it straight onstage, and the acting industry isn’t interested in queers who want careers built from parts reflecting queerness.

For decades I chose oppression and self-repression in my personal life over the innovation and creativity I showcased on stage. I didn’t believe I deserved more than that. I didn’t believe anyone would respect my wishes if I announced them—which did indeed prove true a number of times. To my mind other people were truly trans. I just built a career playing with gender on stage. The real trans people were deserving of accurate pronouns and hormone prescriptions. For a long time I held onto the belief that people who were “naturally” read as more masculine than I fell into this privileged category. Butches. Androgynous-without-trying dykes. People who didn’t contend with all these hourglass curves. People who got “sir’d” regularly, and who looked masculine in straight-cut clothing instead of uncomfortably stuffed into shirts and pants from the wrong section of the store. I was jealous and broken-hearted when the bois would gather at Dyke Nite or drag rehearsal and bitch about their everyday adventures with misgendering. I didn’t have those stories and I wasn’t invited into the boi’s club anyway. In retrospect (especially knowing how many of those people have come to identify as trans in the last several years), I’m sure for many of them it was a humblebrag, an early indication that they were capable of pulling off passing trans one day too.

I was told on no uncertain terms by many of these very bois that they, “just didn’t see me as butch, they just saw me as a girl”. Even in “queer” circles (and I air-quote queer because my definition of queer is not based on sexual orientation, but measured by how comfortable one is believing people when they self-identify rather than attaching arbitrary labels, expectations, prefabricated identity boxes, or gate-keeping definitions of queerness) there was no place I was allowed to call home.

I remember at some point realizing I didn’t hate my body as much when I dated female people and women, but then again when I did so I also felt much more comfortable expressing myself androgynously, masculinely, and not second guessing my choices when I felt like wearing a dress. I love dresses and skirts and pretty femme clothing. I like wearing attractive, flattering, fun, and luxurious feeling things. I just wish I was read as a pretty boy/creature when I do.

Clearly it was not empowering for me to pass as femme/female for so long, yet I was lost about how to change. I remember repeatedly laughing off my discomfort of the ways people appreciated/objectified/”complimented” my body over the years, hiding my own dismay with the repeated chant of, “well, it seems my maker had one thing in mind when my body was made”. I was referencing these extreme curves, my broad hips, tiny waist, huge ass, and large nipples. That thing the binary maker had in mind was decidedly not that I should be seen as a tomboy, Sir, imp, creature, one of the guys, or a clearly they/them human being. It was an impregnateable she/her, culturally “sexy”, woman-object thing.

I love women.
I love being part woman—especially when it’s not how I’m primarily categorized, treated, or seen.

A lifetime of passing cis and being treated femme has kept me out of clubs I want to explore and away from company I want to be recognized as part of. I still don’t know how to approach some of these communities and feel safe or welcome. Gay and bisexual leatherfolk, to be exact, are the people I feel my sexuality aligns most closely with. I’ve been to The Eagle in a number of cities across the country, but I haven’t been to the one down the street in Providence where I’ve lived for two years. The desire to go is there. Fear of rejection, violence, or feeling as though my presence is negative or disruptive keeps me away. Passing has also kept me in circles I feel stupid, failing, and limited within. Passing has compounded my feelings of dysphoria and amplified depression.

Passing doesn’t really work, even when it offers some community along the way. The community passing helps one build usually doesn’t also help one feel strong on their autonomous journey outside of those same passing norms.

I don’t renounce my experience within the strong, intelligent, resilient, and hard working legacy of being woman, even if I do have a clear desire to renounce being physically recognized for so-called “womanliness”. My experience of being part woman is a brilliant part of my story, socialization, frustrations, meaning making, creative instinct, and how I navigate the world. It has shaped parts of who I’ve become and who I’m proud to be. I absolutely renounce being a girl and have since youth. I renounce being considered woman first, primarily, or automatically. These are important intersections of my own notion of self.

I am also trans.
I am also boy.
I am also a creature through and through.
I am also just me.

I am nonbinary in that I reject the binary, not in that I am not trans. I was socialized to accept treatment as a person I am not. I am becoming the person I long to be.

I am a creature, an imp, a femboy. I am a human who rarely wants to wear clothing, especially a shirt when the sun is warm and shining. I am a feline sort who loves the comfort of languishing, cuddles, and pretty much never spending time in the mirror making myself up. I’d rather skip the hours of self-criticism and dismay trying to figure out what I should wear due to who I’m meeting, what they expect from me, and how I’ll be read in whatever environment I’m bracing myself to enter. I loathe being judged for my appearance rather than my character and actions. I dislike having to wear clothes at all, and femme standard clothing like skirts and stretchy things are waaaaay more comfortable on my random cartwheeling and dancing body than stiff collars and ironed slacks. Femme clothes tend to flatter my curvy figure more than cuts found in the “men’s section”. What I am wearing will never indicate that I want to be confused for or treated as a girl-identifying-person-thing.

I don’t want to be objectified for my masculinity either. The binary really messes with people’s heads when it comes to these types of expectations. Just because I don’t want to go shopping doesn’t mean I want to watch football. I like hikes and good food and making art. Sometimes I have to go makeup shopping for work, and sometimes I enjoy football parties for the socialization and snacks. I hate the mall as much as I hate jock culture, but I love quality makeup products and I’ve loved individuals identifying as jocks.

One of the main reasons I’m taking a break from performance for a while is to spend time enjoying the person I see in the mirror these days. I need time off from stressing out about how I must comment on or translate my looks for whatever character I’m playing onstage. Hormone replacement therapy has ushered me into an era of self love and appreciation in a way I’ve never experienced. This moment is important. It’s healing. It’s an incredible gift to feel this way.

I feel free.
I feel like me.
I don’t want to pass.
I just want to be truly seen.

Play On My Friends,
~ Creature

My writing takes time, research, and consideration: it is my art.
Please help me continue by joining my Patreon campaign, Donating, or booking a professional or educational Session with me. Thank you!

BDSM Destination Vacation: Achieved!

I just returned from a four day, three night kinky vacation another Pro Dom and I produced. With one service sub in tow we kept everyone fed on two full meals a day (including turning one guest into dessert midweek), we taught private classes, helped our guests safely explore situations they hadn’t tried before, and we planned, plotted, and delightfully schemed a number of play scenes including one elaborately costumed role play… We even kidnapped a mermaid only to eventually release it into the wilds of a tub filled with seaweed!

Weeks like this will hopefully fill my calendar much more frequently in the coming year. They’re an absolute joy to produce and participate in. Producing kink events is a natural extension of my performance art and sexuality education careers, it obviously fits in well with my professional Dominance and BDSM instructor practices, and it makes perfect use of the skills I’ve garnered from three decades of producing theater and creating art. I adore this job. Please send me your requests, fantasies, desires, tell your friends, and let me know your musings! I’d love the opportunity to create like this for you and yours.

The week’s revelries were created for a wonderful and adventurous couple, but I work with single people and small groups as well. In addition to kinky getaways I have other BDSM opportunities coming up too. In January I’m planning a Dominance Training Weekend Intensive, and hopefully in February I’ll be able to produce a ritual-based play party. If you’re interested in either of those or would like me to create something tailored to your own vision, please contact me through my Creature Kink website to start a conversation about what each option entails and pricing options.

This holiday season give yourself the gift of hedonistic affirmation! Learn and/or practice BDSM skills in a comfortable and creative environment. Get some of your kinky needs met. Experience outlandish fantasies while being taken care of by well trained Doms and our submissives… What could be better?!

Play On My Friends,
~ Creature

My writing takes time, research, and consideration: it is my art.
Please help me continue by joining my Patreon campaign, Donating, or booking a professional or educational Session with me. Thank you!

Emotional Care in D/s

What exactly is Dominance and submission? Within the idea of BDSM how does D/s function? How does an agreed upon relational power imbalance effect the people who choose to engage in those roles short term? How about longterm? Does the Dominant partner experience the same things as the submissive partner during play, service, or other activities? Does negotiating a role within an unbalanced power dynamic mean that you yourself are lesser than or above your partner(s) or any other person you share time and energy with? When a submissive is having a hard time and becomes emotional, or a Dominant is domineering and fails to correctly read a situation and respond appropriately, has all sense flown out the window and is it impossible to regain a healthy balance? Is it possible to build upon mistakes and outbursts, utilizing those less-than-desirable behaviors as steps toward better coping mechanisms? Can we look at unhealthy habits or behaviors and develop plans for how to more acceptably process fear and negative reactions in the future?

Variations of these questions come up during relationships, and will definitely come up in ones which have negotiated power differentials as a part of their agreements. Nothing in life is perfect, but if I’ve learned anything in my 41 years relating to others (for better and for worse), it’s that the process of living can lead us closer to the agreeableness we’d like to achieve and to better understandings of one another—if we’re willing to be introspective and confront ourselves about experiences that don’t feel great. I think it’s important not to throw the baby out with the bathwater as we practice caretaking and interdependence. There’s no map showing where we’re going in life, and though we can learn from others at the end of the day those lessons mean naught if we can’t integrate the knowledge unlocked by them into our way in life.

I’ve had experience being submissive in a longterm relationship, and I am someone who is currently Dominant in particular relationships (I’ve also had a number of relationships which weren’t kinky or of the D/s variety). I can definitely say that (for me) the emotions which are pricked on either side of the slash are not the same ones. The nature of unbalancing a dynamic also redistributes meaning to both sides of the field on which we are playing.

When I was submissive to a Dominant partner, every little moment felt bigger than it was probably intended to be. If I was caressed it meant the world to me, if I was told I had disappointed my Sir or if I was forgotten about I fell into despair. As the submissive partner I had signed onto a position of having to trust my Dominant for many many things. I needed to trust their skills during play and that they wouldn’t harm me, trust them to watch out for me in play spaces or in public if I was somehow compromised by them, trust that my feelings were cared for, that my wishes would be respected, that I wasn’t being purposefully misled or manipulated, and that I would only be tasked with offering, performing, and taking what I could actually bear… it’s a very vulnerable place to be. The nature of submission is fraught with potential for knee-jerk reactions and emotional questioning. When I needed to not be submitting, I had to consider what that meant for my relationship, and speak to it responsibly so that expectations and trust could be maintained between us.

When engaging in a Dominant role, I must remember to be grateful for the engagement of my partners, and that my submissives don’t (or may not) hold the same experiences, knowledge, or skill levels I do in various activities. When I am teaching chores to be done specifically to my liking I must honor the learning process and remember to have patience, sometimes teaching a task more than once, sometimes teaching it in a different way or with an eye to the needs and learning methods of each particular submissive I teach. I practice listening and being nonjudgemental to understand what perspectives and situations motivate or hinder each partner I consensually take dominion over. I spend time thinking about what I like and desire, learning and practicing new and better skills, and I question my own authority regularly so that I might be fair and ethical in more cases than not. When I need to not be Dominating, I consider what that means for my relationship, and speak to it responsibly so that expectations and trust can be maintained between us.

Caretaking from a submissive standpoint is different than caretaking from a Dominant one. Think about it. Taking pride in and enjoying making the perfect cup of coffee to serve to my Dominant partner so they can experience some extra energy and pleasure while they work is a form of caretaking, as is cooking or cleaning their home or giving them my body to manipulate. Teaching my submissive to meditate, how to eat healthfully, how to care for themselves, planning experiences, and working a submissive’s body over are some of the ways I caretake as a Dominant partner. The end result of both positions in D/s coming together is still a relationship seeking equal energy flow in and out, maintaining balance.

It’s normal to care for others and seek care and nurturing in return. We learn from one another. Opposites often attract. When we have no one to care for us in the ways we prefer to be cared for, we have ourselves. Relationship with self is one dynamic which never goes away, though it may change greatly over time and is informed through myriad experiences. We need people outside of ourselves though, it can’t be self-soothing all the time in life. Perhaps that’s one reason why when we find a good fit in relationship, it can feel as though everything is dissolving away into overwhelming chaos when we find ourselves stuck or on the outs. It’s important to examine what about the relationships we’re in work for us, and what about them do not. We owe it to ourselves and to one another to consider what changes we need when those thoughts and feelings arise. Nothing is forever, it’s the nature of life to endure change and even to seek it out. In order to stay with a relationship for a long period of time we often must undergo multiple changes, autonomously and with one another.

I believe in the healing power of intentional relating. We cannot always be in control of a situation or of ourselves. We can, however, better learn how to less damagingly dip in and out of the flow when we find ourselves stressed out, triggered, in a rut, beating ourselves up, or making mistakes we’re mortified at having made. Sometimes what we need most from relationship partners is the understanding that there must be support and room to grow on our own.

Play On My Friends,
~ Creature

My writing takes time, research, and consideration: it is my art.
Please help me continue by joining my Patreon campaign, Donating, or booking a professional or educational Session with me. Thank you!

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