Memories of Swimming Naked

When we were children there was this game that was played. 4th grade. I was in a new school, new town, with new “friends”. Football, drugs, and church summed up this new place. At least one Minister was known for indiscretions. Maybe with kids. I don’t know what those parents payed attention too, just the stories children told. Still, it seemed the churchgoers weren’t listening.

This school system’s rival was two towns over. These cities might have been like your own hometown. If you’re older than 35 and female, was always one of the boys even though you enjoyed dresses, and if you were from a rural area too you may already be familiar with some of this story…

The game was boys against girls. It was kind of like tag (or training for future drunken assault). Boys chased girls around the schoolyard and captured them, dragging them into boy-jail against the fence. A few of them kept guard so you couldn’t get away. It was supposed to be sexy (I think?). Forth grade hormones were kicking in, and we were all starting to be scrambled up by the simplest, awkwardest things. For example, Kirk Cameron was a poster you could get through The Reading Club and everyone had him.

I wasn’t turned on during this recess game though, I was terrified. I didn’t want to be owned by a boy, put in his jail, and told I couldn’t leave to spend my recess how I wanted.

Maybe it was the ethics of 1987 imprinting on my young mind, but that year I also had dreams of getting breast implants. Dolly Parton was pictured in lace in a magazine being passed around the classroom to smirks and stares as we learned about the vas deferens and fallopian tubes. It’s too bad they never told us they’re the same things, just in different bodies…

During that game I’d sit on the tar, knees to my chest, arms clenched by my sides when a boy caught my eye and start running towards me. On the basketball court, which rarely saw basketball played, I’d tighten all of my muscles as hard as I could, clenching my jaw and squeezing closed my eyes. I made myself heavy and dense. I willed my body to be immoveable. Unpickupable. Sheer intention through physical lockdown was my ritual. After plenty of tries, by the end of our time, I proved too big a hassle, and would be left alone. Uncaptured.

I was a boulder in a dress.

No fun.

Next recess I’d find other friends, always girls at that age. I still wasn’t safe from the games I didn’t like that they played, but at least I liked them enough to engage.

This is to say that I was a child. I taught myself these things, ’cause it seemed the teachers weren’t listening.

I was stranded further out each time I stood with my gut against the grain. I was mocked and bullied or beat because this kid had a crush on me, or that kid had a crush on them, and I was too oblivious and awkward, too weird to understand the mating rituals of teenagers and their often violent endings.

A couple grades later added male teachers to the list of people trying to look down my dress or up my skirt. Boys learned to sneak glimpses loitering by the girl’s bathroom entrance. It was Freshman year. I went to the mandatory (because I was in marching band) football pep rally. There I witnessed our rival team’s mascot being burned in a raging bonfire while drunken townsfolk cheered. I went home early with a stomachache, not understanding this type of revelry. That school district was hell, and the sports fans definitely weren’t listening.

###

The mascot burned that night was of high school number two that I went to. Sophomore year. I joined Latin Club, and went to their social to meet people. During potluck lunch they learned I had come from enemy territory. By the end of the social I’d been sold at highest price to bidders. You see, new club members were considered merchandise for a mock Roman slave auction fundraising activity. The following day at school I was charged with doing whatever my new “owner”, a popular Senior, desired. So in 1993 I sang on cafeteria tabletops, crawled on my knees to Math, and other less palatable things. The entire school was complicit, so “it was ok”, and I was excused for my sore knee’d lateness to class.

At this same school I was assaulted by my gym teacher while sitting on the bleachers waiting to play my trombone for pep band at “the game”. He continued to harass me during gym class after a meeting between my parents and the Principle didn’t change anything. No, the authorities were not listening.

###

School number three was a smaller more artsy school, nestled directly between the prior two. There was no football team, instead Soccer ruled their day. They had an intramural hockey team captained by a few kids who became my friends—they were Jazz Band geeks too. They had named their hockey team “the Scrodominators”, and I’d met most of them over the summer in community theater. They started a battle-of-the-bands ensemble, so I joined and played trombone and back-up sang to Weezer’s “Undone”. We won, and were given a performance slot at the bandstand during our town’s yearly Summer Holiday. We wore peach and green tie-dyed t-shirts, newly silk screened, to unabashedly announce our group’s name to the city: “The Fuzzy Apricots”. (We thought we were pretty funny.)

This pack of boys who caused mischief were my crew. Senior year they even came to my ballet classes and learned choreography for a recital or talent show or something… I was kind of an honorary “one of them”, often serving as the bridge to the girl’s group who hung out with us too. On nights when I felt the blood stirring restless in my veins, I’d call the guys to get invited out. We’d skate on a nearby pond, hike around private property exploring abandoned quarries, or play hockey in the road in front of my house until the police (having little else to do), would pull up in the middle of my epically empty street and threaten county jail for our “illegal street activity” which was “impeding the (nonexistent) flow of traffic”. I literally and metaphorically lived on the wrong side of the tracks, but my friends had parents who were lawyers. We were lucky, and most of us were white in this tiny city with only one flashing yellow light.

Summer nights after Senior year were filled with breaking into the ironically named “Yacht Club”. Ironic because it was on a small lake where the townsfolk kept their canoes and a sunfish or two locked away. After midnight we’d go naked swimming—everyone knew the combination on that gate. Ravenous by 2am we’d hit up Dunkin’s, the only 24/7 joint within an hour’s drive, and then maybe grab a cigar from someone’s house to share while playing overtly flirtatious rounds of Mao in a barn attic down the street from my house until dawn.

We were drunk on each other.

On daring to play and make up games.

Fed by hormones and creativity.

In my teenage years my friends and I were busted up by local cops while lovemaking in the forest, on beaches, and in fields. You see, country is country, and under a black sky filled with billions of stars, smoking shitty 1990’s New England weed on the javelin mats out by the high school track, or on a lake in some friend’s no electric no plumbing summer shack, or in the attic bedroom where our whole Senior class almost got mono, that was pretty much what there was to do. With nothing but time and youth on our side, we were searching out the Deities of pleasure. Pleasure was the only thing we knew of to get us out (funny how I long for that mundane and gorgeous land today).

I wanted to move to the city and be an artist.

For college I ended up in Boston.

The rest is history.

###

What I’m saying is that artists have been the only folks even remotely safe for me to explore with, well the artists and the queers. Dominant culture still scares and never ceases to surprise me. How does one survive, so shut down and seemingly full of hatred? How does one not see misogyny, racism, rampant queerphobia, transphobia, and other oppressions—they’re established and practiced cornerstones of our severely limiting and dangerous patriarchy?

It is 2019.

Online I read, typed out over and again: someone begging for understanding of violent rapists or those who overtly undermine the bodies and rights of people who contend with pregnancy; the chalking up of this burned cross or that dead trans woman of color to sticking out “inappropriately”; adamant red-faced tales describing border detainees as “illegal” versions of humanity; not to mention politically manipulative redistricting defined as “permissible” constitutionally.

I live in a neighborhood full of people with skin different colors than my own, yet our bank accounts are probably quite the same. I’ve empathy, though I’ll never know firsthand my neighbor’s specific struggles or feel the exact grief in someone else’s bones for what they’ve lived through and had passed down as trauma generationally. We don’t have the same privileges in this society, and so we live together suspicious sometimes… until we’re not. Sometimes all you can do is sit in your car or drive, stereo loud enough to beat down repression before it catches up.

My experiences aren’t dire compared to many of my neighbors’ when that repression takes the form of cops.

According to politicians and people of means, we’re meant to be caged like animals for daring to survive.

Those with power are actively choosing the behavior of never listening.

Play On My Friends,
~ Creature

This writing takes time, research, and consideration. It is my art.
Please help me pay rent: join Patreon, offer Support or email me directly. Thank you

Trash Fires

Deep breath. Slow, in and out. Let go of the tension. Calm the nerves. Allow my cortisol levels to drop… Steady. Grounding. Coming back to the moment I’m in. It’s going to be alright…

If I took the time to do this for five minutes everytime I read about or experienced an injustice which directly impacts me (much less the ones I read about and witness others who are less privileged than myself endure) I would be in a constant state of meditation. I would live the life of a monk. I would never be able to stop paying attention to my breath and body. Understandably, there are many days I don’t have the bandwidth to post about or speak on the subjects I find demeaning and unfair.

I am exhausted that so rarely people who aren’t directly targeted by a particular social issue speak up about it on my or other’s behalves.

When someone is hit by a car they are generally not the one calling 911 and managing the scene of the accident. If you were lying there, trying not to paralyze yourself, focusing on managing your broken physicality, amped up emotions, and fearful mind until help gets to you, other people—people who were not directly effected by the accident, and perhaps the person responsible for the harm—are the people who manage response. They are the people who call for help, who ask you if you’re ok, who make sure that whatever information needs to be gathered is being taken care of, and that you are out of further harm’s way.

For some reason racism, sexism, and other human rights issues are only treated when the victims of these crimes take responsibility for everything related to response and cleanup of the crime—even to the point of educating perpetrators and managing their resistance to compliance within our social order. There are so many problems with the world that we live in, this cannot continue to be the way we make meaning or allocate our resources.

###

Racism: Anyone and everyone harbors bigotry somewhere inside. It is every individual’s job to examine their personal issues and learn to grow and share this planet we live on. Because our country (and the world) is a place which has hundreds of years of institutionalized bigotry directed specifically at nonwhite people (therefore unfairly, disproportionately, and over generations exponentially profiting white people), racism cannot be thought of as anything other than a problem for white people to examine and solve. Consider it a disease if that helps, and seek treatment. We white people must educate ourselves about what to do in situations where racism is evident (and to see evidence of racism), regardless of whether or not people of color are present. We must challenge ourselves when we are called out, and begin to see the racism we ourselves perpetuate. Until white folk are as clear about what oppression looks like as the oppressed are, racism and the enculturation of violence by it shall persist. As long as there is institutionalized bigotry, every single white person will profit off of racist behaviors in one way or another. We should not want those things.

Sexism: See “racism” above. Apply to sex and gender based bigotry.

Abortion Access: AMAB folk, and people not able to get pregnant must speak up in favor of bodily autonomy for women and AFAB people who risk both wanted and unwanted pregnancies. Not only does the law in the United States state that abortion is a private medical matter, but access to abortion is protected until and, in cases that threaten the life of the mother, through the third trimester. Access to safe abortion is an issue which directly effects ONLY marginalized populations. Not a single person who can get pregnant is of the highest and most privileged ruling class. Something to think about: what does it mean if you support taking a marginalized person’s bodily autonomy away from them?

Anti-Choice: If you are anti-choice because you believe yourself to be pro-life, that is entirely your own right, and please do not have any abortions. I beg of you to follow your heart entirely in such matters. In the meantime, it’s obviously a primary directive of yours to ensure that all children who are born have access to affordable healthcare and medication, healthy food and nourishment, safe housing, and safe family situations or adequate alternative parental support. It’s clear that you care deeply about access to top tier education for all regardless of class, and honest discussions about sex alongside comprehensive (definitely not abstinence only) sexuality education offered to young people. It’s wonderful that you voted for increased state funding for easy access to free birth control, as this method has proven to drastically lower the rate of teen pregnancy, as well as the rate of individuals under 30 seeking abortions—yay! I assume you rally as hard against the school-to-prison system as you do Planned Parenthood, as prisons rob families of two-parent households and the income they need to rear children sufficiently in alignment with the wild abandon you celebrate every embryo’s right to life. Thank you for being so active and vocal in the fight against immigrant children being taken away from their parents, and being as intolerant of detention centers as you are. I really appreciate all of the hours and money you pour into anti-gun violence legislation, your sincere efforts to keep weapons out of schools, and your pledge to keep all children who have been born safe, healthy, out of abject poverty potentially leading to a life of crime, and alive.

Immigration: No people came to this piece of land we call the United States seeking home because they weren’t looking for a better life. The white people who first colonized this land did so violently, and it is not acceptable that we continue perpetuating their inherited violence onto those who would peacefully do only what our forefathers, foremothers, and forezaddies have already accomplished. Waging a war primarily on brown people in the name of protecting our country is unconstitutional and definitely unpatriotic. US citizens: we must do better. Our national birthrate is dropping, and the economy requires an influx of working citizens to sustain itself and keep up growth.

Orientation, Sex, and Gender Diversity: Who the fuck cares about defining the private bodies or affections of others? If you find that you do, I implore you to get a job so that you might have less time to squander on such trivialities. To what end does disrespecting someone else’s stated pronouns or other identifiers benefit you in any possible way? If you’re not LGBT or genderqueer, what possible stake might you have in denying someone their pronouns or preferred name within conversation? Why do you care who “Jess” brings to the company picnic, as long as their +1 offers up a delicious peach pie? These are not brain surgeon level complications regarding the work of adulting. Get the fuck over your personal shit and act like a community member and fellow individual. At least fake-it-till-you-make-it as a well adjusted human being for the sake of the rest of us.

Sexual Appetites and Relationship Styles: Since when is someone else’s relationship style or interest in various sexual or sensual activities (between consenting adults) any of your nevermind?! If you aren’t being pulled into a scene you don’t want to be a part of, it’s not your goddamn right to act out about it. If someone is pulling you into something that feels uncomfortable: you’re an adult. State your boundaries, negotiate shared space if you must, and move along for Lilith’s sake. I believe in you. If you are an employer you certainly don’t need to know about any of these things, however if you are privy to privileged information you certainly shouldn’t be running a business based off of someone else’s afterwork bedroom/kitchen/dungeon plans. I absolutely believe in your ability to effectively compartmentalize—how else did you ever become a boss to begin with?!

Human and Sex Trafficking: Shame and classism are primary ways we institutionally regulate people’s access to healthy sexual expression and response, as well as to social status including upward mobility. If this wasn’t the case I’m pretty sure trafficking would be MUCH less prevalent worldwide. Children, women, and other people unwilling to share their bodies with you should never be put into situations leading to abuse and enslavement. Do your due diligence when contracting illicit work from a marginalized person, make sure they are not under someone else’s control. Learn to report trafficking where you actually find it.

Sex Work: Speaking of demand for service… those people who participate in the workforce surrounding consensual sex and sexuality, are people who have some stake in the healing of sexual wounds and shame—not only their client’s, but in some cases their own as well. What happens between two consenting adults within a respectfully negotiated sexual/sensual scene, even when money is involved, is not the business of anyone who isn’t participating. People engaged in sex work should be protected just as enthusiastically as people of any other workforce are. Don’t contribute to violence against sex workers through your own words and behaviors.

Rape: Stop trying to control others. Your sexual release is your job to advocate responsibly for. Masturbation is your friend and well within your means. Self love is an important step toward treating others equally. Rapists should definitely not have their sentences forgiven because being convicted of rape is embarrassing. Rape could be understood as a crime which fucks up the lives of perpetrators exponentially more than that of their victims… Let’s get with the program.

Abuse: Be the end of abuse by breaking the abuse cycle. Get help if you’ve been affected. Get help and learn not to abuse if you’ve perpetrated. Evolve. The only way to heal the world of the poisons we’ve ingested is by turning our knowledge of adversity into motivation to become the sort of person who’s able to hold space for the complicated reality of humaning as it effects others who are in need. We can do epically more positive work in our lives when we examine and heal from our own maltreatments and misfortunes.

###

This is the end of my rant today… I’m sure it’s evident that my bandwidth is pretty low right now. I’m angry. I’m hurt and I’m furious. I’m mortified and deeply sorrowful. I’m impassioned and I will not step aside. We must look at the wrongs ourselves and our communities perpetuate, and we must each commit to furthering the (r)evolutionary: positive growth, peaceful coexistence, and radically humane change.

Play On My Friends,
~ Creature

This writing takes time, research, and consideration. It is my art.
Please visit my Patreon, offer one time Support or email me for options. Thank you.

Institutional Bigotry

I have nothing to be ashamed of, and damn the powers that be which tell me this isn’t so.

This morning I read an article by Violet Blue about how female ASMR performers are being categorized and targeted as adult entertainers and so defunded by PayPal, Patreon, and shut out of YouTube. It’s an excellent read and I highly recommend it. Why does this matter? Let me count the ways as I take a stroll down the well worn path of Misogyny Lane…

Financial institutions stealing money from working women, non-white, and queer people is just one of the many things that has happened this past year (and historically) to undermine the power women and minorities have over our own bodies and lives. Banks and financial institutions have the power to restrict individual people for pretty much any reason which is what enables, even incentivizes, other industries to follow suit. Politicians are in bed with financial institutions, and they absolutely pave the way for discrimination, unfair treatment, and bigotry.

What’s kink got to do with it? Most of my Pro Dom clients are people who want to feel taken care of, enact being submissive, wear women’s underwear, or are straight up masochistic and can’t find what they need at home. Most of these people are men (we’ll get to that in a moment). Following my own journey through masochism, as someone assigned female at birth (AFAB), helped me to undo a lifetime of instilled mistrust in my body. It turns out I can take a punch, feel pain, and survive. I can even sensually enjoy it! With this increased sense of survival comes a deeper trust in my own body and myself. My core grows stronger, I am able to more confidently go after what I want in life, I’m freer to leave behind transgressions put upon me by society and my communities. I become less controllable and more independent. I have more energy to speak my mind, to organize, to continue learning… This is an example of what it can look like for a female person to break free from the mythological limitations they’ve been trained to believe in since birth.

I’ve been called crazy more than a few times in my life, mostly by men who saw me do something difficult or heard me speak up on an issue which made them uncomfortable (this list includes some trans men and butch women within the past 20 years too). I am feminine. I don’t deny this even though I prefer not to be categorized as such — it’s just what most people see in me when they look. I’m also fairly masculine, androgynous on my best days, and I love each of these parts of myself. That femininity is not inherently understood to be, among other attributes, a “practiced resilience”, is a disservice to the idea and ideal of femininity itself. It is even a foundation from which misogyny grounds itself upon. It may be terrifying to those who would align themselves predominantly with their masculinity, and therefore believe themselves to be “tougher” than those perceived feminine (conflated with “female”), when a feminine person shows their strength, resilience, and lack of fear about painful events. A healthy femininity is not a fragile body, heart, or mind.

So, what does a healthy masculinity look like? It’s certainly not machismo, misogyny, red pill rhetoric, or a patriarchally perpetuated masculinity. We animated bags of dirt, are whole. Feminine, androgynous, and masculine, all. To enslave one’s identity toward one facet of their experience and restrict all other desires and needs in order for one to appear to “pass” as “masculine enough” for patriarchal privilege, is a disservice to the miracle of being alive. We each have one body, one intellect, and a full range of emotions on our side. We each maintain an ability to train and retrain synapses within our brains an infinite number of times between birth and death. To utilize these assets we must continue to think critically, observe anew, question, and learn throughout our lives.

Back to my clients — the ones who are masculine or male identifying, yet still desire to be taken care of, explore submission, wear pretty things, and succumb to pain at the hand of a woman or feminine being. Imagine if their workplaces, friends, or families knew of their longing to experience and express femininity and “feminine things”. Might they lose their jobs? Be ridiculed? Murdered? Lose their lives as they know them, their families, and homes? Our cultural mythology says yes. News headlines and statistics throughout history concur. Political, financial, and social acts of misogyny reinforce our society’s expectations of patriarchal rule largely through instilling fear in all people about what might happen when one steps outside of compliance. We are not allowed to be our most authentic whole selves. AMAB people who desire expressions of femininity can expect to lose their livelihoods (if not lives), and women and minorities who unshackle themselves from a fearful and disempowered state can expect to be robbed, silenced, institutionalized, raped, and worse. There is no money and no structural incentive for those in power to support their citizenry in being whole.

Poor people are more controllable due to being stressed out, underfed, overworked, and less available to speak out and organize against the powers that be. Poor people often subscribe heavily to opiates of the masses — drugs, drink, television, video games, and other forms of intellectual depressants or escapism for the salvation of their struggling hearts and bodies. Middle class people fear losing what they have and becoming poor. For women and minorities to constantly be the target of governmental, financial, workplace, and social discrimination, and for these people to be held accountable to a different, usually more extreme, degree of consequence than groups which reflect patriarchal values, is absolutely not coincidental. This week’s news of the strange-yet-exceptional punishment of censorship paired with taking performers’ income away, in the name of stopping the disconnected yet very real practice of child rape and sex trafficking, is very important to pay attention to. It is an insidious act and practice. It is malign. It is absolutely against free speech. It is a dangerous and troubling conflation of ethics which further endangers realtime victims, doing nothing to solve the problem it cites as taking on in the first place. It is anti-American.

This is the United States we are living in right now. They are not only coming after me, a queer-female-trans-sex-worker-loudmouth-artist, in time they are coming after you too. Take a moment for internal introspection: how much fear and self-repression has society already instilled within you (or within the people you care for) in the name of playing along for external gain? How much of your soul have you sold? How many of your heart’s desires have you forgotten? What percentage of yourself has fear inspired you to let go of?

Play On My Friends,
~ Creature

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This writing takes time, research, and consideration. It is my art. Thank you.

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