I just got a message from my brother: the group of them (brother, mother, aunt, uncle, cousins) are at the Inner Harbor, seeing the sights, shopping, going to the aquarium, etc., and thought I might want to join them.
I do. I especially want to spend more time with my cousins while they're in town, and it'd be kind of neat to spend some time with folks in "my space" (Baltimore being closer to that than anyplace else we're likely to meet, unless I do some MAJOR housecleaning in the next hour and somehow convince them to come to my house, fifteen minutes West of the harbour).
But there's the Mom/clothing issue. Nine years ago, in response to a request from Mom when I came out to my parents as transgendered, I agreed that I would wear boyclothes to her house. She wanted me to promise to wear boyclothes whenever I was around her; I modified that before agreeing to anything. She's never seen me dressed as *me*. I wore a kilt to my brother's wedding (not the brother who's in Baltimore today). When I've gone to my brother's in-laws for holidays I've worn pants because I figured it wasn't the right time to push things, especially with all the financial help I've been depending on Mom for lately. But this is ... well, my ground. It's not a holiday party or a wedding. It's fifteen minutes from my house, and a place I wander around with a camera some nights. At the same time, the first time Mom sees me dressed as myself, it's going to come across as a challenge. I don't want to antagonize her. I just don't want to have to keep putting on a disguise if she's going to be around.
Morally, I feel there's nothing wrong with my choosing my own clothes today. Politically is another matter. Just not showing up would suck too, 'cause this is a chance to spend more time with my aunt, uncle, and cousins without driving very far.
Interestingly, this topic came up with my sister in law last night. With all the slush on the ground, I didn't want to wear my flats, so I wore my cute boots and brought my innocuous flats to change into so as to not freak out my mother. My sister in law thought that was silly, and convinced me to leave the boots on (which I was happier about wearing in the first place, slush or no slush); she also chided me for choosing a more conservative top instead of the more festive one that I'd feared would bother Mom. She pointed out that in her parents' house, her family's judgement about what's apropriate should prevail over my mother's. She's right, but there's the question of how far/how fast it's practical to try to push Mom. (Note that her family's reactions to my cape probably had a lot to do with Mom's decision to buy me fabric to get it re-lined -- everyone over there thinks my cape is just the coolest thing, and tells Mom that when she tries to apologize for how "odd" I am for wearing it.)
Folks are supposed to go over to my brother's house sometime before the visiting kinfolk fly back to England, and my sister in law told me she expects me to come as myself, not in my visiting-mommy-disguise, so the issue is likely to be right in Mom's face soon anyhow ... but I'm still nervous about it. The memory of Mom's reaction to that phone conversation nearly a decade ago still stings ... but so does the reminder each time I put on a completely different look just to do family stuff. (All Come Free, while being more about my reaction to my parents' reactions to my coming out, has more to do with Mom's reaction than to Dad's, and also reflects the feelings of the decade leading up to my telling them, when all my friends and many strangers knew, but not my folks).
At my brother's house, I'll have my sister in law, at the very least, standing up to my Mom and arguing my side, plus I'll have the excuse that I was honoring the wishes of the hostess. But it'll still be tense with Mom. Today, while it's "my city", it's technically neutral ground -- the unspoken rules are all different. And my sister in law won't be there. And complete strangers will be -- I'm sure Mom will react to the "public embarrassment" aspect of drawing attention. On the other hand, it's one of the places that I go on my time, a place that's part of my non-family stomping ground. Putting on the boyclothes disguise to go there feels like ... well, wimping out for sure, but also "cheating" somehow.
I don't know yet what I'm going to do. I can go in Glenn-clothes, go in boyclothes, make an excuse and not go ... I'm going to go take a shower and then decide.
I hate this stress, I hate it I hate it I hate it. One of the Big Important Advantages of being OUT is that I don't have to worry about how people will react when They Find Out, but there are still these little corners of shadows and greys and tense situations to deal with. It's not [expletive]ing fair. (Of those corners, this is the most serious. There are other, smaller ones.) When I made my peace with dressing as Myself and [expletive] what the rest of the world thinks, it was supposed to free me from this whole, "Do I have the nerve to actually walk out the door dressed like this?" panic -- and mostly it did so (though, oddly, I sometimes feel that when going out in boyclothes -- go figure). I resent Mom for her part in my feeling like a scared, closeted eighteen year old again, even though on her side it's just wanting to protect herself from something she sees as unpleasant.
Then again, if I take too long writing this, they'll finish their sightseeing and go home and my decision will be moot. Guess I'd better go take that shower.
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Is there anything in your Glenn wardrobe that is more "ambiguous", that sends the dual messages of "this is my turf, dammit" and "I am at least trying to not cause a scene with you, Mom"? The kilt would be one example of this; some SCA garb would also qualify (I don't know what periods you do in the SCA). Of course, of this I don't know what's actually comfortable in December, so forgive me if this is a stupid idea. Just trying to help. You should not have to wear boy clothes, and I understand the desire to not have a confrontation today, so I'm looking for compromise options.
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I did think of wearing garb -- probably Norman (at least I think it's Norman) --or my kilt. I've got stuff that'd be comfortable enough temperature-wise today. I don't think I'm going to do that, but as of this moment, it's still an option.
I do often try to schedule visits to Mom's house on the way to or from a performance, so that I'll already be in boyclothes and won't have to feel like I've dressed up especially for her. So that usually means kilt or garb.
Today, I suspect that'd seem more obviously "costume" than anything else I could wear. It'd feel sort of a little of both sides to me.
Still thinking.
And thanks.
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At the Christmas party last night, I wore the black slacks with a long-sleeved black velour top. At Mom's house Christmas Eve, I wore a red polo shirt with the black slacks, and my cousins were amazed that I was in short sleeves (it wasn't that cold Tuesday night, and I had my cape).
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She really can't complain about kilts if the likes of Samuel L Jackson can spend an entire film wearing one (51st State) - and I know life is about more than Hollywood, but such images as you know carry ideas of what is and isn't "acceptable" and might help her out.
But we dion't know each otehr, so feel very free to ignore my views completely, hope you get to hang out with your family and still feel like "you", however you end up dressing :)
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I hadn't thought of using Eddie Izzard's existence as something to throw into the discussion -- guess I ought to use that while folks are visiting from England, rather than later...
As for what I wound up doing, I'm about to write a fresh post about that.
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It sounds like it may be time to tell your Mom that you love her but need to dress in the way that meets the needs of your own spirit from now on. That she can love *you* best by honoring how, and who, you truly are - not by thinking first of what others will say.
Are there other parents-of-transfolks who she can talk to, to help her get used to acceptance? Pride, even?
Geri
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That's an accurate reflection of part of what I said (perhaps the most important part). And yes, that's been gnawing at me for years, both before and after coming out to her. And you're right, it's not getting easier.
I sometimes feel sick to my stomach when contemplating visiting my mother, because it upsets me so much to have to put on a disguise to visit the closest of family. Of course, she can't see that; she only sees that I showed up, and that I did so dressed "apropriately". How difficult it was for me to do so is completely invisible unless describe it (and she comprehends/believes the description), but I don't do so because that would feel like re-starting an already-fought fight.
"It sounds like it may be time to tell your Mom that you love her but need to dress in the way that meets the needs of your own spirit from now on."
She can be as stubborn as I am. It's long past time I should've said that, but I fear a rift ... then again, if things are heading in that direction anyhow, maybe I have less to lose than I'd thought.
"That she can love *you* best by honoring how, and who, you truly are - not by thinking first of what others will say."
The question is how to say that in a way that she'll hear it. In many ways, her ears are closed. I need to sneak the message in via the paths still open.
(I don't expect you to be able to tell me how to do that -- I'm pretty sure that requires knowing my mother pretty well. But if you have generic Clue to share, things I haven't thought of that I can figure out how well they apply, I'll listen.)
It really feels as though she doesn't love me, but rather that she loves the son I'm supposed to have been (as long as she can pretend that I really am him). But I know how much I hate it when someone plays the "If you loved me..." card on me, so I'm skittish about saying things that even sound like that.
(I've got more to say about "if you love..." in the rant that's brewing about what happened a few hours ago.)
"Are there other parents-of-transfolks who she can talk to, to help her get used to acceptance? Pride, even?"
Sometime in the past decade, PFLAG changed from, "Uh [scratches head] I guess parents of transfolk might fit in here..." to explicitly including transgendered in their literature. So yes, there's PFLAG for her to talk to, but first I have to get her to want to talk to anyone about it.
Geri, thank you.
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> out how well they apply, I'll listen.
I don't have the magic phrase, of course. But it occurs to me that this may not be so much about *what* you say, as about your willingness to say it and stick by it. I mean, you'll likely put in the usual stuff about "Mom, I love you, and making you happy is important to me - so important that I've honored your wishes about my garb for X years. But it's eating me up inside to have to maintain a facade, especially to the one who I'd love the most to know me - the real me. I can no longer pretend I am other than who I am, and I want to honor you by letting you get to know the real me. And I want you to honor me in turn by welcoming and accepting the real me."
Or something like that.
But really, if she's going to hear it, she'll hear it; if she's inclined not to, she won't. And it comes down to, who is going to be the one to draw the line?
What will happen if you simply tell her some variant of the above, finishing with "And I am going to dress as *me* from now on, and you will have to accept that." Will she grit her teeth and put up with it? Go along with it but make snide remarks? Say she never wants to see you again?
And how well can you withstand each of these?
Hugs,
Geri