söndag 6 september 2009

On internal Sir-ness....





I have always been a really pretty girl. Like a real pretty one. It was what I was dressed up to be growing up, and what I liked being when I was a child. I was smartly dressed in chequered dresses white blouses and patent leather shoes by my mother. I chose tops with roses and tightly fitting jeans when I became older.

Then suddenly, as my body was filled with growth hormones, a jolly mixture of testosterone and steroids and my puberty was put on hold, there was a shift in me. I will not credit it only to the hormones because I believe that is a way too easy escape route, it also had to do with me leaving a context that had very subtly kept me in line.
I was sixteen, I left my village I spread my wings and I shaved my head. I looked at myself in my first ever own bathroom mirror and I said: Look I am a BOY!
I loved my shaved head. I loved what it did to my face and for sometime I did like what the hormones did to my body, it made me bulky, something I had never been and but somehow always felt like.

You see, there had always been a longing for power within me, and I had become skilled at practicing some parts of it. A subtle power of the mind, a power driven by words and tones of voice was already mine. However, this was something else. This was a kind of masculinity that I had never felt. And for a short period of time I thrived on that.

Then, as I have said in an earlier post I became unhappy with the way the hormones made me look, the bulkiness made my arms stiff and I didn’t recognise myself in the mirror. Coming off the hormones I returned to being that rose-top-fitted-jeans kind of girl again. I was home; I had just been out of my own skin a bit.

But as I look back on that period of my life and what I took with me when I came out of that I can really see what I gained. This period, even though I couldn’t see it myself then and I am sure no-one else did, allowed for me to explore a masculinity that had been ascribed to a certain kind of force and power in my culture, and it bred within me secret room where that is stored.

For it’s true, when ever you see me as girlie as I can ever be there is till that notion of a very masculine force within me.
I think it comes out the most obvious if I look at my own taste of music, below is a picture of American Folk singer Tim Eriksen, I just love that man. There is softness in his voice and the way he carries himself that just melts me. I wish I had his voice, in a sense I wish I could be him.



I speak about that a lot, the longing for a somewhat deeper voice. To not be so girlie and frail. To be able to be physically overpowering. I think it comes from a need to be taken seriously, to not be seen as tiny and sweet all the time, an urge to have others see that confidence in me all the time.

I know people say that it’s nothing that I need, that it doesn’t matter how tall you are or what you wear if you handle the world like I handle the world. I am grateful for such compliments, but even if so it’s slightly oversimplifying I think. Of course it is so that I don’t take up as much space in a room naturally as a person who’s taller than me. I need to fight to take that space, and I do that gladly and somewhat on autopilot nowadays. But that is only because I have had to do that, not necessarily that I have wanted to do that all the time.

The Sir in me is sparked by Tim Eriksen’s singing. By lyrics like this:
One bright summers morning as the fields were a-dawning
Bright Phoebus had rose and shun over the lea
I spied a fair maid as homeward was riding….
I stood in amaze and said I, bonny lassie if you’ll only consent and go to Jamestown with me
No other in this world will be mistress of my castle, there none will go clothed more finer than thee
-Lass of Glenshee, adapted by Tim Eriksen.


It is sparked by the whisky-cokes I drink when I am letting my hair down, it’s sparked by seeing butches giving me ‘the look’ when they see my glistening nails and ruffled skirts. (I instantly think “Oh I’ll show you girlie :P”)
It is lit by the limelight, and by grabbing my tits on stage as I speak of my ideas of femme in said limelight.

Even though hormones did fuck me up pretty badly during the time I took them, I think the changes of my physical appearance were important for me to realise this. To allow a certain kind masculinity to flourish, and then tucking it in were only I could see it, was crucial for the way I see myself nowadays.
For the choices I have made and how I speak of my constitution. I wouldn’t go as far as to say there was any kind of transition within in that, even though there were noticeable changes of the way my body looked and what I felt and did during that time.

What has scared me a bit when I look back on that time though is that I wasn’t given a choice as such with this. Of course I could have chosen not to take the hormones but that would have made me sickly short. It scares me that even though I assume what I got was a pretty low dose of testosterone I could still very clearly see and feel its effects. It scares me that no-one told me that this might happen, that my body as I had known it would not be the same during the time I took the hormones.

As it is today I love my female body, I cherish its frailness and the fact that I am petite. Recently, I have come to learn that my boobs are not as small as I always thought though, and I struggle a bit with wrapping my head around how to handle their alluring power ;)
But most of all I cherish my female appearance and my femme-ininity since I am confident that there is always more to me than what meets the eye.

That even though I am still that girl I was when my mother dressed me up in chequered dresses and socks with lace, I know that there has always been, and will continue to be a very feisty ‘man’ within that. One I could only see shadows of growing up, but who I carry with me close to heart these days.

Here am I, the girlie girl. Inside me is Sir.



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