Okay forget drag as art, it is not important to the issue at all. I don't believe the appropriateness of the Virginia governor's actions can realistically be compared to the issue either. It seems to be stacking to add weight, if we are going to get to the bottom of the problem it is probably best to get rid of everything that is not the problem. So in that interest let's forget everything that came before, my opinions, everything. It looks like you summed it all up well.
Quote from: Emma1017 on February 11, 2019, 03:33:23 PM
I didn't want to go so deep but I feel the endless pain shared on this website and truly wish the world really understood who we are. If there was more acceptance there would be less sensitivity. Then drag would just be funny.
I wish that I was better at turning thoughts into coherent sentences. To me this is important, for us and them, so I will make the attempt. Then I will let it go, we are adults, these are feelings, it's not on anyone else what we carry in head. It has been brought up though and the question has been asked.
I do understand what so many are saying, it is near and dear to us and having someone treat it in a manner that appears so frivolous can feel like a personal attack. Put together with the fact that so many people in the world don't see the distinction and it can feel almost like it has everything to do with us. It doesn't though, it's not about us and this question is our mountain to climb, not theirs. If there was acceptance, if there was less sensitivity, these are conditions. Moreover conditions that would make it more comfortable for us, not them. They are embracing who they are and flaunting it in the face of those conditions.

Maybe even because of it. Like them or hate them but it is not about us, that is their mountain or maybe amusement park but they pay their dues and they are not hurting anyone. Wait, I know they are hurting us right? Are they though? If there was acceptance and less sensitivity would they be hurting us? If all of the women around me are a head shorter than me and it makes me feel awkward, out of place and bad inside, is it anyone's fault? Is it their height or mine that is the problem. Neither, it is how I view my height or how I believe others view my height because it is more pronounced by those around me. It would be kind of silly to blame their height and if you think about it just a silly to blame mine. I am not trying to add weight here, just trying to point out that the two heights as unrelated as drag and transsexuals. We may cross paths at times, there are transsexual drag performers and there are women that make me look tiny. Trying to find a comparison that may not have internal turmoil for everyone.

Ah hem, I will confess that the height thing has caused me some turmoil, I spend so much time with women that are shorter than me, they are my friends though and I don't blame them. Why would I blame them? That was my mountain to climb and I did,

I don't even feel like hugging every tall girl that stands next to me anymore. A pretty cool parallel in that analogy, many drag performers have nothing but respect for transsexuals and many women wish they were taller. Sorry, that last bit was for my own amusement.

Just kidding, I am not sorry one bit. Suffer!
I tried so many times to be a part of the trans community. I didn't have to, I had already made it through the storm of awfulness that is the beginning of transition. I didn't need help, I was hoping to help others and be with people who could understand that part of me. It never happened, I was out of place in every group that I went to. At first I tried to give what tips that I had, no one wanted them. Then I tried to just listen and be supportive even though the topics were not relevant to me and for the most part never were. I didn't offer any opinions or personal experiences, just gave an ear to hear and a shoulder to cry on. It got to the point that even when we did dinner after group I was mostly quiet and just listened to the stories and conversations that I really didn't understand or care about and that seemed to be okay with them. I felt like a mascot. I can stand up for myself but there was no need, I wasn't part of the group and they wanted nothing from me but my presence. Then I see them at pride and they would not talk to me, they barely looked at me. Anyway, no more about that group. I have been to groups that more than one of the members hit on me. Never went back to those for that reason alone but they had excluded me as much as the first group. I went to a picnic with a trans friend that I met long ago here, we are very different but that has never mattered, it was no different there except she included me as often as she could. It was funny how they would immediately shut me out, usually by ignoring me and talking over me. Don't get me wrong, it was a beautiful park on a beautiful day and after I got over being annoyed I sat by myself and enjoyed the afternoon. At least by then I knew it was okay that I didn't know or care anything about computers, hockey or subs and doms. It was okay that we were different and I had already given up on being a part of the community 5 months before at the Keystone Conference. Not going to bother talking about that. I had already learned that I did not fit in but hoped that I could enjoy the company at the picnic anyway, but that didn't happen. This has a point, though I don't think many will like it. I reached out to the trans community when I no longer needed to. I have a couple of trans friends that I enjoy so much that they are stuck with me forever, they both live far away though and I rarely get to see them. I have since met someone here that lives closer, she is pretty great and I hope that standing her up the last time we were supposed to get together doesn't keep us from becoming closer friends. (I am sorry babes, my family hardly has anything to do with me and still they manage to mess up my life.) I have cis girlfriends that fulfill all of my other friendships needs. My one friend questioned why I felt a need to be a part of the community, You are a girl, the world sees you as a girl, wasn't that the point? I know some of it was that she has known about me and supported me 20 years before I knew transition was possible, now that I had everything I ever wanted she didn't understand how I could need more than the support that she already given. She kept reminding me that being around trans people that don't pass will make it easier for people to see that I wasn't born a girl. She actually feels vindicated now that I don't try to be a part of the community anymore. Hey, friends are not perfect. She won't go to pride with me either, I enjoy the drag show and the festive atmosphere. I still wanted to spend time with people like me though, that understood that one part of me that she is not capable of understanding. I never found that no matter how hard I tried. My giving up doesn't make me feel relief, only sadness. Here are the two points that may not be popular.
When I had dinner with those women in my group that didn't pass very well at all, most didn't even try, I didn't mind if was harder for me to pass. I passed all of the time, I could live with not passing for a short while, I had experienced it all before. I just wanted to be with people like me and it wasn't any discomfort for me. The fact that they treated me like a mascot only has to do with point two. Point one, them not passing and possibly me not being able to pass because of that was not on them, they were just being themselves. Me passing or not and how it made me feel was a war that I had already won. People knew and accepted me for me and I earned that. Some people will never accept if they know but they are few and are no more responsible for how I deal with passing or not than those women that did not pass very well did. I am responsible for me and unless something horrible and extremely unlikely happens I will rise or fall in this life because of me and I would have it no other way. It is not them and they are not responsible, our discomfort is ours alone.
Being a mascot is my interpretation, but it was clear that I was not part of the group and became more clear when among the rest of the community they wanted nothing to do with me at all. In the community I was of no interest but outside of the community I was, well I don't know what I was to them. Showpiece or buffer maybe? Not a part of the group but they were thrilled that I was there. I have been an outsider before but in my adult life never more than at the trans conference. Even when I didn't pass, there were awful people but there were good people too, people that included me. There I was just alone and it was such a relief the few times in the day that my young friends and their parents were around. It wasn't that we understood one another or that our interests were similar, but that they talked to me, even when the trans boy's mom asked me to go to the bathroom with her. Everything felt normal and there wasn't any more awkwardness than normal for people just meeting. They talked to me and not just a polite smile and hi, answer any question I might ask then scooch away. The drag performers that I met didn't have that wall between them and me and the ones that know about me have enjoyed talking about makeup(They know much more than me, but I loved talking about it), hair, clothes and even men. They asked for my opinion on their presentation and advise. One very young girl was transitioning and though we were very different we had a lot to talk about, felt like talking to my one niece to be honest. Point two, those mostly gay men were more accepting and comfortable to be around than every trans group I have ever been to. I have so little in common with them and they are so bold and bizarre that it left me speechless at times, but they didn't shut me out.
This will probably be the only community that I will be part of. I like it here and there are many, many wonderful people. The reason I still am a part of it though is because, we don't have to get to know each other to share common interests, I won't be shut out because I am different ( lol, maybe if I am a jerk though) and even if I am I can just log off, and I don't have to sit at a table with you all and be ignored. I can be excluded here but the investment I give is what I want when I want. Sounds kind of selfish huh? I do like the community here for the most part and seeing a community of good people point fingers to another spoke in the trans umbrella, well, it bothers me a lot.
More than anything it is because this feeling is ours to deal with not theirs. They have their own problems and they are just being themselves. If they were hurting anyone I could understand, wait, is being catty and judgmental hurtful? If so there are a lot of people that should be locked up, like my one aunt. Please lock her up, really it would be doing the world a great favor. I am kidding, most of the drag performers are nothing like that. When we have to police people that offend us though aren't causing actual harm, where does that end?
Sorry this is so long and that I can't proofread it right now. I will try to get back later to fix any mistakes.
In the meantime, words of the terribly inept but entertaining Bill & Ted,
Be awesome to one another.
Michelle