When I established days and times to provide content at certain websites, I have called those submissions "columns."
Having to come up with that content on a weekly basis has not always been easy. Taking a look at the news events of the day sometimes provides a hook. Sometimes a starting point is found in a diary posted by someone else. But sometimes I just have to go with stream-of-consciousness writing and hope that eventually it all makes sense. I've done several of those over the years.
This one was originally created in February of 2009...and was fueled by one stuff going on in my actual life on campus at Bloomfield College in New Jersey.
I've dragged it out here and am sliding it into my Selected Writings of a Transsexual Woman because of the recent flap about Mount Holyoke canceling The Vagina Monologues, saying they are not "trans friendly." I have no doubt that we transpeople will be castigated for that at some point...even though we didn't instigate it.
In early February of 2009, I was preparing to be in a campus production of VM.
The column produced is on the other side.
The graphic above is named Song.
I'll be truthful with you. But then, I always am. So maybe I should say I'll be truthful again.
I'm exhausted. I got up early enough this morning and did some of my usual Friday morning things, but around 11 I fell asleep on the couch with Paula Deen and Giada De Laurentiis cooking who knows what. Certainly not me, because I passed right on out. And I slept for two and a half hours.
So now I am fuzzy-headed in the extreme, my eyes will hardly focus, and I have much less time than I usually do to finish my Friday column.
But I know I have a topic here somewhere, a topic that concerned my earlier comments. Or at least I had one.
Last week I was told somewhere that Friday evening on the Internet is not the time or place for anything resembling serious discussion. Really? Who made that rule?
But that was not the topic. The topic had something to do with some comments and my current schedule, which is abominable. I'm at school 8-8 (no, that is not a smiley face) Monday through Thursday. I have 6 hours between classes, each day, often filled in part by meetings. And this past week I have been able to add on hours for rehearsal...and next week I get to do a part of the Bloomfield College presentation of The Vagina Monologues, woman #1 in They beat the girl out of my boy...or so they tried. They chose this version specifically with me in mind, it turned out, so I had very little opportunity to say, "No." Then Wednesday I received an email:
I was wondering, since the Vagina Monologues includes the part on transwomen, if you would want to do a lunch presentation to talk more about it? Maybe we could get Crystalrose or Aisha to offer it as a TRUE [Total Residential Undergraduate Education - Ed] program. What do you think?
I though maybe we could specially use it to reach out to our nursing majors and hopefully inform them sufficiently transfolk are people, too, and deserve to be interacted with respectfully.
You can take my word for it or not: such respect...actually treating us like human beings...does not come naturally in this society.
And later that day I was reminded of a previous commitment I had made, being one of the
sanctimonious women's studies set.
to speak to the Women's Studies class,
Changing Women's Lives.
Did you know?
60% of rapes/sexual assaults are not reported to the police. Those rapists, of course, never spend a day in prison according to a statistical average of the past 5 years. Factoring in unreported rapes, only about 6% of rapists ever serve a day in jail.
Sorry. That was just my sanctimonious impulse spasming.
So I look at my morning comments, searching for a clue about what I was actually going to say.
I commented in a diary about free speech.
People who fetishize free speech...
...often are totally unwilling to grok the concept that not every thought that comes into the head needs to be vocalized and that the world can become a better place sometimes by simply modifying the language that we use.
The question is often whether or not people really want to contribute to the improvement of the world.
What always amazes me when I say something like that are the people who do not believe that I should have the freedom to say such a thing. And that's what I characterize as "fetishizing free speech:" thinking that it means that others should not have the right to respond when speech shows no evidence of considering the consequences of thoughts being analyzed for the negative effects they have on others.
In Shall We Be Normal?, dirkster42 wrote about being queer and
a divide between those who want to assimilate and those who want to flaunt it
I was disturbed about what I believe was presented as a false dichotomy.
First of all, it was presented as a choice people make. Maybe for some people there is a degree of choice, but I reject that the choice is between assimilation into the dominant culture or "flaunting" being different. Rather I believe that some of us just are different.
If we choose, I believe it is a choice to be our authentic selves. And I know that some people disagree with me, but I believe that the world, our culture, our society, should change to accommodate that.
If anyone thinks it is selfish of me to want you to be as free to be authentic, I can't help that. I'm still going to work for your freedom...even though I already have found mine.
Assembling the Fragments
Introspection
When you build yourself
out of fragments
assembling carefully
that which is good
shedding the bad
like a winter coat
deciding what fits
what is detritus
left suspended
in the wake
of growing up
why would there be
any desire
to conceal
the finished product?
Do I live my life
to minimize your
discomfort
with the idea
of regeneration
rebirth
renaissance
or do I live my life
to improve
our common existence?
Is there really
a choice there?
--Robyn Elaine Serven
--February 13, 2009
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