I had a
memory today that I would like to talk about. And I would also like to talk
about how awful it is the way that children are dissuaded from breaking gender
stereotypes and even sometimes punished if they do.
BUT
I’M GETTING AHEAD OF MYSELF.
Let’s get in
the ‘ole time machine and head back about six years to my freshman year of high
school. Yes, this is the scariest ride in the park so if you have a weak
constitution I would advise you to sit this one out.
So let’s
think for a minute about high school. It’s a pretty terrible and awkward
time. We’re in the throws of puberty, hormones rush too quickly for some of us
and not fast enough for others, hearts are broken and then healed the next day,
everyone is too distracted by their social status/sexual frustration/unrequited
love/magic cards to learn a damn thing, and crowds gather in an instant to
watch those two girls from earth science tear each other’s hair out by the
fistful. (Not to joke about girl fights, some of them got pretty serious, like
when that one girl with the ring cut that other’s girl’s face open and broke
her jaw or something and she had to go to the hospital) #classy #goskippers
#weareNK
Sorry
everyone, I’m getting nostalgic.
Anyway,
everyone is mostly just trying really hard to fit in. And a huge part of fitting in, was squeezing into the neat
oppressive little boxes marked male, and female. I remember the first day of freshman
English class. We were filtered in from three different middle schools and so
we didn’t all know each other. Our teacher instructed us to stand up, walk
around the room, and introduce ourselves to three people we had never met.
After about ten minutes we all sat back down, and she remarked that she was
happily surprised to see that we had mingled so well, and that usually when she
does this the boys introduce
themselves to other boys, and the girls to other girls.
you come here often?
It was funny
how even the most seemingly gender-neutral things suddenly seemed so divided.
When we got our uniforms for band class (yeah yeah
laugh it up…) Everyone received a (used) white concert shirt (talk about
sweat stains), and a clip on bow tie, but the girls got cummerbunds, and the boys got suspenders. And I wanted suspenders
dammit! Although I do remember being pretty happy about getting to wear a
collared shirt and bow tie to every concert. But still, I was the only girl
drummer in high school and a lot of people thought that was a REALLY BIG DEAL. I remember the first
time I met the high school band director, before I even started high school and
she was helping with rehearsals for the Rhode Island All-State Jazz Band (yeah,
I know it’s the smallest state). She
gave me a lecture about how girls
hardly ever get this spot and how there aren’t many girl drummers and how music is a mostly male-dominated scene and how I should be very proud and how I have
to make all my fellow females proud and play confidently to show everyone that
girls can play the drums too.
Geez.
No pressure.
How about
being proud of all the hard work and practicing I did to get to that point? How
about people judging my drumming by how well
I played and not my gender?
Then there
was jazz band. The senior jazz band got to rent special concert clothes. The
boys were all fitted for tuxes and the girls were asked what size (hideous) concert
dress they needed. I remember being very upset when I saw the senior jazz band
play for the first time. One of the only times when I felt really comfortable
and good about myself was playing the drums, and I was NOT about to let that be
ruined by having to wear a stupid dress (which was more like a glittery black
toga than a formal dress JUST SAYIN’).
Luckily I was clever, and so I told the band director that I wouldn’t be able to wear a dress to play the drums since you have to sit with your legs apart (left foot on the high-hat pedal, right foot on the bass drum pedal). So I dodged that bullet and got away with wearing black pants and a black dress shirt. BUT STILL, what if I had played something else? I would have been very upset. And what about all those other boys and girls who would prefer to wear a dress or a tux or pants or a skirt or any of it? What would they have done? What do they DO? School was just a very oppressive institution when it came to following gender roles, and I don’t think the teachers even realize what they’re doing or how much harm a simple rule can impose on a questioning or queer or confused teenager.
Then of
course there was drama club. I loved drama club; that was another place where I
was really comfortable and just happy overall. I loved acting, and although it
might sound sad, I liked pretending to be someone else sometimes. Not in a
really desperate needing-to-escape kind of way, but it was a kind of release of
tension and a loosening of the standards which I felt I had to comply to every
day kind of way. It’s funny, because the majority of the roles I played
required me to be much more feminine than I was in real life, but since I was
pretending to be someone else anyway it didn’t bother me as much. Also, gender
roles were bent and broken more in the drama club than anywhere else in school.
gender norms? what are those?
Everyone had to wear makeup onstage (“hey dude can you pass me the MANscara?),
everyone flirted with each other like crazy, and the only gay kids I knew in
high school were in the drama club. I remember asking my director once, “when
will I get to play a part that is more like me?” And she said, “when we can
find a character like that.” What I was REALLY asking DEEP DOWN in my
SUBCOUCIOUS was “How come I can’t play a male part?” But I never worked up the
courage to ask out loud.
I remember
once she cast me as Macbeth’s father’s ghost in a comedy that included a short
spoof of Macbeth, and I was so happy. It was such a small insignificant part
but it was awesome. I used the big deep gruff voice and yelled a little and
that was it.
Wonderful.
OK now that
we’ve taken a little detour down memory lane and you’ve heard all about my
extra-curricular activities, I’m going to attempt to guide us back towards
on-topic lane and get back to the original memory that I set out to write about
when I started writing this post.
We all
remember gym class. Forced exercise. Hours of embarrassment for the un-fit, and
a time to show-off for the athletically inclined. What I hated worst about gym
class was how damn gendered it was.
In my freshman year gym class was one of my best and oldest friends. The
problem was, he was a boy and I was a girl so every time the class got split by
gender I had to endure it without him. And we got split up quite a bit. There
was the fitness test, where all the girls would run as many laps as they could
in one gym while the boys would do push ups, sit ups, and leg stretches in the
other, and then vice versa. I remember there was a “standard of fitness” that
we were all supposed to meet, except that it was different for the guys, they
were supposed to be able to do more push ups and sit ups and run more laps, and
I remember always peeking to the boys side of the fitness rubric whenever I
checked my scores.
Then of
course there was health class. I remember on particular day of health class where we
got split up; we were supposedly learning about dating and relationships and
we were supposed to get into groups of three of four and were instructed to
talk about what we didn’t like about guys on dates. First of all, I had
never been on a date. Second of all, what kind of stupid-ass-stereotype-encouraging-gender-role assignment was this??
What exactly was the point of this assignment other than to drive high-school
boys and girls further apart? I mean, I’m being completely serious here, each
group got a piece of giant paper and a couple markers and we were supposed to
write down basically what ticked us off about guys when they tried to woo
girls. I just sat there, but I remember the other girls in my group saying how
stupid it was when guys talked about how big their penises (peni?) were in
order to try and impress girls. Just then my gym teacher walked up; Oh good, I thought, they’ll be embarrassed when she hears them and she’ll surely put a
stop to this madness.
FALSE.
She just
CHIMED RIGHT IN. “Yeah, that’s so annoying” said my GYM TEACHER WHO WAS AN
ADULT AND SUPPOSED TO BE TEACHING US TO RESPECT EACH OTHER “they’re all just
six inches anyway.”
…
REALLY MRS GYM TEACHER??
I mean,
c’mon, right?
But the
worst part of being split up from my friend, was that he wasn’t there to defend
me when I got teased. Almost every day of freshman gym class, I got made fun of
by this girl who thought she was from the ghetto (let’s call her Tiffany) and
her two lackeys. By the way, my school was comprised of 98.5% white kids, from
middle to upper class families, and I can assure you that she was not from the
ghetto. Now, luckily I have a conscience or else I could have really done some
serious damage, she was extremely overweight, barely passing remedial classes,
and obviously came from a troubled home. She was always starting fights with
people for no reason; one of her favorite lines was “My daddy’s blacker than the
ace of spades! He’s from PORTUGAL!” She said that to me several times but I never
knew why. I did a pretty good job ignoring her until she started to call me out
specifically.
She made fun
of my gym shorts, every day. I wore long cargo shorts and a t-shirt to gym
class, and a few days into the semester she asked me why my shorts were so
long. “Because I like them like this,” was my honest reply. She thought there
was something wrong with this, and she and her friends started to call me
“Mail-Man,” “Because you look like the guy who delivers my mail.”
Now, this
was all very stupid and at first it didn’t bother me that much, and when she
noticed that I wasn’t getting upset over her name-calling she decided to amp it
up. Tiffany and her friends started to tease me in the locker room, telling me
I should be in the boys’ room. She would yell when I came in so everyone could
hear; “there’s
a BOY in the girls’ room! Somebody get the teacher!! Oh wait, it’s just MAIL
MAN.” She would tell me to get out of the wrong room and say that I was
perverted for sneaking in. I changed quickly in a stall before and after class
and tried to ignore her. Then she and her friends started picking on other
aspects of my gender-non-conforming appearance, asking me why I didn’t wear makeup
or shave my legs, and said that I must WANT to be a boy because of the way I
dressed and acted. After while I started to hear
“Male-Man” instead of
“Mail-Man.”
Getting
teased sucks no matter who you are, but it invokes a different kind of fear and
dread when you’re struggling with your own identity, constantly wondering what’s the matter with me already, and
in fear that someone will be able to read my thoughts and prove that I’m
insane.
Soon Tiffany
started to find me outside of gym. I’ll never forget one day in the cafeteria
when one of my other best friends swooped in to rescue me. I was saving her
seat at the table when Tiffany walked up.
“Hey
Mail-Man. When are you gonna get rid of those ugly-ass shorts?”
My face
burned red but I ignored her. I hadn’t noticed that my friend had walked up
behind me until I heard her voice,
“What’s
wrong with her shorts??”
“They too long. They for boys
obviously.”
“Well
your sweat pants are even longer than her shorts, so they must OBVOUSLY be for
boys too.”
Tiffany
literally couldn’t think of anything else to say. She just scoffed and walked
away.
I was
beaming. One of the best feelings in the world is when a friend has your back,
followed closely by making a bully feel like an idiot.
good friends know how to provide support
The teasing
slowed down a bit for a few days but then she picked right back up and was even
worse than before.
What’s funny
is that the day I finally snapped, she wasn’t even making fun of me. Instead,
she had targeted my friend. He had accidentally knocked some kid over during a
game of basketball, and Tiffany had taken great offense to this and began to
berate him loudly from the bleachers (she never participated in any of the
exercise).
Now, let me
just say, that my friend was, and still is, one of the nicest people on the face of the earth. He doesn’t go around
fighting with people, he’s never mean to anyone, he never bullied or attacked
anyone, and plus he just didn’t care enough about gym class to purposely knock someone down over a
stupid game. So when Tiffany and her lackeys started yelling at him from the
sidelines;
“oh yes you
DID knock him down on purpose! I SAW YOU DID IT,”
he didn’t
really know what to say. I just couldn’t take it anymore, I had had WAY MORE
THAN ENOUGH of her, so I stopped playing, ran over to the bleachers and yelled
with a voice that I did not recognize as my own, by rather seemed to
materialize in my throat like the sword of Griffindor in the Sorting Hat, right
when I needed it most;
“SHUT UP YOU STUPID JACKASS.”
A few kids
stopped and stared. The gym teacher looked slightly startled but did not make
any attempt to stop me. It wasn’t a sophisticated manipulation of the English
language by any means, but for a fourteen-year-old it wasn’t half bad. She shut
up for the rest of the day.
So the moral
of the story is, high school sucks. Especially when you don’t want to conform
to gender norms, but the thing is, I don’t think the teachers and
administrators even are aware that they are helping perpetuate these
stereotypes. There must be something we as a society can do about this. Kids
spend so much of their time not only in school but also in extra-curricular
activities run by the school after classes end for the day. What I’m saying, is
that anyone in charge of educating and influencing young adults for six plus
hours a day needs to be aware of the strain that pressure to conform to gender
stereotypes puts on kids, whether the kids themselves realize it or not. I
wrote about being picked on in gym class in a reflective essay for my sophomore
English class and I remember getting the graded paper back and reading one of
the comments my English teacher had written near the end of the essay; “where were your gym teachers for all of this?”
Well English
teacher, I still don’t know where they were, but I sure would like to be a part
of making sure that kids aren’t subjected to this type of bullying in school
anymore.
These read so well I've stopped going to the library. Ms. Conrad would be proud!
ReplyDeleteThank you, you're too kind! I'm glad you enjoy them.
ReplyDeleteMiles, I know we aren't too close or anything but I've been following your blog and it's really great and well written. Serious props to you!
ReplyDeleteThank you very much, and thank you for reading!
ReplyDelete