I’d like to
talk for a bit about what I’ve been calling (in my mind) “The Man Club.” What is this “Man Club?” you may be wondering.
Well, it’s not a real thing, it’s just a way for me to try and understand the
ways in which I’ve been treated differently as of late. And I must admit, I’m
not altogether a huge fan of being a part of this club! Allow me to explain:
Since
arriving in Amsterdam, as you may know, I have been presenting as male and
passing very easily. I had never met any of the people I began interacting with
at school and out around town, so no one knew of my past or my transition. Dropped
into this new place as a male, I began to feel like a spy, like suddenly this
whole world of male-male interaction opened up and I was allowed into the
“boys-only” tree-house for the first time. The guys I met at school talked to
me about things that guys had never really expressed to me before. From what
I’ve experienced, it seems as if most of what guys in their
late-teens/early-twenties say to each other involves the way girls look, trying
to find a girl, having sex with girls, various types of sex-related jokes, and
their various interests; music, movies, video-games, books, sports etc. The
number of comments other guys have made to me since I got here that involve the
objectification and sexualization of women ABSOLUTELY BAFFLED ME. I’m serious
people. I was not prepared for this.
seriously??
A few weeks
into the school year I went out for dinner with a couple of guys from school.
We sat in a pizza restaurant near Centraal Station (“centraal” is Dutch for
“central”) awaiting the arrival of one of the guys’ friends from home. She was coming
from his house and would arrive on a bus across the street. He informed me that
she was his best friend from home, and that she was a girl, and so she was
cleaning his room and doing his laundry. He gave me a sly smile after that last
part and laughed a little. I didn’t know what to say, so I laughed a bit as
well and added, “you should probably learn how to do your own laundry you know,
it’s kind of an important life-skill.”
He just laughed some more.
This is weird, I thought,
Is this normal?
Do most guys expect their female friends to
clean up after them??
I hope not.
This was the
first time I was caught off-guard in
the man-club, but it certainly wasn’t the last.
Later that
night we were walking down the street, discussing the start-of-term party that
the school had thrown for all the students and faculty. The theme of the party
had been throwback/80’s, and so one lad discussed his costume;
“Yeah I dressed
as gay for the party,” he said.
“Dressed as
gay? What does that mean?” I asked, trying not to sound accusatory.
“Oh you
know…body glitter, tight pants, open shirt.”
“You can’t
tell if someone’s gay just by looking at them you know...” I answered, trying
still to keep my tone light.
“Oh yes of
course of course…” And then everyone just kind of looked down and the
conversation died and someone started to talk about something else.
It struck me
later that when it came to conversations such as this, I just didn’t know what
to say. I had never exactly run into this scenario before. Sure, people have
been making offensive sexist/homophobic comments for ages, but up until now, I
had always been responding as a female. And, as a young female, and then later
a gay female, people had generally just known not to make sexist/homophobic
comments within earshot of me, and when they did it was always pretty easy for
me to express my disapproval. I used to be able to just shoot an agitated glare
in the direction of the offender and they would pretty much get the picture.
Even when I was among a group of people who were all laughing at a stupid
sexist joke, I could tack on an un-amused, “you’re an idiot” to go with my
disapproving stare and that would usually diffuse the situation. I never needed
to come right out and explain to people why their comment was stupid and irked
me, because they already knew that it was sexist/homophobic, and so just by my
being female/queer, they immediately knew why
I was displeased and often became apologetic/embarrassed without me having to
brow-beat them.
But now.
Now I wasn’t
entirely sure what to say.
And it’s not
as if the obvious aim of the majority of these types of comments was to degrade
women, but they certainly came out that way. Much of what guys say is to
express how attractive they think a girl is; unfortunately, most of the
“compliments” I heard involved objectifying said women. I was talking with some
friends one day after class when they asked me if I’d met any girls here at
school that I was interested in. I hadn’t really, but I thought that the girl
who sat next to me in jazz history was kind of cute. (This may have been
because she had been the only girl in class who had started a conversation with
me thus far, but I told them I thought she was kind of cute anyways.)
“Her, oh no
man,” replied one.
“What, yeah
come on,” retorted the other, “I would totally fuck her.”
Whoa.
That escalated quickly.
But somehow,
that is how it always seemed to go. While I liked to describe attractive girls
as cute, other guys seemed to either
consider them fuckable or unfuckable. Which, I think we can agree,
is not really the same thing. I hadn’t thought at all about having sex with
this girl who I’d spoken to for a combined time of probably seventeen minutes! This
happened to me several more times over the course of fall semester; someone
would ask me if I’d seen some girl from one of our classes or something or if I
thought she was hot, then I would reply, and they would answer with something
like, “yeah, I’d totally fuck her.”
get your mind out of the udder! i mean, gutter.
This was not
the preferred choice of words for everyone
I encountered, however. I was sitting in the concert hall one afternoon when a
classmate came and sat down beside me. A couple of minutes into out
conversation, he craned his neck over to the left to look at a couple of girls
who were settling into their seats and pointed one out to me, “Man she’s hot!
Check out that ass!” My reply was just to laugh, and we continued talking. A
minute or so later he leaned in to say, “that girl I pointed out before? I take
it back; I got a look at her face.” And out of some stupid reflex I answered,
“a buttahface?” (but her face, if you
will.) He laughed and laughed; “yeah man exactly! She’s cute, buttahface!”
Aaaarrgh no!
I was
assimilating!
This was not
good. This was the kind of thing I had said among friends before as a joke, and
so it just kind of came out as the only thing I knew to say that seemed
appropriate for the time.
This was
hard, because as much as I hate sexism and stupid comments and objectification,
I really wanted to fit in! I had always wanted to be “one of the guys,” and now
that I really had the chance to really be “one of the guys” without any
feminine history, fitting in was a lot harder than I had anticipated. It seemed
to be that in order to be one of the guys I had to say all these things that
guys apparently say to each other, even thought I didn’t want to, and even
though I didn’t really find a lot of their conversation remotely interesting.
What’s a boy
to do? I’m not sure, but I resigned to hanging out with my two nice roommates
and my American-grad-student friend as much as possible.
who says we can't have fun staying in?
I hoped that
the whole degrading-woman habit was partly just an age thing, and that most of
the guys I met would grow out of it over time. I met a few slightly older guys
with whom I could engage in satisfying conversation, but most of the guys I met
in class were my age but were just starting their first year at the
conservatory. This being the case, I hoped also that some of it was just macho
over-compensation in the face of a new environment and all new peers to try and
impress. I think that I’m partially right, but what scare me are the
counter-examples that prove me partially wrong…
Some of these types of comments even came from teachers. Being a music student, and a jazz drummer at that, I have been used to studying in a male-heavy environment, and had often been the only girl in a music class, or at a rehearsal or gig. But now, I was a part of the majority in these all-male classes, and I was taken aback by some of the things that my male teachers said to a room full of male students.
The teacher
of my modern jazz combo class this semester was prone to repeating himself, and
he gave us the same lecture about playing to your audience several times:
“You have to
play for women,” he would say (for
the 57th time). “You can play all sorts of hip, complicated shit for a really
small audience, or you can play stuff that sounds pretty, for a big audience.” He had this way of
forming a sentence or two, and then looking around the room and smiling as if
he had just said something really eye-opening or funny. Which he coincidentally
never did.
“If you want
to fill the concert halls, you have to play music that women will like. You can
play altered scales and odd time signatures and intellectual shit, but then
you’ll just have guys in the audience. And these music guys aren’t the ones who
are gonna make you money, they’re gonna stand in the back and look real hard
and talk about the chord changes you’re playing. You have to play pretty
melodies and stuff that sounds romantic for the women. When a guy wants to
bring his girl out for a date, they’re gonna go see something that she wants to listen to. So if you wanna
make money, you gotta play something this guy can bring his girlfriend to.”
#eyeroll
Talk about
not knowing how to respond; I didn’t even know exactly what to say to my peers,
what in the world am I supposed to say to a teacher,
especially when he thinks he’s humorously sharing very profound information. #AAGH!
#frustration
It seems as
though dishing about women is also used as some sort of male-camaraderie-building-device.
And I don’t necessarily mean sitting around complaining for hours to your
buddies about your girlfriend; these types of comments are just made casually,
at any time of the day, and for seemingly any or no reason. They were so
off-hand much of the time that I’m sorry to say they stopped surprising me. I
was sitting in the living room one afternoon eating lunch when one of my
roommates walked out of the bathroom holding a copy of Women’s Day magazine. “Shit man,” he said, “women are so crazy.”
Um.
Right.
What am I
even supposed to say to that? How about: If
women are so crazy, then why are you reading Women’s Day magazine…?
Was this an
offer for us two guys to bond over the mysteries of the opposite sex? Well, I
wasn’t biting, that’s for damn sure. This type of comment came as no surprise
from the guy who continually referred to women as “bitches,” and told us all
that he was going to “fuck as many girls as possible,” while he and his
girlfriend were apart attending their respective universities. Just to give you
a bit of background, this roommate and I did not get on terribly well. The
first night I met him he made a racist joke, then a homophobic joke, and then a
sexist joke. For the first several weeks we were living together, he bragged
constantly about how much he could drink, sometimes offering me one of his gigantic
German beers and trying to coax me to drink with him. I would usually end up
saying something like, no, it’s Tuesday,
I have class in the morning, and then he would call me a pussy American, and talk about how he’d
been drinking since he was thirteen and how he could drink forty-million beers
and twelve bottles of vodka and blah blah blah. It was an altogether very
irritating display of machismo. One night when we were all eating dinner
together, he told some story about snowboarding and drinking and something
happened where some guy who worked on the slopes told them to stop acting up or
something. He described this authority figure as a “faggot.” My fork stopped
mid-way to my mouth as I shook my head and said sternly, “don’t say that.”
“No, I will say that, because he was a faggot.”
He was
constantly making himself out to be manly by putting down my other male
roommate and I. BUT, when it was convenient, he would “team up” with us on the
basis of our masculinity. Although I really couldn’t stand living with him at
all, it had been an interesting sort of pseudo-sociological study on
masculinity. I feel like my whole semester abroad has been an interesting study
on masculinity, gender, and society, and although I have not been pleased by
all of my findings, I have been surprised many times.
I observed
an even more interesting male-bonding experience when said roommate had four of
his buddies come and stay with us for the weekend. #torture
They arrived
late on a Saturday night and immediately began drinking. I was awoken very
early the next morning when they stumbled in from the cold and began to
drunkenly cook food to loud house music. When I went upstairs to tell roommate
to turn his music off because the rest of us were trying to sleep, he responded
with a scoff and a “no,” and I could only assume that he was trying to look
ultra-cool in front of his buddies.
Later in the
morning when I got up for real, I walked into the kitchen/living area to find
four half-naked guys sprawled about the couch and floor. When they finally woke
up in the early afternoon, I was surprised by some of their antics. For
instance, my roommate ran up behind one of his friends with a 2 liter Coke
bottle in hand and then shoved it in his friend’s backside like he was
pretending to sodomize him with it.
…
Well then.
Slightly
homophobic as they seemed, I found that a lot of guys made various gay-vague
jokes and comments. Whether it was pretending to bum their buddy with a soda
bottle, or making jokes about sleeping over a friends house and sharing a bed
and raping him during the night (I apologize for being so crude--any manner of
sexual assault jokes are always in extremely bad taste--but so many came up
that I feel I need to mention them here) it seemed as though maybe the reason
these kinds of comments came up was to mask a slight discomfort with
homosexuality. I don’t actually know, but along with objectification, I noticed
that an alarmingly vast majority of the time, the topic of conversation somehow found its way there.
I was
discussing the “Man Club,” over dinner one night with some friends when they
brought up a very good question: they asked me if my distaste for all the male
behavior I had experienced made me question my transition at all. Despite being
rather put off by guy-to-guy conversation and behavior, none of it actually
made me question my transition. In fact, over the past few months I have put
together the clearest picture of my own identity that I’ve ever had. I’m
definitely a guy, but I’m also no “macho-man.” I don’t care if everyone knows
that I’m not ultra-masculine, either. What I do care about, is people respecting my identity even though it may
not align with their picture of
masculinity. I’m scared of spiders, don’t follow professional sports, don’t
know anything about cars, don’t like to objectify women, and would prefer
staying in to read or watch a nice documentary as opposed to going out to bars
all night to hit on women. But that doesn’t mean I’m any less of a man. A big
part of transitioning for me has been the realization that I really don’t need
to conform to anyone else’s expectations or standards, and although it can be
difficult and scary to break away from societal constraints, I am a lot happier
and more centered when I allow myself to be free of these types of pressures.
there's just no substitute for self confidence
So in short,
I’m definitely not questioning my transition, but I am constantly confused by
my place in society and the world and by the actions of others.