Saturday, November 13, 2010

A Quick Detour To Awesome Town!

Today we're heading to awesome town to bring you this great excerpt posted on After Ellen from the incredible film director Kimberly Peirce:


Kimberly Peirce 

The Yale Daily News had a Q&A with director Kimberly Peirce in which she discusses what inspires her as a filmmaker and her own gender identity. An excerpt:
I call myself queer. I don’t identify as a lesbian or as a transsexual. We all go through phases throughout our life, so that’s why I identify as queer. But I’m probably somewhere close to transgender because I’m very much masculine as well as feminine. It’s just within me. I enjoy my feminism, but I certainly don’t revel in it in the same way many people do. I just am what I am. Lots of people feel freer these days, but there are still horrible things happening. There is more dialogue than there was. If you have the feeling of not being in the right body, there is more opportunity for self–acceptance today.

Kimberly Peirce is the only celebrity (not that I meet them often) that I have ever fully embarrassed myself in front of (aka lost my shit).
beatle.jpg
 It was the summer after my freshman year of college and just after Boys Don't Cry had come out.
027boysdontcry.jpg

Leading up to the film I kept finding one article after another on Peirce and the making of the film
Boys Don't Cry
Then later after watching a documentary about Boys Don't Cry(oh, how I miss old school Bravo),
On the Town
 I became increasingly blown away by just how fully she had invested herself in the process of this film's creation (a five year process if remember correctly).
5year.jpg
The final result being one hell of a picture. 

Matt Lucas
Needless to say I thought she was a mega dreamboat (still do) smart, talented and beautiful.
heart-dreamboat-annie.jpg

So when I got lost in Manhattan one evening and happened to walk past her I was temporarily dumbfounded. 
tara_reid_stunned.jpg
Truly I just stood there not moving while she passed thinking over and over again, "that's, Kimberly Peirce who made Boys Don't Cry, I have to say something, I have to say something...."

Finally I turned around, now at least fifteen feet away, to see her climbing into a cab with her friend and I just yelled. 
brick.jpg
Yes that's right like a crazy lady I just stood in the middle of the sidewalk and yelled "BOY'S DON'T CRY WAS AMAZING! IT WAS AMAZING!" 
As this was happing, I saw her friend start to rock with laughter. Meanwhile, Kimberly Pierce leaned forward to see who the hell this crazy was. 
Unicorn_man.jpg
At which point I bolted.
Running down the concrete street sidewalk, like a kid on celebrity crack, I couldn't help, but laugh. I was on cloud nine, even if I was an ass. 
Next time more adventures, in awkward, summertime fun! 
idotarod1.jpg




Sunday, November 7, 2010

Growing Pains

Ah, lezzie's they grow up so fast....

JGjpg.
Before I knew it my own summer of lust was ending and I was on my way home back to Virginia.
The Virginian.jpg
To say that my next two years of high-school were awkward may be an understatement.
Life12.jpg


This is preferably where I would insert a story of triumph and courage in the face of adversity. 
colorPurpleInvite.gif
However, (I'm sad to say) when it came to high-school I don't really have any. It's not that I shelved every part of my summer at Sexplo (puh-leeze), but my journals from that time are a mix of boy and girl craziness.
JustOneOfTheGuys
I was fascinated by guys and yet always found myself having to mentally prepare when it came to intimacy (see: beyond first base).
2008_the_reader_006.jpg
On the other hand I also wanted to be with women,
25desire_600.jpg
but I didn't want to add to my already eccentric reputation.
article-1023232-016F74A000...jpg.
Somehow I thought that if I could just make eyes long enough at the few out girls in school, maybe they would notice and lend a helping hand.
KissMe.jpg
How were they to know? 
uh-huh-her.jpg
Some attempts I made at keeping it awkwardly real:

  • Cutting my hair into a baby dyke cut on several occasions.
  • Watching every gay/lez movie I could find in search of helpful tips.
  • Befriending the few openly gay girls at school.
  • Falling for one of the tough bad asses of the group only to find out she was dating another closeted friend (insert epic heartbreak here).
  • Dressing like a British school boy on a regular basis. 
  • Falling for the same straight girl all of my male friends liked.

brett4.jpg

  • Reading all of the feminist lit. and listening to all of the female, tear your panties off with my guitar, music I could find. 
  • Worrying if I was supposed to like my bestie just because I liked girls. (Note: This is a common newbie mistake, it's okay either way.)
  • Developing crushes on and dating femme boys.

Bieber.jpg
Somehow in the midst of all of this I just kept hoping (and not hoping) that someone might just call me out in some embarrassing undeniable way.
tumblr_lbh60nbGlJ1qz6f9yo1_1280.jpg
Still how could they when I wasn't even fully out with myself?
115393.jpg
At that age I wasn't really sure if it was just a phase or maybe a fetish that I could out grow (Oh, how that Southern Baptist guilt even got to the liberal Jewish kids.).
but_i_am_a_cheerleader_1.jpg
I assumed that since I enjoyed the company of guys that I could also enjoy having sex with them just as much as women. Right?
What?
However, my past still dogged me. So I decided to try and find a way to leave home again the following summer. 
even_cowgirls_get_the_blues...jpg.
That summer I left for a theater internship at Vassar College (gay, gay, GAY!), with participants ranging in age from 17 to around 40.
Queen600.jpg
Every person had their own dorm room (YES!). Which meant that so as long as everyone pulled their weight we were pretty much left to our own devices.
Archie258_01.jpg

Finally my summer of love was here and this time I was not going to screw things up.  













Monday, November 1, 2010

Sexplo!

Welcome back to the shit show.

tumblr_kzlbmt7sJj1qz6f9yo1_500.jpg
    I wish that I could tell you that as my summer of lez love played out I became less sexually inhibited. 


However, truth be told outside of serving on one LGBT Q&A panel and my first trip to P-Town, I mostly stayed on my own sexual island. 
tumblr_la171fkqXX1qald1501_500.jpg
Only my friends in the LGBT circle knew. So it seemed that I was doomed to one unrequited summer crush after another.


Making the Short List:
Promiscuous bad girl lesbian who didn't think I was into her (are you kidding me?!?). 
Riot Girl Lesbian who seemed equally spooked by her own sexuality.
My documentary film professor, recently divorced in her early 40's(What can I say? I love smart older women.)
JaneaneGarafalo1209.jpg
Note: Years later when I spoke to my PBG lez crush the exchange went as follows:

PBG: Really you had a crush on me back then? I had no idea.
Me: Ummm...yeah, but I was too afraid to say anything. 
PBG: Really? I totally would have hooked-up with you. 
Me: Damn.

So...

By the end of the summer I really didn't know what to think. Sure I loved the ladies, but so far my track record was providing ample proof that I wasn't particularly good at snagging any of them. 


Part of this was because I was so awkward. 
awkward_scout
At 16 I clearly had no game 


Urkle
and I looked like a straight chick. 
Vanity_wideweb
Looking back I can have one "Ah ha!", moment after another. Although at the time all I could think was why? 
areyoutheregoditsmedodai020.jpg
By the time I left Sexplo I was only partially out of the closet and unsure of how to face my life back in Virginia. 
VA_lovers
What would I tell my best friend and would I tell my parents? 
disappointed.jpg
Was I really willing to face further hazing by my peers?
I know, I was tired just thinking about it. zzzzzz...
Lilo
Next time: The South rises again....
general-lee
and then falls down. 
Jenna_20Bush_20Drunk.jpg
Or 
High-School Part 2: the Questionable Years 
high-school-musical


Saturday, October 30, 2010

It Takes a Village to Raise a Queer

      It was summer of 1988 and I was sixteen years old when I came out of the closet for the first time. 


I was away at a summer program at Wellesley College and I saw a flyer up for an LGBT meeting and decided to attend under the guise of "questioning". 
Katee_anne.jpg
    Sure I had seen a few gay movies, and stared longingly after a few girls in my time, but I hardly thought that qualified me to be a certifiable pussy bandit. I was fifteen after all and growing up in a largely homophobic area of the South.

Song of the South
Being in New England I thought it might finally be safe to stick my toe in the luke warm end of the kiddie pool. 
Stromtroopers-in-the-pool.jpg
    However, when I arrived at the meeting spot a number of other teens were waiting just to see who showed. At first I almost didn't step forward. 
     I was just "questioning" after all (right?). 
So I wasn't really sure if it was worth it to spend my summer being hazed by my peers after taking it on the chin back at home. 

girl-pouting.jpg
     In the end I decided that this was bullshit and I decided to move forward. 
I had expected that usual taunts from home, but instead I was met with silence and stares. 

Girl thread!
    Okay so I did have an unusually large rack at that age, and I was a bit of an eccentric dresser, but looking back I think it might have been something else...
FFAF.jpg
     Before the descriptor had been placed in heavy rotation, I was femme. Sure I liked to mix it up with school boy vests, mens pants, dress shirts and ties too. However, for the most part I was pretty damn femme.


Which meant that either to my benefit or to my detriment almost no one suspected that I might be queer. 
      
    This left my peers a little confused, but once I was able to re-arrange my lipsticked balls, I went in and sat down.
    There were about ten teens in that first meeting, most of whom lived in New England or New York (each were out in their communities). 
     Myself and another guy from England were the only two still sitting in our respective closets. Both of us lived in similar conservative communities (although his came with added religious pressure):

 As each person in the group shared their story I was at first struck by their incredible bravery in the face of adversity.

h&s_scaredstraight.jpg
However, something else  hit me ever harder. 


In the mist of their mistreatment, each of them had found places in their community where they felt supported. Friends, family members, youth groups, gay rights advocates and community centers that had taken them in and offered support. 
rsz_1gayteens.jpg
Outside of movies, I had never known that type of support might be possible.

So when it came to my turn to share my story, I cried.
There was a fair amount of crying that went down that day, but mostly out of relief and joy. We were both just so happy to feel that we weren't the only ones anymore. That we never really were the only ones. 
http://tumblr_ky26j49oqb1qzb1flo1_500.jpg/
To be continued....
Next time's topic: The end of summer and one hell of ride back in the South. 


Please feel free: to offer any comments, memories, stories on here or e-mail me at anunexpectedlez@gmail.com