Tuesday, February 23, 2021

TikToks, Talking, and the “Small t” transgender: An Exploration into Identity

 

As a political science major who came into my college career with a background in politics, I sometimes joke with my friends that I haven’t learned anything and am about to graduate with a degree that gave me no additional knowledge. I often point to people who study STEM and look at the amazing things they are able to create after their graduation as proof that they have learned amazing things that they will use to change the world. Take a computer science major, for example, they study things like coding for years in order to create popular apps that all the hip kids use. Now, of course, I have learned several things from my studies, but my knowledge is a lot more theoretical than practical.

Still, I’m extremely fortunate to live in a world and in a society where I reap the benefits of those whose studies are more practical. One of my latest obsessions is the app TikTok, where young people make memes and videos about a variety of topics. The algorithm, or how the app knows how to show you things you’ll enjoy, is highly complex. Many creators on the app joke that the algorithm knows more about the person watching the videos than the person even knows about themselves. I never expected that to ring true.

A few weeks ago, I was mindlessly scrolling through the app while work was dead. When you work for SafeRide in the middle of a global pandemic, you tend to have a lot of free time on your hands. A video popped up where one character was speaking to a second. The first character said to the other that being a lesbian “felt different from being a woman” and that they felt as though it was a unique relationship to their gender. The second character, a cisgender lesbian woman, mentioned that she did not feel as though she was any different from other women. In her eyes, she was just an average girl. The first character is then revealed to be nonbinary as their pronouns, “they/she,” flash on the screen.

Mindless scrolling through an app full of memes and funny, relatable content rarely gives me a pause—unless, of course, I see a recipe that I just have to try out (feta and tomato pasta, anyone?)—but this made me stop my mindless scrolling and think. I had always felt that I was different from being a woman, and had chalked it up to how my sexuality caused me to identify. As a lesbian, I thought it was normal to experience some degree of separation from my gender, which I always felt I had. Just then, dispatch assigned me a ride. I put my phone down, making a mental note to think more in-depth on this later…

The next day, I spoke to my fiancée, Maddie, about the video I saw. Maddie is nonbinary, so I figured they would not mind if I spoke to them about it. Of course, they were happy to speak to me about what I had seen and how it had made me feel. We spoke in-depth about exactly what the separation was that I felt.

I knew that I had always felt different from other girls—I wasn’t into shopping or makeup, I never played with dolls as a kid, I liked shopping in the men’s section of clothing and abhorred the idea of wearing a dress. Deep down inside, I always dismissed these feelings as a feminist. Girls don’t always have the same interests. Toys and clothes have no gender. You should do and wear what you feel most comfortable in. Plus, I never felt as though I had real dysphoria—I was happy to have the body I have. I didn’t want to surgically remove my breasts to feel like more of who I was, nor did I want to have a penis (although sometimes my fiancée and I would joke that life would be so much easier if I had one, a nod to sexism and homophobia). But with that being said, I also never felt entirely comfortable with my body. I had always thought that this had stemmed from the media’s portrayal of women or the expectations set by society.

But then we started speaking about gendered language. I didn’t mind when my brother called me his sister, or when my parents called me their daughter. But due to my short hair and the “pandemic chic” style of covering half of one’s face, in public, I sometimes get mistaken for a man. People will call me “sir” or “dude” or some equivalent—that is something that has never made me feel bad and that I’ve never taken offense to. But, when I open my mouth and speak back to them, they correct themselves: ma’am, lady, miss—and for some reason that always made me feel… Bad? Weird? What the hell was the right word for it? Wrong? I mean, even receiving an envelope with “Ms. Hunter Bullard” written on the front always just made me feel… meh.

Maddie understood how I felt. They told me about how when they started going by they/them pronouns, they felt like things were just… right. I didn’t really know pronouns were supposed to feel that way. I had always seen them as neutral. I had started out countless meetings rambling off my name and my she/her pronouns that it didn’t even strike me that things could be different.

“Am I having a gender identity crisis?” I asked the person who I will one day marry.

“If you have to ask me that,” they said, “then yes, you probably are.”

I still wasn’t sure about my identity, so I decided to dig a little deeper. Fortunately for me, in my queer theory class, we were reading literature on trans rights one week, and the next week, literature on breaking the norms. In Wilchins’s 2004 book, Queer Theory, Gender Theory: An Instant Primer, the author describes the “small t transgender,” or what many of us now would describe as a non-binary individual. Reading more into the theory, I realized just how much I related to it. I realized that maybe, just maybe, the jokes about TikTok knowing someone better than they do were right. And that my fiancée, in their infinite wisdom, knew best. I began to use the internet to experiment with they/them pronouns and loved how they made me feel. Although I’m still technically comfortable with she/her pronouns, they just make me feel neutral. Meanwhile, they/them pronouns make me feel right. So, thanks to the internet, an app, conversing with those around me, and most importantly, queer theory, I was able to find my true identity as a nonbinary individual, one who has broken and will continue to break societal norms.

No comments: