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Despite the frequent pretense, I run what boils down to a smut blog. The point isn’t lost on me. Thus, every 50th post I like to take a moment to address a tangential ‘real’ world issue that intersects (however glancing) with issues of sexuality and depictions of desire.

Unfortunately, living just below the 45th parallel north, Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) dawns in mid-October and runs through March; instead of fighting the good fight, I’ve pretty much curled up under a rock this year.

It’s more than just SAD… I was forced out of my job mid-July. It wasn’t the best job in the world but it was the best job I’ve ever held in that 65% of it was spirit-crushing political power games and 35% of it was the most rewarding work I’ve ever done outside of social justice activism or creative endeavors. I worked with, advocated for and loved on brilliant but economically disadvantaged college students. Making their lives a little easier, pouring a little more light and bringing joy came so much closer to balancing the bullshit-to-reward ratio than I’d ever expected to find.

It did, however, present limit my abilities to explore my creative urges. I tried to look at it as a blessing in disguise when I was told to accept a ‘generous’ buyout and resign or I would be fired and get nothing.

In that I spent three weeks bouncing around between Iceland, Berlin, Amsterdam and Madrid, it was a blessing; I still haven’t completely processed the experience.

After four months of looking for a job that will pay enough to support me, allow me the time and energy I need to at least be more consistent with my photography and finding exactly fuck all; I am out of time and nearly out of money. I feel completely trapped.

This is compounded by the fact that I have never once in my life gotten anything I wanted. That sounds entitled. Let me clarify: it seems as if whenever I allow myself to admit that I want something, the universe kicks me in the face and illustrates in the most cruelly malicious fashion that wanting is the fuel on which impossibility voraciously feeds.

All the jobs I’ve ever gotten have been accidents. I’ve been in the right place at the right time and given a chance based on nothing more than abject desperation. Same with everything else except finishing college. I am not sure how that happened but I am definitely going to pay for it for the rest of my life. (I have no regrets.)

I don’t know why I’m venting all this. I don’t presume anyone does or should care. And I know it’s narcissistic that I am hijacking the venue for discussing things in the context other than insular smut criticism. But I have been feeling a degree of disingenuousness lately. I’m posting all this stuff about desire and wanting when I don’t even believe any longer that such experiences are ever mine to have again.

Truthfully, due to my continuing–and now rendered completely mysterious by the fact that a battery of extremely expensive tastes has deemed me surprisingly healthy for a late thirtysomething, high-functioning alcoholic–health issues, I pretty much figured I’d lose my job and make the most of the time I had left figuring I’d have died by this point.

But I am still here. And while yes, I may be going blind. And even if someone ever was insane enough to ever want me, maybe I’ll be so sick I can’t offer them pleasure.

As stupid as it sounds–and it sounds idiotic–the truest impetus for this blog was an effort to leave a record of the things no one wants to discuss openly but which I find so compellingly beautiful, which haunt me. That way maybe when I am gone, someone I loved deeply but was to afraid the telling would ruin everything might stumble upon it and in reading this record know how desperate I wanted to connect with them but I knew the desire to connect was not mutual–and I can’t do non-mutual. So I did this, I said in a horse whisper to secrets and silence: this is a kiss that demands no kiss-back.

And then, on Thursday, in a conversation that could have gone very badly and didn’t go at all like I expected–and I am still not at all sure what was decided by it–there was a moment when someone I love acknowledged my vulnerability and admitted her own. It was like the sanskit namaste: the spirit in me acknowledges and greets the spirit in you. Except: it was the fragileness in me acknowledges and greets the fragileness in you.

And it was like two years of unresolved anger evaporated in that moment. Like all these years I’ve been struggling to remember the name I was given but had forgotten and then in the hearing it uttered, remembering.

I want to live and I want to grow and learn–be more than less. I want to love. It’s just so bloody difficult to love the all–the good, the bad– and not the you with its good and its bad.

I’m lost but maybe you’ll find me if you are willing to look. I’m looking for you. Maybe I’ll find you, too.

This is a self-portrait made by Zoe, a precocious, articulate and self-possessed sixteen year-old who blogs as Posh-Lost.

I admire her spunk.

Admiration aside, I have misgivings about posting this—not the least of which is the image maker being too young to ‘legally’ browse this site. Also, does displaying her work alongside more explicit content unnecessarily sexualize it?

Laurie Penny uses an ingenious coinage to refer to the well-intentioned worry we shower on the behavior of teenage girls: concern-fapping.

It is patently fucking absurd to think young women are not foundationally aware of the degree and extent to which their bodies are sexualized by society.

Further, anyone looking at this picture should know better. This is not some cell phone bathroom mirror selfie; light shines in through a window visible along the left edge of the frame, a la the Dutch Baroque. Further the staging speaks to an interest not in seeing while being seen but something closer to a preoccupation with the perception of self by another.

The flimsy, semi-sheer camisole is sexy; but whether sexy translates to something libidinous or reciprocally desiring remains pointedly unresolved.

Granted, it is not free of flaws. But it is thoughtful and I find it thoroughly and unironically interesting. But I can’t lie—there is something else to it that gets under my skin.

Long story short: I have never disclosed my gender on this blog. I’ve implied through omission, undertaken some linguistic gymnastics and mostly embraced opportunities to shore up ambiguity.

I have mild-to-medium gender dysphoria. As a child, I wanted to be a girl. When other kids played super heroes—I didn’t give a fuck about the perpetual fight over who got to be Superman because I was Wonder Woman. This was frowned upon. Frowns became stern words escalated to outright threats.

A dear friend suggested that if I was meant to be a woman, nothing would have stopped me. I think that is sage advice.

If you need a hammer but you only have a wrench, it doesn’t really work the best but you can more or less make due. From the standpoint of how my body relates to my sexual identity, this metaphor serves.

I pass as male and straight although I’d never embrace either. This creates a-whole-nother layer of complication. On the one hand, there are social expectations of me with which I find so uncomfortable they are debilitating; on the other, I have privilege in that I can somewhat function under the assumption that I am cisgendered. My ‘problems’ seem charmed compared to the struggles of the rest of the gender dysphoric community.

Additionally, I have a pathological aversion to anything related to medicine. Gender reassignment surgery is not a consideration. It’s that I feel more feminine that masculine. azura09 always says she thinks of me as a really dyke-y Daria Morgendorffer.

And yes if there was a Matrix like scenario where I could take the red pill and wake up female-bodied, I would do it without a second thought. Even if the ante was upped and I would die five years after taking the red pill, my choice would be the same.

I know this image is Zoe and she seems really amazing and the last thing I have any desire to do is co-opt her experience or her own depiction of her body but—fuck me—this is to a T the way I see myself in my head.

If there were surgical procedures that would make this awful body conform to this image, they couldn’t cut fast enough for me.

Maybe then someone might be able to love me.

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