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Miriam Eric Suzanne

Butter bells, fresh from the kiln Butter bells, fresh from the kiln Butter bells, fresh from the kiln I had to look it up I Laser-cut pottery throwing gauge Tech continues to be political Aggregating my distributed self A web component for CodePen embeds? We don Eleventy buckets & cascade layers A slash-why proposal User styles on the web Custom element, two ways New year, same (terrible) Mia CSS @scope Reclaiming my time Cascade Layers Javascript automation on Mac Personal Histories Ancient Web Browsers Critical CSS? Not So Fast! CSS tie-dye gradient backgrounds Personal website redesign Request for Comments: Sass Color Spaces A long-term plan for logical properties? Container queries in browsers! I never let things be small A whole cascade of layers This content won No demo [website] reno 2 days of cordwainery Body margin 8px The gray areas of HWB color Miriam, for the archive Complex vs compound selectors The spam has arrived Am I on the IndieWeb yet? My theatrical delusions A Complete Guide to CSS Cascade Layers Container queries explainer & proposal Very Extremely Practical CSS Art An open CSS notebook Custom Property “Stacks" Alcohol affects the frontal cortex Embracing the Universal Web CSS most normalizer-est Introducing Sass Modules F*CSS Not clear to me, an installation Framed | Born to choose this way Last Bullet, live music video A Dark Plain, live music video Guts | Let Rejecting maleness Chosen family (thank you) Mia Speaking of pride More CSS Charts, with Grid & Custom Properties Stop Being Productive Fun with Viewport Units Gods on the Lam Body & gender fragments Trans Interviews & Photography Getting Started with CSS Grid Just Like That Adaptation: SideSaddle/Myths Justice [under construction] Some clarifications on trans language Some kind of resistance tour Loops in CSS Preprocessors An Interview with Miriam Suzanne Estrogentrification Miriam, a how-to guide Holes / SideSaddle midwest tour Underground music showcase Species of the stars PROPHETIA VETITUM MUNDI Pig Sez, song demo I UMS day 4 (the end) UMS day 3 A Dark Plain, song demo UMS day 2 UMS day 1 Media Archeology Lab, Artist in Residence Stratified design (re)Thinking on your feet Five(5), song demo Poetry readings are terrible Explosive growth Get curious The Posture of Contour Starting from a seed Portrait of Sondra & Dan Creative modes and cycles Ordinary tools of thought Portrait of Kitten Karlyle (nsfw) Fuck the muse Susy 1.0 release
(Mis)gender
2017-07-11 · via Miriam Eric Suzanne

Gender is strange and elusive. Sometime we attach it to genitals, and sometimes we attach it to boats. In Spanish, I can misgender my table. Every day we gender each other, even strangers – at a glance, on instinct, with very little to go on.

Some gendering is obvious – from pronouns (he/she/they) to honorifics (sir/ma’am), and gendered nouns like ladies or gentlemen. Things get more subtle when we talk about groups (hey guys), or the way servers (should I say waiters or waitresses?) are trained to serve women first and bring men the check. No matter how we see ourselves, our existence is constantly gendered (and misgendered) by the people around us. I notice every instance.

I’ve been misgendered most of my life, usually by accident. As a child, I was only gendered correctly with insults. Looking back, “long haired African girl” seems a bit on-the-nose. I had long hair, was born in Lesotho, and now I discover I’m a woman. Three for three! How is that insulting?

Now that I’m mid-transition, the gendering (and misgendering) has taken on a new flavor – a sense of personal success or failure added to the experience. I don’t mean to imply that the goal of transition is always to be properly gendered, but wouldn’t it be nice? When people assume I’m cisgender, life is simpler and safer – if lacking the nuance of queer diversity. Even condescending and sexist phrases can feel refreshing – at least I’m being gendered correctly.

People rarely misgender me these days, so the sting is worse when it happens. Strangers on the phone, old friends on occasion, or someone just discovering that I’m trans; but mostly family. The people who have known me since birth. And when it happens, someone is always there to say: well, it’s hard.

I’ve misgendered people too, used the wrong pronoun, or even a deadname in my worst moments. It’s an accident, of course, and I feel terrible about it – most of us do. Intentional misgendering is violent verbal abuse, but accidental misgendering is more complex. And more painful.

Gendering is instinct, learned at a young age – deeply ingrained, subconscious, and instantaneous. We use names and pronouns without thinking, and get them wrong without noticing our mistake. Sometimes it means we haven’t shifted our perceptions of a person and have work to do. Often, we’re just bumbling our way through every child-and-dog-name in our heads before we get to the right word. My aunt flips through all her children and my deadname before she gets to Mia. It would be funny if I wasn’t already hurting.

Brains are strange and language is fragile. When people tell me (over and over) that it’s hard, I know what they mean. It is hard for all of us. I know. We know.

But when I’m misgendered, none of that matters.

The room becomes a sudden minefield and time slows down. Everyone seems on edge, unsure what happens next. One person is feeling bad for their mistake, aware that they’ve hurt me, and everyone can relate. There, but for the grace of various gods… All eyes are on me. I’m not thinking about the semantic slip or the person behind it, I’m trying desperately to hold my fear and self-loathing at bay.

I never wanted to be trans. When I look in the mirror sometimes, it’s all I see. Then I have to leave the house – go out in public, where my existence is so offensive they pass laws about it. I’m a national threat. I get my own special TSA pat-down and papers-please potty regulations.

I’m not fragile, and I don’t want pity or condolences. I have a good life, with supportive friends and family. I’m not depressed, and I’m not in constant or unbearable pain. But the othering and double-standards wear me down. The shame becomes ingrained and internalized.

Can I go outside? Can I use a bathroom? Who might attack me? Will I ever date again? What if I’m a pathetic joke everywhere I go? Is everyone laughing behind my back?

If the misgendering were intentional, I could brush it off more easily. Being an asshole reflects poorly on the offender, not on me. But when it’s an accident it feels personal, like it’s my fault. I brought this on myself. I’m asking too much of the people around me. I look too trans, or speak too deep. Maybe people are only humoring me, and the ruse is up. Now everyone feels bad because of something I did. My trans pain is upsetting these people I love, and I’m responsible.

I imagine people are thinking about my genitals, or my deadname, or my years as a ‘boy’. I know I am.

There’s no time to take care of myself. Everyone is anxious, alert, and watching me. If I fall apart, I look fragile. If I get upset, I’ll make it worse. Simply pointing to the mistake can make people defensive, and I’m seen as the aggressor. If I brush it off, people think it doesn’t bother me – not like the others, thank god. I don’t want a confrontation. I don’t want anyone to be sorry, or feel terrible, or lose sleep over me. I don’t want a conversation, and I don’t want a reminder that it’s hard not to hurt me.

Being misgendered is not like being offended – not intellectual, but emotional. In that moment, I’m not mad or insulted – I’m sad and lonely, discouraged and afraid. I feel bulky, masculine, and in the way. My mind is racing, and I need a way out.

When we misgender people, we tend to focus on the shame of our mistake, and how bad we feel for causing pain – or how hard it is to change our gendered instincts. We jump to long-winded apologies and explanations that only take us away from the opportunity to make things better…


Back in Moab with my family, I post a note to Facebook knowing my trans friends, at least, will send me support – and they do (along with others). My brother also senses the problem, and he’s ready when I come downstairs. In the kitchen, he slides up beside me and says the one thing that actually helps:

Hey sis.