Since June is Pride Month, I’m going to write about my identity
crisis of summer 2013.
There are many ‘types’ or classifications that come to mind
when you think of homosexual females, and that’s where my mind dwelled for a
while during that summer. The most common classifiers: Dyke, Lipstick, Femme, Butch,
have about 20 different subcategories between the four. (Maybe I’ll post about
the endless list and definitions of the inbetweeners one day) Lots of people
say they don’t want to be labeled, that they love who they love and don’t need
a word to describe that. Welp, I like labels. They give me a clear picture of
what’s in front of me.
I decided that I identify as Femme, and that’s where my
problem began. How the beep am I going to meet someone if I don’t appear a
certain way? Lezbehonest here, most lesbians have a telltale sign that you can
pick out pretty quickly: clothing choices: baggier jeans or gym pants, plain t-shirts,
hooped lip rings or eyebrow piercings, slicked back ponytails or short hair, white watches (that’s
a theory of my own. Straight individuals- don’t stop wearing yours in fear of
catching the gay). Others are sneaky and can only be identified when you join
our secret club (handshake included). It might be the gate of her walk, the
style of her not slicked back hair, the choice of accessories like wallets,
belts, or shoes; subtle similarities that you can find amongst us that only the
trained eye can spot.
And then there are gays like me, who look ‘too straight’. I
don’t have piercings other than my ears. I wear only eye makeup regularly. I wear
regular work clothes during the day and my ‘never seen yoga’ yoga pants at
night or on the weekends. I wear my long hair in either a bun or down and curled. I
carry bags and I don’t think I have the lesbian swag that some of us do. So,
again, this is where my distinctiveness is hidden.
I’ve heard things like, ‘you’re too pretty to be gay”, ‘you
just haven’t found the right guy yet’, and ‘you don’t even look gay, you don’t
have to lie about not wanting to go out with me’. Really, though? These make me
face-palm. Every. Time. This is why I don’t like going out. I don’t like
getting hit on by guys because it’s awkward. I don’t want to waste your time,
and I sure as hell don’t want you to waste my time. I don’t like the pretentious
asswipes that don’t take no for an answer. I just haven’t found the right guy
yet? Maybe you haven’t found the right guy yet... how about that? Oh, you don’t
like guys like that? Neither do I, BYEEE. And then I’m a bitch for turning them
down, watch out... might get shot for that one of these days.
So, without a blinking light over my body or a tattoo across
my forehead, how am I supposed to put myself out there to get noticed by the
right people? I can always catfish online, or pick someone up at a gay bar, but
is that really where I want to meet someone I might have a future with? After
being handed my orientation on a silver platter at an all-girls college, the
real world does not make finding someone as easy as it was before. I guess that
leaves me waiting for the right time, or whatever. If it’s meant to be, it’ll
be.
And that was my identity crisis of last summer.
I think every femme in the world has felt this at some point. Hence my pretty rainbow tattoo on my chest (not quite the forehead, but close enough). I think it's just about being sure of who you are and willing to wait. Even if the waiting lasts a really long time. Thanks for articulating one of the most difficult struggles within the lesbian community.
ReplyDeleteI still struggle with "not looking the part." I'm also one who needs a label to identify with. Being femme makes us no less of a lesbian. Yeah, it makes it harder to feel comfortable and "fit in" in certain situations, but we know who we are. I've caught myself telling my fiancée that I feel awkward going out because I don't look the part. Live true to who you are, no matter who that might be.
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