I saw “Barbie” this morning and I ugly cried all the way through it. I wanted my mom, or at the very least, the numerous friends that have mom energy holding me up in her stead. The first thing that made me cry is that Barbie has always been the ideal woman, which means that I’ve hated her most of my life. I’m genderqueer, and people that generally love Barbies don’t love me. I didn’t become “Weird Barbie.” I was born that way. The tears flowed into the ugly cry when Barbie listens to The Indigo Girls in her car. The second is that Weird Barbie was coded as lesbian (haircut, Birkenstock, etc.) Seeing all the Barbies accept her in the end was magnificent. Weird girls are their missing demographic. That’s because my reaction to Barbie has always been that it teaches women what a woman is and is not. That has never included people who look like me. There is no genderqueer/nonbinary Barbie. There is no lesbian Barbie because I’m not sure they could do that without breaking the rules of the Barbie universe.
It teaches straight, cis, hetero women that I am not a woman as well, because I don’t have “girl interests.” I don’t think like a stereotypical woman……….. anymore. I have felt all the body shaming, queer shaming, gender expression shaming, and all that comes with it. When I was a teenager, I got called fat at 130 pounds and took the most dangerous diet pill on the market to combat it. Phen-phen didn’t do anytihng for me, but it made me feel like I was doing something about how I felt rather than sitting there and feeling sorry for myself.
I haven’t always been this small, but it’s a whole ball of wax on its own. I do not recommend my diet plan to anyone ever at all. I have to take Adderall XR sometimes. I take drug holidays from it a lot because I cannot stand the appetite suppression. I’m small because I can go two days before I remember I haven’t eaten anything, and not because I want to. When the situation is dire, food doesn’t sound good at all. Even the thought of it makes me nauseous. I have said this before, but I’ve cried in a grocery store because I had to feed myself for a week and I couldn’t find anything that actually sounded good.
Drinking isn’t a problem, so I try to load up on protein shakes because they’re easy on my stomach when I’ve developed a block against eating. The worst it’s ever gotten was that I was down to 110 pounds. I arrived in DC looking like a heroin addict and I was totally sober. That wasn’t all due to medication, though. I was under a lot of stress with the divorce, the move, the homesickness, the everything. DC is my city, but it still took a while to reestablish myself.
I’ve gained weight, and I can’t decide if I look better or worse, but I feel better so the weight is staying. I already deal with feelings of inadequacy because I’m so small that most of my clothes are from “The Children’s Place.” I wear a large in boys,’ and the reason I put up wtih tags on my clothes that advertise that fact is because I like men’s clothes better, but even the small is too large in some brands.
It harps on my self-esteem to an enormous degree because when my sister and I are walking and talking around the city, it looks like a grown ass woman and her weird little nephew (this is not far from the truth of our relationship, tbh). It’s been a process to just accept what I like. Who cares if I buy kids’ clothes? They fit better, and that’s most important. If I buy an Oxford from a men’s shop, the shoulder seam will go halfway down my arm and it looks like I’m wearing my granddad’s clothes (this is not fucking awesome). So, in order to look like the clothes were made for me, I like the expensive stuff. All the stuff your sons will grow out of in a New York minute will last the rest of my life. My favorite brands are Nautica and Tommy Hilfiger. Thanks to all your sons, I can buy a $50 Tommy H Oxford on e-bay for six bucks. At Goodwill, kids’ clothes are practically free. 😉
The Children’s Place is a new favorite because they sell basics in a ton of colors.
It comes with a price, though.
Women and men look at me like I’m an alien most of the time until we start talking. Then, they’re drawn in by my personality. I’m one of those people that can talk to anyone about anything. Two things about that. The first is that I know a little bit aboout most things, if not everything. So, I can seem brilliant long enough to fool people. 😉 The second is that like I’ve said before, I have a Southern pastor vibe, so people tend to spill things to me that they wouldn’t share with anyone else. I’ve had people tell me the worst stories of their lives on the Metro. I once talked to a bus driver in Portland that confided in me that he was five hours sober now (that was terrifying). And if you don’t want me to know something, don’t tell me because I’m bad at forgetting things. I won’t tell anyone what you said, but I will write about reverberations from it. I don’t have the right to tell other people’s stories, but I do have the right to talk about how their lives have bled into mine. So, if said bus driver runs across this, I still remember and it was 26 years ago. It was a long ride, PDX to Lewis and Clark. I honestly felt llike I had to keep him talking because I wanted to observe his speech patterns to know whether he was tellling the truth about being sober or if I needed to get the hell out of Dodge.
Being the type person that everyone wants to tell their secrets to has a cost as well.
I have unconsciously been everyone’s pastor without going to divinity school and everyone’s counselor without a license. If you’re the sort of person that is currrently writing this off as bullshit, I had to give up all of that because my secret-keeping ability was at full capacity and I was living the lives of the people I’d heard instead of my own. All my energy was pouring into them in every conversation. I was conserving approximatelly zero percent for myself. When you’ve always been that person and you learn to negotiate boundares, you get “PNG’d back to Langley” (slang for treating an officer as a persona non grata and giving them a desk job, very much like the old dude in “Slow Horses.”). This is because people who are used to getting everything they want from you all the time now think you’re an asshole because you’ve realized that they’ve expected you to be there for them, but they have their own boundaris intact and you don’t. So, they’ll dump on you as hard as they can and won’t be there to help you pick up the pieces because they’re not stupid enough to give away as much energy as I do.
This is a universal problem, and knows no boundaries. Most relationships are like this. One is the leader, one is the follower. Generally, this is because women are taught from birth to be fixer/pleasers in relationships with men, who certainly have their boundaries in place because no one calls them on it. Same sex couples have the same issues, particularly lesbians, because the role of fixer/pleaser becomes muddled there when you’ve been enculturated the same way. I wasn’t raised to be queer, therefore I have all the heteronormative bullshit internalized homophobia that most if not all queer people carry their whole lives because there is no escape.
So.
I can deal with being thought of as Weird Barbie, but I will not play the game. Zac knows he’s my equal. He would never in his lifetime tell me to do anything. He’s the one who will show up for me. I got that relationship because I knew enough to want it. Why wouldn’t I want to find someone emotionally unavailable to please when that’s how male/female relationships are set up in the first place?
Doesn’t matter if it’s a wine and yoga pants girlfriend or a U-Haul girlfriend, we’re going to have that shitty, enculturated reaction to each other if we’re not careful. We can either do everything to please each other because that’s what we’ve been taught to do, or we can have it out. My choice now is to have it out, because even if there’s a fight of thermonuclear war proportions, it’s still better than holding everything inside and feeling like there’s no room for me no matter its size. I will not stuff anything down because I know what it does to my mental health when I do. I feel absolutely worthless. If there’s no blame to be had, I’ll make it up just to torture myself a little better.
No one on earth can hurt me worse than I can. And “Barbie” showed me that my feelings aren’t unique or special.
I am, though.

