Passing Time

by Bedford Hope on June 22, 2010

Silly Bands. All the rage amongst the Tweens.

Eleven. The two little femme children at our bus stop look decided different from each other now; one is already showing substantial curves, bra straps peeking out around the edges of her tank top shoulder straps; my child, now taller though a full year younger, is all angles, sharp lines, harder jaw, bony chest, skinny legs, dirtier hair, holes in the knees of all his pants. His skirts don’t have the holes of course, though the tights under them sometimes do.

Born a boy, and a boy he will stay, for now. Either pronoun is fine, actually.

He still passes, but for how much longer? I haven’t noticed any double-takes, any dirty looks. He’s going into seventh grade; highschool year after next. Our high-school has a strong GSA, and a good community of GLB parents and a lot of kids out of the closet. But.

You try to imagine it, being your kid, and in the end, you can’t really. Cellphones, internet, cartoons on tap, youtube, x-box, handheld computers, global warming, BP spill, amber alerts, school shootings, Jack Bauer, Lady Ga Ga, Obama and Limbaugh, Lindsey and Britney gone commando.

The world you lived in, the insults we most feared, faggot, queer—Queer! Rehabilitated!— these words must lack the sting they once did. Mustn’t they? After Ellen and Will and Grace,  as we  await the end of Don’t Ask Don’t Tell. Gay marriage in MA, civil unions and partner benefits…

But we know that violence against gays is up, not down (though maybe this is a reporting artifact.) we know the suicides still happen, even in supportive families, we know the fight if far from finished. The little boy girl, whose parents were really to blame, will soon be an adult, and to the homophobes and haters that means, he’s fair game.

So I’m enjoying the end of this. Oscar’s little brother has lost interest in outing him to random strangers. (I think he just liked the confused look on their faces) But his body is going to start outing him, any day now.

Doing the laundry, folding his skirts and putting them in his drawer.

I no longer flinch when thinking about the future. The past is a memory; the future a dream. The present is good.

We’re here now.

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{ 1 comment… read it below or add one }

Melissa June 22, 2010 at 9:58 pm

Wow you just took me on a trip to our future! Chris is a few years behind your Oscar. I had not really thought that hard about the future when puberty might begin to betray her. We dont have the open minded community here so it is homeschooling and mostly stealth for us. Very few people know that the cute little blonde with the almost waist long ponytails and adorable yellow dress and sandals was born male. For now it is all so easy. Pretty hair and pretty dresses = girl. I often wonder how people around us would react if they knew that she was male. I shudder to dwell on it and yet in a few years it wont be so simple.

Oh well I am going to dwell in the present and relive the wonderful times of the past. I will let the future lurk out there for now.

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