Showing posts with label a work in progress. Show all posts
Showing posts with label a work in progress. Show all posts

Saturday, April 28, 2012

The Figure of a Man



            My body is not like home, but is the only place of residency I have ever known. There lies no warm, soft bed within my walls, nor is there a dog bounding to the door upon my return. A sloped, sideways grin does not stretch upon my face upon the thought of my body. No ball of joy warms my stomach to sit night after night in my body, nor do I ever sit comfortably in my own skin. I do not wish it to remain as such, forever to be remembered in this way. My body is not the safe comfort zone I can retreat to in times of pain, misery, or despair, nor is it a place I can look to when in need of reassurance. You see, it is the source of my pain and misery, my torment and despair. It is the source from which I can never run or hide; it is everlasting in its presence.
This body – my body - is a man’s body. The two handfuls of heavy flesh on my chest are a man’s breasts. The miniature hands, tiny feet, and delicate features of my face are the hands, feet, and features of a man. The plump, ample curves outlining my figure are the contours of a man’s physique. The hooded clitoris between my legs and the folds of skin within which it resides are the genitalia of a man. Every knob of bone, patch of skin, and mound of flesh on this body – on my body belongs to a man. This whole, entire body - my whole, entire body - belongs to a man, and that man is me. This is the mantra I repeat in my mind all day. It is this mantra that reminds me how I wish to think and feel about this- my body one day and not second-guess myself.
Today, this place I inhabit weaves the hollow tones of lament rather than the radiant melodies of the ballad I hope it becomes. I have this deep and echoing carnal ache for my body to be congruent with who I am in my own mind. I yearn to wake one morning able to breathe a sigh of relief and not of despair- for it would mean I would no longer feel the acceleration of my heartbeat as my cheeks burn with the heat of the agonizing humiliation of the ever-present discord between my body and my mind.
            Waking up everyday in my body is like waking up in a place you don’t recognize. You’re groggy and sleep is heavily fogging your mind (vision?), and when your eyes open, your surroundings slowly come into a blurry focus. You don’t recognize this place you find yourself in and in an instant you are wide-awake with a panicked jolt of electricity flowing through your veins.
            For me, that moment of panic is replaced with a deep, dark dread; dreading that moment of clarity after the fog clears from my groggy mind (vision-?), dreading the jolt of angry electricity shoot through my veins. I dread waking up, only to come to the realization that my surroundings- my body, is one I recognize. The panic only comes after the same realization hits every single morning that my body is the same as it was the day before. The panic comes in arriving to the same agonizing conclusion that my body will continue to be the same every morning after this one. The agony in my inability to change my body- though I’ve tried in the past, it refuses to shed the curves of a woman. It refuses to gain the toned muscles of the man that I am. It refuses to allow these breasts of a woman to flatten out, and it refuses the clitoris of a woman to grow into the penis of the man that I am. In the half hour that follows, I drag my heavy carcass out of bed and gather a shirt, shorts, deodorant and my binder, I shuffle to the bathroom, dragging my unwilling feet along, forcing them to take me into the bathroom. My tiny, delicate, callused hands shut the door, as it echoes and locks me inside like a tomb. If logic didn’t remind me that I am 18-years-old and should not be afraid of the light, I would never flip that daunting switch on. I close my eyes as I feel the lights click on with a constant low buzz in my ears.
            Finally, with a defeated sigh, I open my eyes and quickly avert my gaze from the reflection I see before me. Though this happens, quick as lightning, the damage has been done, the image seared into my brain as if branded there by hot iron. I shove away all potential thoughts as I pull down my pants and stare at the toilet as if waging a battle. As a new wave of thought and emotion is about to wash over me, I pushback with energy I didn’t know I possessed, smacking the wave back behind ever-weakening walls in my mind. I continue through my morning routine- though it is hardly routine for anyone else, with a zombie-like blank stare. Carefully avoiding that reflective glass, I gather my school things and walk out the door, far from ready to face myself- let alone other people, hard classes, or even the day itself.
            I lose myself in the hustle and bustle of people getting to class and worrying about tests or what they can’t remember from the party the night before, as I make my way to class. As soon as my first class begins, I throw my mind fully into whatever we are studying, focusing and honing in on each little detail, writing it, reading it, speaking it and doing it so that I am fully engaged, with no room for any other thought or worry to cross my mind.
            So the day goes, with me only living a half life- seemingly present in all that is happening, but really hiding in being so “fully” present. It isn’t until I return to my room, exhausted from my mental efforts of pushing away that it all comes flooding back- back to the place I awoke in that very morning- back to the panic and dread and agony of feeling trapped- and back to the place I am forever uneasy in- treading so carefully I could be tiptoeing in the place I am so familiar with, yet is so damn unknown to me.
            Anguish. That’s the word; if ever one existed, to describe these feelings about my body. Sometimes, I feel nothing, nothing at all. Just kind of numb, I guess. It’s about plans, I think. Plans not carried out the way they were planned leaves room for uncertainty and the potential need to actually think about something. I can’t just go about my day in my normal state of faux-presence; I actually have to think in the moment at the times plans don’t work out the way I intend them to.
            Then there are those random, unexpected times that thwack me in the back of the head, knocking the wind out of me until I lay broken in pieces on the floor. Times I don’t know will happen- like hitting traffic on a long bus ride. The ride goes from four to five hours long. Four hours I expect. Four hours I can handle. But the additional hour out of the blue pops out of nowhere and all of a sudden I’m faced with an entire hour I don’t know how to fill…an entire hour without internet or food or things happening; an entire hour with nothing to distract me from my own thoughts.
            As the music on my ipod flips to a song that reminds me of home, my mind wanders to thoughts of what I miss most- the ocean, the water, the beach; swimming, laughing, moving through the water. My thoughts shift to scenes of swimming and water polo. I vaguely make plans to go swimming the next week, thinking I can handle wearing a girls’ suit as long as I can be in the water again. I imagine moving through the water. Before taking a single stroke, I feel the water on my skin.
            Warning bells go off in my head; these are the thoughts I barricade my mind so carefully from. But the cogs are already turning and I can’t stop the flow of images. I imagine the water engulfing my body and washing over every inch of my skin. As I realize I won’t feel the water rush through my legs, over my testes, or around my penis, a sinister swell of the most profound anguish imaginable crashes over me. The desolate, numbing emptiness that floods my mind is so damn loud in its utter silence- akin to the grief-stricken howl of a new mother finding out that she will outlive her child.
            The anguish envelops me in its intertwined tangles gushing through my head, wrapping itself around every limb of my body, flooding my throat and stomach with angry bile, choking me. I am frozen in the water, as if someone pressed pause on a movie. As the initial wave of anguish subsides ever so slightly, the searing image shatters, immediately replaced with the black, blank pane of nothing; the wall, the barrier I so rigidly maintain. With a cringe of bleak hopelessness, another wave of anguish sucks the air from my lungs, and I am bitterly reminded why I must so rigorously maintain the internal façade of blank, black nothing.