Wyatt and I had known about each other for a few years in Portland before we actually began hanging out. But upon our first actual friend date, it was love at first bite. Talk about instant LTR. It really was like finding your new best friend at the first day of school and wanting to do everything together. So we did. We ate everywhere we could go in the city, we performed at open mics, warded off creepers--we were kind of a tranny super hero duo for one another. Once I left Portland, it was just a matter of time before the team got back into trouble making action.
As Wyatt has been traveling for the last few months, I get to be his last stop before he returns to Portland. Once Wyatt arrived, his concern for his safety became more prevalent. Being from the land of Fred Phelps I found that after exiting my queer bubble of Portland--becoming re-accustomed to the reality of the Mid-Western queer experience did not take much effort. For Wyatt, however, it was a different story.
As we spoke on the phone about plane arrival times and the joy of getting BBQ soon, we came upon the issue of airport security. I told him of an incident where I had recently been harassed by police at the airport; how I figured they must have seen me kiss my boyfriend goodbye as I sent him off through security.
"If you almost get arrested for kissing your boyfriend goodbye, I'm going to be arrested for just existing and being flamboyant." He says to me through the phone. So I wonder if maybe I had made a bad decision in telling him. Then I decided no. No I hadn't. "I exist in a queer bubble in Portland and I sometimes forget just how that fear feels."He finally explains. I didn't want my friend to be scared, but I also felt that it was vital information for him to know the kind of space he would be stepping into once he got off the plane.
When Wyatt arrives he's just as I would have expected him to be; engineer overalls, gold and white glasses, a small bit of curls that are dyed purple, a pink shirt that states, "Make It Happen", and an ever present smile. We literally skip to each other--not thinking of who's looking or even caring--slamming into one another, hugging, and giggling like we're five.
As we drive the two hours to my cabin I ask him how he's feeling about being in the country. "I'm nervous for my safety," he says, "as someone who has a gender presentation that may not fit into general stereotypes--and as someone who has had top surgery, but is not on T--and who adores bright colors, pink, and sparkles...not to mention very tight things and short shorts...yeah, I'm nervous." I do my best to reassure him, but I hear his concerns loud and clear. "I not only fear for my safety out in the country, but if I lived here I would fear I would never have sex again." He laughs, saying it tongue and cheek.
The next morning Wyatt looks at me in his pink shirt and overalls and says, "I'm going to need to borrow something."I was ready for us to go sit at a diner, looking like ourselves as we always do; ready to take on any rednecks that may want to start something. But this is Wyatt's choice, it's his safety, it's what he feels he needs to do in order to feel safe. So we search through my closet. First a camo shirt...and it just goes on from there. He borrows a pair of Carhartts, a belt buckle that says 'RUSS' on it, a tooled belt, a camo cap, and a thick jacket. All of a sudden Wyatt doesn't look like Wyatt, Wyatt looks like Bubba. "WHO AM I?!" He's says over and over as we take photo after photo--both of us intrigued by the intense change in his image just by the difference in his clothes and taking off his glasses.
"Just looking for kool-aid in the store...and even in my camo getup, I feel like there are all of these eyes on me. Like they know." He says to me as we stand in a checkout line. It's easy to forget these real fears when we go away to cities or places with queer meccas and live amongst lots of folks like ourselves. These spaces are necessary and I find them beautiful, but I also find it becomes easy to get lost in them and to forget about how many queers and queer youth are still struggling to exist with any sense of safety and self security outside of these places.
A photo shoot occurs shortly after and he inevitably posts the pictures on Facebook. Then confusion begins to settle in for the both of us as the comments start swarming in around the "Bubba photos". We understood the astonishment that other people were having around the drastic difference in his transformation, but alongside that both of us were having separate reactions to how folks were feeling.
"It's like I became invisible as myself," he says to me as we burn some cardboard in a barrel out back. Out of all the comments that were coming in about the drastic difference in his appearance, most of them had to do with, "I wanna do ya." We were both astonished that no one was asking, "why"; why he was dressed like that, or how it felt to be seen as "butch"--and more importantly, something that you are not. I had begun to wonder if Wyatt had traded places with a rural queer for the day; I wondered how many queers existed out there that felt inside the same way Wyatt expressed himself outwardly all the time. These were the questions that came up for me, yet I felt I was the only one asking them. And it broke my heart. The fear of being noticed and seen as who we are easily turns into Carhartts and torn a-frames for safety sake.
To camouflage oneself is a survival tactic--whether you are the hunted or the hunter. The hunted camouflages to not be seen and not die, but the hunter camouflages to not be seen so to eat and therefore thrive. Perhaps this was an illustration on how queers are far less the hunted than the hunter; how so many folks feel sorry for rural queers and think that we make ourselves easy prey by living outside of a queer mecca. We are creatures with an innate ability to cloak ourselves and mimic lives that are not our own. Through this we avoid being prey.
RECLAIMED HIS WILD!
* Wyatt is the host and co-creator of Put It In Your Mouth With Wyatt Riot.
Check it out here! * http://www.putitinyourmouthwithwyattriot.com/
What a great post, Twig. Definitely got me thinking again about the queer bubble of Seattle (where I live now) and the desert towns where I grew up (in Arizona). Glitter + Camo = Perfection. Much love to you and Wy.
ReplyDeletehi, i'm not even sure how i hyper-link-labyrinthed myself to this page, but i really enjoyed reading this little anecdote.
ReplyDeletei'm a small town queer currently living in portland, but honestly, i think the layers are much trickier than urban vs. rural. i feel completely comfortable being myself in my own conservative hometown because i grew up there, i know the history, the families, i know which stop signs didn't exist 10 yrs ago and even tho i'm now a vegetarian, i still know where the best crawdad fishing holes are.
on the other hand, i just moved back to the continent from Honolulu--a major urban center where i never felt accepted or safe, and i got harassed, threatened, and faced physical violence more than i ever have in any small town.
i guess what i'm saying is, i think it's more about knowing customs and having common ground (or not) in a community than about urban/rural "camouflage," at least for some of us.
interesting topic! thanks for the blog!