Sunday, March 27, 2016

Champions Online

This is going to be literally the nerdiest blog post you've ever seen me write. And I say that knowing that I've already published one about Kindred and League of Legends, and another about World of Warcraft. Sort of. Even then, both of those tied into LGBT identity politics, and this is no different. But it's much more personal.

This is another one of those instances where I look back on a behavior of mine from Before (in this case, storytelling and acting), and re-analyze it in the new light of my most authentic self. It's not that I think any of the specifics of these stories are universally interesting (though I do like them), but more that it occurs to me that if I was doing this, then it's not unreasonable to suggest that perhaps other trans women have (or had) been doing this, too. That somewhere along the way, they figured themselves out, and looked back, like I did, and asked themselves, "how could I have not known?"

More importantly, because of that, I want to share this kind of content so that other trans women who are, today, the way I was Before, can have their awareness sparked. Maybe this can be to them what shaving my legs was to me — that last "a-HA" of realization, that final comprehension of the truth. So, read on, and see if any of this resonates with you. If you get bored and quit along the way, I don't mind. But I still have to share this. Because if I'd found a blog post like this five years ago, I could have probably spared myself a lot of misery.

I started playing Champions Online years ago. Before that, I played City of Heroes and City of Villains. I've basically been playing some form of superhero MMO off and on for about 15 years. Before that, when I was a little girl whom everyone thought was a little boy, I played the Marvel Super Heroes Role-Playing Game with my friends. I don't remember exactly when I switched to writing predominantly female characters, but I do know that it was fairly early on in my life that I realized I felt more natural and at ease playing them. Before that, I pretended I was Superman, or Spider-man, or whatever other superhero I could pretend to be without being shamed.

But the most recent iteration was Champions Online, and, as was always the case in my MMORPG gaming, even back to Ultima Online, nearly every character I invented and role-played as was a girl. Especially when I was able to play with strangers — people who'd never seen my face or heard my voice. You can see a little bit of gameplay footage from Champions Online in my transperson video.


With Lilly Wachowski being outed the other day, it occurred to me that The Matrix, and everything it spawned, could no longer be interpreted as a story that might have some transgender metaphors, being the brainchild of a trans woman and her cisgender male brother. It had to be interpreted as a story that was transgender metaphors, because it was the product of two at-the-time closeted trans women who were storytellers.

The Matrix was a product of two siblings who knew a truth about reality — that they were women — and also knew that they could never tell that truth directly without facing massive negative repercussions. It was the product of two trans women who saw a world around them that was a vast and empty and lifeless wasteland, that was filled with zombies who were stuck in a fantasy, because people valued The System over each other, and feared anything outside of their constructed cultural understanding. It was the product of two storytellers, and storytellers ultimately tell us stories only about themselves.

As an aside, this is an extremely important point to remember, and it's why representation in media matters so much. The reason the creation of The Silence of the Lambs was a tragedy is because it is cisgender horror fantasy about transgender people. When we have a TV show or movie with a white cisgender straight guy for the villain, nobody gives a shit. It has no impact on cis/het straight white males in broader culture, because for every villain like that, there are 20 heroes, and thousands of ordinary "good people" characters who all look basically the same. Even when they try to tell the story of a cis/het straight white male as the bad guy, they make him the sympathetic hero of the entire thing.

Stories are reflections of their authors.

I remembered a particularly brutal sequence from one of the shorts in The Animatrix. I wrote a post about it that I shared on my Public Figure Facebook Page, and my tumblr as well. It exploded, becoming by far my single most popular original post on the site, with over 2,000 notes in its first couple days. From that one observation, I started feeling the pressure of this stream of realizations washing over me, as one metaphor after another suggested itself for nearly every aspect of the entire franchise.

While I'm sure it is not a new idea that these movies must be, at least to some extent, metaphors for trans existence, I've been deliberately avoiding looking into other people's theories about the property until I've developed my own. I'd hate to squash any of my own interpretations before they were ever formed. I've been taking notes and writing about it, and will share my thoughts soon. (Update: I shared them.)

But first, back to Champions Online. Because while I was thinking about The Matrix being the product of trans women who were storytellers, it occurred to me that some of the stories I'd written about characters I'd created, back in my superhero MMO, were also most likely laden with trans metaphors. That, like my 2002 song under a bad star, which predated my realizing I was a girl by about 12 years, I had probably known all along, on some level, and just not been consciously aware. I was curious to see what sorts of hints I'd tried dropping to myself, so I went back through them to see what I'd find.

They are presented in the order they were written, although some are adaptations of older favorite original characters from City of Heroes. I've already taken my name from these stories. Now it's time to see what that name came from. It's time to see what I was trying to say with these stories, and these characters; to myself, and to anyone who would read them. 

Sugarcoat


With a reportedly unlimited and uncontrolled innate capacity to reduce the temperature in her immediate area, this young girl was delivered to the laboratory of Dr. Elisabeth Hanson, the famed geneticist, by a MARS team requisitioned for that purpose. It quickly became apparent that not only was the girl unaffected by her own abilities, but that Dr. Hanson would not have time to help her in any way unless they were subdued.

A few quick contacts resulted in the rapid prototyping of a form-fitted suit that counteracts much of its wearer's powers in scale, though not in type. After donning it, though still refusing to give her real name, she agreed to assist Dr. Hanson in whatever way she could while the Doctor, in turn, studied her closely in hopes of helping her learn to control her powers on her own. It wasn't long before Dr. Hanson took to calling the nameless girl "Sugarcoat," in reference to both her saccharin wit, and the faint dusting of frost perpetually gracing her exposed features.

Sugarcoat was originally a tanky kind of character, back in CoH. I remember the idea around her then being that she was cold and distant and unreachable, but that she still wanted to help; she just also refused to fight. Playing to the game's "taunt" mechanics, her story concept had been that she basically made fun of enemies until they tried to kill her, so that her team could take them out. She did almost no damage, but was also almost impossible to actually kill. And yet, she could never really get close to anyone, either.

That older metaphor is plainer, to me, for my unrealized transness of Before. This newer one puts more emphasis on the dampening suit, also a fixture of the original concept. But it builds beyond that, to a girl who won't give her name. A girl who refuses to divulge it, because she knows that names have power. A girl whose existence is perceived as a natural threat to those around her, though she's just being who she is, and has no desire to harm anyone. A girl whose body must be put in check, because she might do some damage to society, just by being free and living in it. This is the story of a society that would rather change an uncommon kind of girl to make her what society wants, than even think about how to change society to make it work better for every kind of girl.

Today, I'd call this internalized transphobia. It was The Jason Construct pointing out that, if I were to acknowledge who I was and honor myself, I'd have to go to doctors in order to be made into something suitable to be around the general public. That my body as it was, and as it largely still is, to be honest, would be seen as something grotesque, and terrifying. This was me trying to talk myself out of being myself. 

Seranine 


12-year-old Sarah Logan has no idea that she died nearly 20 years ago. While walking home from school on a day like any other, she was struck by a drunk driver, whisked away to a hospital by ambulance, and pronounced brain dead upon arrival. Agents of a small biotech firm who happened to be on site managed to convince the hospital director to sell her body to them for research. The hospital director reluctantly covered up the loss with the girl's parents and quietly resigned immediately thereafter.

Once in the biotech company's lab, detailed scans of her physical attributes were meticulously recorded before her brain was removed. Then, as part of a revolutionary procedure that was outlawed in the United States almost as soon as it had been announced, Sarah's consciousness was digitised and preserved on disk. The legislation outlawing the practise cited ethics concerns, as any practical application of the technology practically demanded the brain of a child in order to ensure adjustment and acceptance of a new reality. Earlier experiments using adult brains were uniform failures, and always for the same reason -- they missed what they knew as "life." Once the law was enacted, the data that was all that was left of Sarah Logan vanished along with the company that had preserved her.

Safely disguised under new ownership, former employees of the defunct biotech firm secretly revived the project, and her brain image formed the basis of a powerful new AI. Publically, the company that now owned her brain image declared the "code" to be proprietary and has thus far been able to keep the truth hidden.

The AI was placed into a unique prototype android body, a multipurpose heavy-duty chassis capable of withstanding extreme conditions ranging from severe heat or cold to direct fire from small arms. Ninth in the Sentient Extensible Reconfigurable Android series, this model is currently on loan to UNTIL.

Oooooookay, this one is pretty straightforward, too. A girl whose development was halted, whose life literally stopped, more than 20 years ago; a girl who doesn't know that that's what really happened. A girl who isn't exactly dead, but isn't exactly alive, either. A girl who can't grow up, because her mind is stuck in a mechanical shell. A mechanical shell that can take tremendous punishment, but that is ultimately not really who she is, or ever was.

Alkaline


My name is Kali Bastille. In my family, for generations, the women have trained for a difficult and noble task. It often destroys us, one way or another. We are taught how to devour the essence of demons, to hold it within ourselves, and to neutralise it with our own magicks and natural abilities. This restores balance to the universe. Some of us don't make it through training. Others go on to convert thousands of demons in their lives before finally succumbing to the terrible toll it takes on our minds and bodies. But never before has a demon escaped one of us after it had been caught.

This is my great shame, and I know not if I can press on with my duty. Even should I find the demon Zhara and catch her once more, can I ever be sure of my capacity to imprison demons again? I have very little on which to go in order to track her down. All I keep seeing in my mind's eye is a pair of letters, always in the same order -- "N" and "V" -- but what meaning they have, I cannot guess.

This crisis of confidence has shaken my faith in myself and in my family's role in the workings of our reality. I find I often now wonder if the powers I possess are truly my own. More frightening is the prospect that perhaps even the actions I take are not my own, either. With every battle, I can feel my hold on my own demons slipping; yet I continue to fight, and continue to hope that that is the right choice.

This is one I had not remembered. The woman whose body was a literal prison. The woman whose name was literally the same as the name of a state prison of France.

The woman who let a demon escape her body, and felt like a failure for letting it out. Who had envy for that demon's freedom, but didn't understand that it was envy because she came at the puzzle from the wrong approach (initials instead of phonetics). Who questioned whether she was keeping Zhara (which is phonetically variant on Sera, I am realizing) prisoner for a truly just reason. Who questioned whether Zhara was a demon at all, or only a demon because she had been raised to believe that that's what Zhara was. Who questioned why it was her job to keep the demon hidden inside herself.

This is the kind of shit that has me shaking my head. I wrote this. I made this up years before I consciously realized I was a girl. Looking back through older works of mine, be they songs or stories, I am certain that on some level, I always knew.

Burn Unit


A national celebrity for his pioneering work in nanomachine-driven organ and tissue replacement, Dr. Bernard Ward was the Mercy Chief of Surgery by day, and relentless tinker in his private lab by night. An unexplained firestorm in that very lab one evening spelled the end of his rockstar lifestyle, and nearly the end of his very life. His assistant, Dr. Bernadette Ng, told Police that she had come to check in on Dr. Ward as she did every Saturday evening, when she thought she smelled smoke, rushed to the lab, keyed her entry code, and promptly set off a backdraft.

By the time Dr. Ng was recovered enough from her own injuries, the window for most thoroughly healing Dr. Ward's grievous wounds had closed, leaving him an invalid following the amputation of all of his limbs in order to save his life. He emerged from a coma some nine months after the fire, was fitted with advanced cybernetic prosthetics, and given a medical leave of absence to recover emotionally from the trauma he had suffered. He refused cosmetic surgery, his lipless yellow grin unsettling the few friends he had left until they all disappeared. Even Dr. Ng finally stopped coming by, belittled by Dr. Ward every visit, and too busy with her own new job as the Burn Unit Chief to suffer it for long.

Dr. Ward felt he had been betrayed by everyone in the world; that in the end, fire was the only constant. He became obsessed with mastering his long-time foe, controlling its every movement and change of state. Though a brief stint as a supervillain with his "Burn Unit" rig ended with him jailed and having a long chat with Defender, who had brought him in, he ultimately decided to use his powers for good... mostly. Some wounded part of him still delights in the pain that fire can cause others, and he views his role as a "superhero" as an official sanction to set fire to anyone he sees fit.

He mocks the Hippocratic oath, and now has his own new motto: "first, do some harm."

Here is one of my rare attempts at constructing a male character. Some of my past secondary misogyny shows itself, here. I interpret that now, in hindsight, as basically simple jealousy. Cis women were free to be women, but I was not, and never truly would be.

So, I imagined a version of myself as a grossly disfigured man who was miserable; a grotesque and mechanical figure, a man who couldn't accept affection or give empathy. Angry at the world, setting everything around him on fire. Trying to do the right thing, because that's what the system demands, but knowing that, on some level, he can never live up to it. That he never could, all because of some accident of his life.

Kizami Shoga


I was once ninja, an assassin, trained nearly from birth and brought up in an ancient and powerful clan. My weapons were what you might expect; shuriken, thrown knives and stars; katana, a popular Japanese-style longsword; and of course, stealth and cunning, and all that that entails. As a female, my assignments often differed from those of my fellows, but in combat, in loyalty, in character, we were all of one cloth.

Yet in truth, I had one higher loyalty. To my older biological brother, ani-ue I called him. On one of those rare assignments where we were able to work together, it was my own careless sword stroke that took his life, my own bloodthirsty blade that stole him away from me. I swore then and there that it would be the last careless act I would make.

I faked my own death so that the clan would not pursue me. I took on the fanciful and false name by which I am now known. And I abandoned earthly weapons for another brand of armament, one far more precise in its targets, no matter how heated or hectic the battle. Time was, I only used the shadows. Now I cast them as well.

While studying their use, I began to loathe who and what I was. I gave up my original plan of being an assassin-for-hire in my adopted home of Vibora Bay, and instead swore a second private oath -- that my skills would be used to save more lives than I had taken, and would take by necessity along the way. Those scales may take more than a single lifetime to balance.

Better get busy.

Kizami was a little harder for me to puzzle out, at first, but now I think I've got it. I view her old life, the assassin, using earthly weapons, as being representative of my attempts to live the life people wanted me to live. To be who I thought people wanted me to be. But on some level, I knew that if I did that, eventually I would hurt those closest to me, just as an accident of trying. And yet even as she acknowledges that she is different from her clan in gender, she also understands that they are essentially all the same.

She fakes her own death, undergoing a transformation of identity, and invents a new name for herself. She does this to hide from her own family, whom she knows will never accept her. She commits herself to training in the use of psionic blades, which can only ever harm their intended targets. She abandons physical weapons for mental ones. She gives up hard power for soft.

But then something curious happens. She realizes, like I did after a little while, that she still had all of this harm she had done in her past life, when she was not herself, that she had to own. I... would not have been able to really understand this if I'd re-read it right after realizing and coming out. But because I've had some confrontations with people from my past since then, and faced my mistakes and owned up to the harm I'd caused, this makes sense to me. It's eerie that I knew it would be like that.

ARGENT Presents Silver Belle


At the forefront of ARGENT's international PR blitz stands the Silver Belle IP, a corporate-sponsored "super hero" that will keep the public distracted from their shadier goings-on. For years, the Silver Belle concept was a pipe dream, a role without an actor. True to form, ARGENT took matters into their own hands to produce that actor by arranging the death of the troublesome, family-oriented Susan Welles, their top tinker and inventor for decades.

When she announced her retirement, ARGENT had her vehicle sabotaged so that during the family's move to a more rural part of Michigan, the brakes failed. The car left the freeway and struck a tree dead-centre at nearly 80 mph. With her husband's airbag failing to deploy, and the dogs flung through the front windshield on impact, dying on the scene, Dr. Welles went from a happily married retiree to a widow who was paralyzed from the neck down. Alone.

Another woman trapped in a body that does not make sense, at the whim of a system bigger than she can fight. An older woman, as well, one who had lived a full life and was ready to enjoy the rest of it, before realizing that now it would never end, and it would never be her own. Using the Champions universe version of a Greedy Megacorp™, ARGENT, I was also showing my disdain for the manufactured face of our society.

Gunshy


"I don't know, Ms. Stock. And you said this is your design? Nobody gave you this, a boyfriend, perhaps?"

Ignoring the implication was usually best in conversations like this, Brandy reminded herself. "No, sir. It's my own work, based on the thesis I did at VBU."

"You know," the Director continued, seemingly oblivious, "times being what they are, the real problem here isn't the quality of engineering that I'm sure your... Portable... Integrated..." He shuffled papers.

"Holographic Overlay Targeting and Portable Integrated Nanomunitions Kit, sir."

"Yes, yes. I'm sure it's quite a package, but the real issue here is field testing. We simply cannot sell something to the United States military on the basis of an untested pipe dream, or even something that works wonderfully in a controlled setting. You understand."

She hesitated, unsure if the conversation was over for him. May as well ask, she thought. "Well. I could test it, sir."

"Hmm? You?" He laughed. At first just a little. Then, when he tried to stop, he laughed harder. "Why, Ms. Stock, I understand that you positively loathe firearms, and cringe at the very sound of them in use!" Again, the laughter, punctuated with wheezing fits of coughing.

With the closest thing to calm she could muster, Brandy rolled her plans back up, and began placing them carefully into her drafting tube again. You were ready for this kind of reaction, she reminded herself.

Still laughing at his own joke, the Director fueled the fire. "A superhero! Who craps herself... at the...! Ahaha! They could call you 'Gunshy!'" he announced with glee.

"Yes sir, I suppose they could," she replied. "Here is my resignation, sir. Thank you for seeing me today." She turned and started out of his office, first walking, then finally pulling her heels off and running full tilt with tears streaming down her cheeks.

Let's just... revel for a moment, shall we, in the fact that not only did I make up yet another world-class STEM woman to role-play, but that I had her design a system for which the acronym was H.O.T.P.I.N.K. This is literally what I spent hours of my life coming up with, stuff like this. All while doing everything I could to avoid my actual life, because that was where I had to try to be a thing I couldn't ever succeed at being, because it was a thing I had never been, and had no idea how to be: a man.

Look at her, she's magnificent. She's brilliant, she's inventive, she creates this amazing system, and when the boys' club won't take it up, she puts it into the field herself, even though everything about it scares the shit out of her. She takes the shitty, nasty label they put on her, and she says, "fine, call me that. Call me that in your corner office, while I go out and make a difference." AND she's unabashedly emotionally present. God, it's like she's everything I wished I could be, back then. 

M.I.A.


Where in the World is Millie Adams? (cont. from page 42)

scarcely five-foot-one, yet her commanding presence seems to radiate from her very core. It is this presence that makes her seem so much larger than life, in person, even if one had never heard of her exploits (surely there are at least a few such people!).

With the onset of World War, many in the archaeological arena simply assumed that the travel and exploration arms of their community would stand down. Bolder than any man, however, is our Ms. Adams, whose initials, in the shadow of war, take on a more ominous and ironic double meaning. Millicent Isabel Adams becomes Missing in Action, or MIA, used by our fighting G.I.'s to indicate which brave soldiers have gone to the field and then gone missing.

When asked about this ironic confluence, Ms. Adams, who insists I call her "Millie," laughs with the harmony of a string quartet. This vigorous, vivacious, vexing vixen verily commands the heart of any man in her company, yet she refuses romance, or even escort, preferring to travel alone.

It is easy enough to understand why any red-blooded American male would wish to protect and serve this lovely firecracker, but those who have tried have failed miserably, our Millie simply losing them at the first opportunity, and sometimes, they have insisted in retrospect, before the first opportunity! How is all of this possible? Who is Millie Adams?

Born into a wealthy land-holding family, Ms. Adams had before her a life of leisure and luxury, with the high probability of an arranged marriage. She has been said to have taken to her equestrian and archery with great gusto and masculine discipline, but the untimely death of her father in one of the new aeroplanes as it crossed the vastness of Lake Michigan changed that, leaving her a rich orphan.
She became obsessed with survival --

(( The paper is torn here, cutting the text short. ))

This campy, pre-WWI-era magazine clipping as expository mechanism has a lot of obvious parallels buried under its boisterous mock-period language. It's the story of a woman out of time, one who rules her own world and enjoys whatever she enjoys without shame. One who is plainly and unhesitatingly herself. Men are attracted to her, but while she largely ignores them, she does so in a gentle and chiding way.

For all the wealth and power she came from, she knows that what she needs to do most is learn how to survive. I built this character up with intent to role-play her as a lycanthrope, after Champions made Become: Werewolf devices available, dropping her neatly into yet another betrayed-by-her-own-body narrative. The untold story there, which I never wrote down, but remembered instantly when I spotted the device in her tray, was that she was bitten, and became a werewolf, herself, so she ran and hid and, you guessed it, started scouring the world, alone, for the cure. The cure to who she was.

Calico


Polly Kate was always the more brash and outgoing of the two Collins girls, so it came as a shock to her parents and indeed her entire family when small-town white-bread little sister Roberta Susan "Bobby Sue" married a Chinese man who had gone out to rural West Virginia to procure soil samples as due diligence for a mining operation. Their whirlwind romance lasted all of four days, after which she announced that she was marrying him, and that was that.

Until six weeks later, when she left a frantic-sounding, garbled voicemail on the family answering machine. With the parents far too old and infirm for much travel, Polly hurriedly packed a few belongings into her old pickup, and drove through the night to Millenium City, pulling into Chinatown late the next day. As a white girl in the predominantly Asian neighbourhood, she was ignored at best, sexually harassed at worst, as she endeavoured to discover the fate of her little sister and her new husband.

Time passed, and after a few months it became evident that if Polly wanted to solve the case, she would need to give up West Virginia for good, and accept living in the city. She took her earnings from a local crafts store, added it to her life's savings, and opened a small sewing and fabric shop in the heart of Chinatown. Business was predictably slow, at first, because of the racial divide, but before long, her relentlessly amiable nature, country hospitality, and depth of knowledge as a seamstress won her a small and devoted customer base. This core base expanded, and soon her business thrived.

Any business in Chinatown falls under the Red Banner's territory, but a thriving one gets special attention. And so it was that Polly's shop was ransacked, week after week. Her customers driven off. Her voicemail filled to the limit with threats and obscenities. She knew that fighting back as Polly Collins would get her killed. But if someone else fought back for her...

This one was a little harder for me to decode, but when I zoomed out to where I am in my life, now, I realize that the seeds of solutions I've developed to problems I've encountered since coming out were here in this fiction. Polly Collins is aspirationally Seranine Elliot.

Polly leaves the familiar comforts of home to help her sister, not sure where it will take her, but sure that it has to be done. I launched myself into the most public view possible to help my sisters, not sure where it would take me, but sure that it had to be done.

Polly moves into a previously-strange cultural context, and wins acceptance by being her most authentic self. I moved into a previously-strange cultural context, and have mostly won acceptance by basically just being me. We both experience social invisibility and/or sexual harassment, but keep fighting anyway.

Polly realizes that she has to let go of old ideas and dreams, and establish her own business; to take literal ownership of her financial future, by doing what she does best. I realized that chasing call center jobs that would waste my abilities and my life was not a viable way forward for me, so I left it behind to pursue what I love, also striving to take ownership of my own financial future.

And finally, Polly suffers unwarranted threats and attacks for chasing her own joy, and trying to position herself to best help her sister, but knows that if she establishes a more public version of herself to stand up and fight, she could both help her sister, and maintain some little sliver of privacy for her own peace of mind. I remember role-playing her as being notoriously bad at hiding her "secret identity," which I now read as an unconscious cipher for the way I decided to divide my public and private life. Like Calico, my public presence is where I expect to engage others, and to have that not always go very well. Whereas my private space is where I expect to not have to deal with attacks on who I am, or to have to explain my identity and why it's valid and matters.

Deadpan


In the Intelligence community, it is widely known that the enigmatic Deadpan is abrasive, but effective, deals with authority more often as a problem than a solution, and most of all, that he gets results. That aside, while it is easy enough to suppose that he is at least middle-aged, male, and has extensive military experience in his background, speculation beyond that point begins to diverge wildly, depending upon the source.

Some who have met him only more recently have wondered if he is an alien or robot, as he seems to never tire or sleep. Others have surmised that he must be American-born and possibly still in the direct employ of the United States government, given his far-reaching access to and apparent influence within that nation's many government agencies. Still others have countered that the bizarre melange of his accent paints him as having had a much more worldly youth, though his accent of late has faded into the drab backdrop of his now constant monotone.

Though his tone remains quite flat in most cases, even when booming to cut through a crowd, his acerbic wit is so cutting and tactless, and so liberally intermingled with his fast-paced, fresh, and raw tactical information that it can be a challenge to tell when he is serious, and when he is not. Add to that challenge the muted affect of his body language, and his completely obscured face, and few struggle to see why he's known by this moniker.

His most recent activity suggests that he is currently working on a new Initiative for the UN, in some relatively high-ranking capacity, possibly even as its Director. He has been spotted in several unusual locations passing out a card with the ominous acronym "U.N.I.N.S.T.A.L.L." to select Superhumans and their contemporaries, often unsettling them more than usual by casually revealing that he knows quite a lot more about them than some of them even know about themselves.

Deadpan was probably the most direct analog for The Jason Construct. He could get things done, but he was essentially not a person. He has a notable lack of tact and inability to have any sort of connection to anyone, he deflects through caustic humor, and he is unsettling to be around, because people know there is something about him that they can't quite put their finger on. Turns out he was just a shell, a hard case; not a whole person. With a design clearly derivative of Alan Moore's Rorschach, haha.

Groundswell


Scarlett Clay was sure she had endured every possible humility over her pun-friendly name, from family trips to the Grand Canyon as a child (mostly for silly photo ops), to her college classmates' relentless teasing of her minor in geology, and shared last name with one of the faculty in that focus, Dr. Ferris Clay. Depending on who was leading the charge, she was at turns called his daughter, his lover, or both. She had thought that was as bad as it could get. She was wrong.

A class field trip to Burning Sands to study the effects of radiation on the soil makeup took a disastrous turn when she was separated from her group during an appearance by Grond in the area. Searching for food and water in the irradiated wasteland, she noticed over time that the ferrous clay that had become a constant layer over her skin could no longer be wiped away faster than it would reappear.

Once she had made her way back to Project Greenskin, she was presented with news both awesome and awful at once. The only reason she had survived without food and water for so long was that she was no longer human in any physiological sense. Her body had become animate clay, constantly shifting and reconfiguring itself. Clothing became more trouble than it was worth, humiliating and mortifying as it was to wander about naked.

Once back in MC, she changed her major from Political Science to Geology, and locked herself in her apartment to study her condition and look for a means of reversing it. Her friends and family were kept in the dark about her strange transformation, and MCU accepted her application for a fully online courseload. Before long, her world seemed to return to some level of routine. It was livable, if lonely, as she never needed to leave her home for food, and managed to have anything else she required shipped to her door.

And then the Qularr came. Acting purely on instinct, she fought back.

This one is so obvious it's laughable. All she really wants is to pursue her passion (which is POLITICAL SCIENCE, are you fucking kidding me?) but she's derailed by this accident of fate. Her body literally betrays her, and she hides away from the world, devoting her life to "reversing" her condition. She hurls herself studiously to a new area of study that had previously been barely above a hobby to her, when suddenly, reality strikes, and she is forced to fight to survive, even though she doesn't quite grasp what she really is by the jumping-off point at the end, there.

The game engine doesn't support it, but I would actually LOVE to role-play Groundswell, now, as a non-binary genderfluid character. It'd be wonderful if I could use the huge male, male, and female models as bases for a number of life-sized animate clay figurines, essentially. To really fully and finally grasp the use of they/them/their pronouns, by playing someone who was genderfluid, or agender, or some other non-binary expression that I still have to consciously work to recognize and honor in others.

Alizarin Crimson


Triple Tragedy Topples
Triumphant Teen Titan

(cont. from A1)

already at the top of many analyst's lists for Olympic gold in an incredible variety of events, the athletic prodigy still seemed to always float above any controversy. Even her exploits at several Junior X-Games competitions during her pre-teen years left her unscathed by the illicit cybernetic prosthetics scandals that laid many pro skateboarders low. Cameron never had any such devices, and provided only forgettable, if timely and insightful comments as the careers of many of her fellow athletes came undone.

Now only 17, Vibora Bay's prized youth role model has finally found herself embroiled in her own controversy, and worse. Not only was she at the center of a dogpiled stream of accusations from anonymous sources, claiming that she was using metahuman abilities and possibly devices barred by the rules of various leagues as well, but in the midst of that professional pummeling, the unthinkable happened in her private life.

The recent rise in gang activity, particularly the now open war between the New Shadows and the Dogz, long rumored to have vampires and werewolves in their ranks, respectively, has left many in the Bay area edgy and jumpy, but never has the sheer loss of civilian life been so extreme or exposed as in what many now call Vibora's Valentine's Day Massacre. Among the dead, Alison Cameron's own parents, brutally slaughtered in a belligerent bloodbath in what police currently believe was just the most awful of possible coincidences -- nearly simultaneous home invasions by agents of each of the rival gangs mentioned above.

Finding herself orphaned and jobless, Cameron's relentlessly cheery public persona seemed to evaporate. She disappeared from competitive Archery, abandoned track and field events, made no appearances during this year's Junior X-Games, in the pipes or in the stands; she was

(Cont. on A5)

This one is kind of laughably awful, but it does draw attention to my sense of "are you fucking kidding me?" all throughout my life Before. Feeling like disaster upon disaster upon disaster was falling on me, feeling cut off from family by bizarre twists of fate. Feeling like I just wanted to be a normal girl, and get to grow up and be whoever I was, but having to hide, instead, hounded and misunderstood.

Axe of Contrition


"I see you have abandoned Therakiel's madness, Edheriel. This bodes well for you," said the Gatekeeper.

"I came not to argue the end," Edheriel sneered, the bassy rumble of his voice all that was left by which to recognise him. "I disagree with Therakiel's means. He has a plan."

"... Go on," he said.

"I did not like it."

Suriel looked down upon Edheriel's twisted form, a mockery of his former Grace. He squinted. Edheriel could feel his gaze searching for Sincerity, and felt mildly smug when he saw the barest arch of the Gatekeeper's brow.

"You do recall, I'm sure, the rules," said Suriel with a casually dismissive wave of his hand. Edheriel grunted his accord. "But."

"But?"

Suriel paused once more. Edheriel had never liked that. He availed himself of the opportunity to imagine terrible fates befalling him. "You also recall, I'm sure," he condescended, "how big we are on faith, and redemption as well. You are here, which means you want back in. That means penance. And you have information. So." He placed his ancient hands one atop the other on the seam of the Gates, his face twisting into a smile that seemed out of place. Maleficent. "There is... one way."

An Eternity of waiting later, Edheriel stood before the Greater Good, his right hand raised, his left resting with affected reverence over a teetering pile of holy books, stone tablets, and talismans from all corners of Reality. The Oath was sworn, binding him indefinitely to Silence, to Service... and to the Axe.

The Eternity of waiting had allowed his former shape to be restored, but had dulled his skills. Now he was no longer the formidable Holy Avenger, but a babe, clutching feebly to a stick as it hurtled down, down, down, forever down, his scowling Watcher close behind. At long last, their descent came to a halt, where the Greater Good was at its weakest, where the need was greatest, in all Reality.

Lots of plain metaphors, here. Edheriel's name is nearly a homophone for "ethereal," speaking to the ephemeral nature of our bodies, and how we are more than that. He tried to be something he wasn't, and it destroyed him. A literal gatekeeper says there is a way he can go back to how things were, but he has to submit utterly to their rules. The gatekeeper's name is nearly a homophone for "surreal." That is, the fact that we have so many barriers keeping us from finding our truest selves is an idea that has a disorienting sense of unreality to it. Edheriel binds himself to the service of ancient authority, and silence in the face of its wrongs, in order to return to Earth in a husk he can't live in, all in the hope that someday he will be able to go back to how things were before. Before, when he was unhappy, but more comfortable. He is tired, and he is angry, and he is utterly alone, but ultimately, the story sends him where he needs to go — to the worst place and time he's ever been in his life.

After losing everything, a future I saw coming, and saw as inevitable, my life followed more or less this track. I was going to school to get a degree I didn't really care about, to try once again to be the guy I never was, and could never have been. I was bound by cultural norms and societal rules, which act as these surreal gatekeepers, telling us the ways in which it is okay to explore our own identities, and the ways in which it is not. Just as Edheriel was shown the rules of angelhood, and commanded to uphold them, but could never live up to them, I was shown the rules of manhood, and commanded to uphold them, but could never live up to them. The reason this story feels like it has a happy ending, to me, was that I know I didn't find myself until I had lost everything else. And I think the same would ultimately prove true for Edheriel, too.

Neither of us were ever what others thought we must be, based on how we looked, and so we spent our lives atoning for a sin that was not ours.

Mechanom


D,

Look, I get it, you don't want to be a babysitter. That's not what I'm telling you to do. Key word: "telling." You still report to me, and don't forget it.

The fact is, this thing falls directly under your purview. It is a new threat. Its capabilities and intentions are unknown at this time. Your unit got the go-ahead when you convinced the brass that you could keep liabilities like this as limited as possible. Now you need to keep your word. You can't just get the budget and the toys, you have to do the work, too. We don't need another Detroit.

So whether you neutralise the thing (if that's even possible) or talk to it and convince it to do what you want it do (if that's even possible), I don't give a good God you-know-what. As long as you're the one doing it, and not me. Or anyone else, for that matter.

All I want to hear back from you on this is, "I've got it covered," and then straight back to the usual dailies. Get it done. It's what you're paid to do. I keep the brass off your back. This, however, is your problem.

Adm. Herbert K. Thornton III
UNTIL, Commanding

This one was kind of interesting to me. Mechanom was originally conceived as a lighthearted play on "Mechanon," one of the major villains of the Champions universe. I basically wanted to make a huge idiot robot that just ate everything. I didn't really bother explaining or thinking about his origins, so much, just that he was being who he was, and that who he was was perceived as a threat. That people would approach him not with curiosity or any possibility of genuine acceptance, but with a need to control him, and, failing that, to destroy him. For existing outside of the rules. There's also this sense that nobody wants to even deal with that, that they kind of just wish he didn't exist, in the first place. So, who do they hand him off to to deal with? Deadpan, another of my characters, himself a cipher.

I think I had this fear, subconsciously, that if I were to really just be who I was, I was going to find false friendship, at best, and that this story concept for Mechanom expresses that.

Glitchcraft


James Harmon IV and his lady love Bethany "Witchcraft" Duquesne celebrated their Valentine's Day 2012 by adopting a Miniature Pinscher from the local animal shelter. Although he was not initially keen on the idea, at Bethany's insistence, he soon warmed to the pup, and sure enough, after calling her a "Glitch" in his life one too many times, she claimed the title and made every effort to live up to it.

Before long, she became more Harmon's dog than Duquesne's, and he even lightened up enough to allow her to follow him around in his workshop, realising early on that she tended to keep herself comparatively out of trouble. (Asked about this later, Harmon is reported to have said, "that little bi-- Glitch was destroying my penthouse every time I left! Of course I took her to the lab!")

She was ignored as Harmon entered a crunch development period in advance of a public demonstration of a prototype Compact Rapid Adaptation Field Technology (C.R.A.F.T.) powered suit, which featured breakthrough "Holo Hex" technology. This approach to fielding personnel in response to a variety of crisis situations, from police needs to high-conflict military scenarios, would allow for the pilot to control the vast majority of the suit's systems by thought alone, with virtually no initial or ongoing training.

Though he had never in his wildest dreams imagined a demonstration quite so effective at showing the world just how dumb the pilot could be (without the pilot feeling insulted), heavy traffic bought sad, lonely Glitch just enough time to settle down for a nap in just the right area shortly before the suit was powered up for the demo. His face fell as the stage rose, and terrified Glitch offered a happy yip at the sight of her beloved master.

Red-faced, he hurriedly ad-libbed, "... that even a dog can operate it!" birthing this new legend, fully formed from the skull of Athena, into the sk-- streets of Millenium City.

I love this character concept. It's yet another hugely obvious girl-in-the-wrong-body metaphor, but with a relentlessly lovable and uplifting lead, rather than my more typically emo concepts. Glitch is seen as a mistake by her "parent," but she wants to be a part of the family. She loves everyone, and if she's destructive, she has zero intent, and even less idea. She is impossibly happy in that way that only dogs are, and accepts that her body isn't quite right with aplomb. And, most tellingly, when she is supported for who she is, as she is, when she "comes out," she goes on to great things. Rather than being man's ideal vision of woman (Athena from the skull of Zeus), she is woman's own acknowledgement of herself, whatever the form — even if it's Glitchcraft from the skull of Athena, someone who was a headache and a problem until she was set free, and given leave to be herself.

Sigilante


Kara Wheeland, orphaned daughter of unknown lineage, grew up mostly alone, or so she felt, in downtown Detroit in the early 1930s.

I was going to leave this one out, but I thought I'd include it to highlight that even in my briefest, most vague concepts, I still touched on identity issues. She feels alone, even though she isn't. She's nearly 80 years old, but looks like she's 25. She hides her face as much as possible, and nobody really knows who she is.

Spearhead


Foolishly did I challenge mighty Ares to single combat, in a fury at the death of our king, brave Leonidas. Where he might have scoffed at my hubris, instead did he accept my challenge. Nothing to be won but the winning. Nothing to lose but my life.

For days did we battle, and days became weeks. Weeks became months, months became years. I paid no heed to the passage of time, save by the wear upon our weapons. At last, I was victorious. I had defeated the God of War in his own domain, on his own terms. I had won.

I broke off the tip of his spear as a trophy, and prepared to return to the mortal realm. Ares laughed. I did not understand why until my feet once more touched the earth. The world had turned, and I, in my mad quest for vengeance, my mad, foolish quest... I had let it pass me by.

Okay, seriously. I cannot think of a more obvious cipher for "trying to be a man, doing okay financially, but ultimately still failing, and finding that the world has passed me by, and that the skills I've developed are out-of-date" than "I fought Ares, the LITERAL GOD OF WAR, and I thought I won, while actually losing anyway, and I found myself displaced in time, with skills that had no value anymore." I even describe that pursuit as a "mad, foolish quest." I am consistently astonished that I was writing any of this stuff, while still having no conscious idea that I was girl.

Whimsy


The tireless Misty Fairweather enjoyed a normal life as, she believed, a normal girl. While she excelled in track events, and seemed to rarely need much sleep, she didn't exhibit any truly superhuman behaviour until puberty hit. An instance of spotting for which she was wholly unprepared led her to flee, mortified, from the school grounds. What she didn't notice until she had gotten home was that at some point, she had actually stopped touching the ground.

I don't think there's much to this, other than a body doing a reeeeeeally unexpected thing in puberty. And while I think I would have preferred being a cis girl who has the ability to control the wind, I find that as a trans girl, who is also seen as dangerous because of what she might represent, without any regard for who she is, we have a lot in common. This is the old X-Men coding that I grew up on, where "mutant" was a cipher for "Those People."

Vex


The Duchess Vex, thanks to the machinations of her brother (who was born to the unfortunate name of Nemesis) found herself next in line to the throne of an Empire she did not want to rule. In her desperate attempts to escape the heavy weight of that duty, she began to explore means of travel to other realms.

She happened first upon the Qliphothic, but found it lacked amusement and the sense of humour which she prizes above nearly all else in life. She left it behind, but unbeknownst to her, a piece of it joined her on her interdimensional journey.

Next, she came to Earth, and found it an ideal match for her notions of how one might best pass time. There were objects of little spiritual weight that she could toss about with half a whim, there were intelligent ape-like creatures who thought very highly of themselves and were thus prone to her manipulations, and best of all, there were countless gateways to other dimensions. The fabric of reality was thinnest in Millenium City and Vibora Bay, and she has made these two places her new homes.

UNTIL has recently opened a file on her, trying to determine her exact nature and intents. While she has sided with what they would call "the good guys" more often than not, her appearance on either side has seemed more a matter of chance than anything else, and she seems to delight in chaos and mischief far above any other considerations.

Dimension-hoppers were always some of my favorite kinds of characters, and Vex is probably my ultimate expression of that. She has power and privilege, but she does not want either of them, because they are not who she is. She rejects them, because she only wants to be herself. She explores different kinds of realities (that is, different theories of reality), before settling into one that she likes, one that feels closest to what she knows is true. But the people there don't understand reality the same way she does, so they perceive her as dangerous.

The idea of someone who could navigate between realities always fascinated me. Vex is probably the nearest story I developed to paradigms presented in The Matrix. When she's tossing shipping containers and semis around with her mind, that's a problem chiefly because The Rules of Reality say that you can't do that. It's not that she's inherently a threat because of who she is, or any particular action she takes, it's that she's an unknown because she understands the world completely differently from most people. And most people find challenges to their reality, their status quo, terrifying, especially if it had been working for them. To most people, a shipping container is a valuable thing that should be protected. To Vex, it's a light, easily-accessible tool she can use to save lives, and which has literally no value in comparison.

Ms. Gemini


What Jim Nystrom, AKA Mr. Gemini, believed to be a mutation in his genes, bestowing upon him the incredible power to replicate his physical form while maintaining control over each of them, was in fact not a mutation but rather the unfortunate result of his older sister Jen's experiments in rapid tissue regeneration. Lacking serious funds and access to anything but her own computer models and simulations, Jen elected to try her theories out on her own body.

She calibrated makeshift beam projectors, double- and triple-checked her numbers, and blasted herself with a wide-spectrum array of light in combination with radiation and specific sonic patterns. The complexity and intensity of the various components of the experiment were such that her equipment shook itself apart, some pieces destroyed completely. Though she could have rebuilt the lab, and is certain she can replicate the process, once she discovered the unforeseen impact on her brother, she abandoned her research and set out to save him from himself, and to keep him from coming to harm, or worse, at the hands of rival villains or over-exuberant heroes.

Perhaps the worst of all, to Jen, was that the delusions Jim developed due to the fact of his power were more the consequence of the mental strain of maintaining so many replicants than anything else. Jen's heart was crushed when she discovered that her experiments on her own body, which she had believed to be 100% successful, had wreaked terrible harm upon her beloved baby brother.

Girl irreversibly alters her body for a greater good, causing her brother to freak out and turn into a villain. This one is probably more about inventing an original character to play off of a Champions universe character, Mr. Gemini, than anything else. But even with something this tangential, the idea of a family member becoming a problem for everyone as a result of something I do in the pursuit of a valuable truth seems like a fair enough metaphor for fears around coming out to family. And once they've "turned evil," that internal conflict of how to best help or save them comes to the fore. Does she kill her own brother, that is, does she cut him out of her life for good? Or does she just do everything she can to keep him from hurting others, until she can bring him around to reason?

Dreamcatcher


I have been trying to die my entire life.

I forgot about this character. And when I opened up her bio to see what I'd written, I cried. I remembered how awful I felt Before, how constant it was. And I looked with new eyes on my Dreamcatcher, and the broken and mangled mass of her body. On how she tried to help everyone with her natural abilities, no matter how frightening or awful or repulsive they thought she was. How her life was endless misery, and how she did the best she could to help everyone anyway.

Logic Bomb


Nameless until recently, the device referred to by Millenium City's scientific community as "the Logic Bomb" appeared in the desert lands in the Southwestern United States shortly after the initial Qulaar landing in that area. Its name is derived from Max Plank's theory that it was planted by yet another alien intelligence long ago, and was triggered to activate by the event of the appearance of another alien race. He is not certain that this theory is correct, or if the Logic Bomb was set to be triggered by the mere presence of aliens, or if it reacts in particular to those hostile to humankind. He has also pointed out that there is no reason to think that this is the only one.

It does not seem to have a mind in the traditional sense, as telepathic probing and psychic attacks upon it produce few results of any kind. Since its first sightings as a shapeless mass of wires and plates, the Logic Bomb has continuously reconfigured its body, and now holds the form of a vaguely feminine human child.

To the extent that its presence benefits humankind, the Logic Bomb's standing on the right side of the law seems to be incidental at best, and attempts to communicate with it have not yielded anything. James Harmon has been developing remote probes to follow the Logic Bomb and determine its true nature, for his observations to date have led him to conclude that it is currently operating in a data-gathering mode. Unfortunately, much of what it scans is destroyed by the scanning process. It is highly reactive, and will aggressively scan anything that attempts to do it physical harm. To date, this has kept it in the sights of many nefarious organizations, as conflicts escalate quickly once the Logic Bomb is fired upon.

An intelligence that we cannot recognize by traditional means, coupled, again, with that same metaphor of being sort of accidentally destructive, while also fundamentally good. She's kind of an empty shell, but, left to her own devices, what does she make herself look like, as she explores the world around her in order to try to figure out where she fits in? A little girl.

Logic Bomb existed in City of Heroes as a fire tank archetype, but the conceit was the same; she was awakened by an alien presence, and she built herself up from whatever was around her in order to fight it off. This version was altered to fit better with Champions Online power sets, and gives a nod to League of Legends and their Vel'koz, who also scans things ("deconstructs" them) in order to understand them.

Push


(cont.)

and remains a promising avenue of research, as the director of this project, I must assume responsibility for our failure to deliver the promised result, that of a powered suit capable of full flight with an inexpensive and mass-producible power supply.


Among the problems we encountered was a relatively severe shortage of range on the repulsion fields, so although the power requirements were met, the capacity for full flight was not, as the suit's wearer can only reliably hover about one to two feet above any solid surface. Even in this case, however, there is a need to counter the repulsion field to some extent in order to produce some level of control; for example, some sort of a spoiler device affixed to the user's back. With this, the sensation of movement experienced by the user is not unlike that of a watermelon seed being pinched between the thumb and index finger. It is possible to utilize as a means of travel, but only with a great time investment that is ultimately impractical for our needs.

Attempts to explore weaponization of some of our advancements were also of limited yield, as these devices were initially developed to repel the user from nearby surfaces, and not to destroy said surfaces. However, we did achieve some limited success.

Of possible interest to my successor is the fact that high-intensity repulsion fields excite the local molecules to such an extent that, in air, what appear to the untrained eye to be very tiny wind systems occur. It is worth noting, however, that this is due to an artificial repulsion field exciting the air molecules, and not due to excited air molecules creating a repulsion effect. Given enough time operating under these conditions, a static discharge may also occur.

This concludes my notes on this project, as well as my resignation.

Regards,
Dr. Susan Welles, PhD
Director, R&D
ARGENT, Inc.


I feel like the metaphor of a woman designing a suit, to the impossible specifications of her superiors, that ultimately is only good for literally pushing everything away is pretty plain. It can't even fight. It's supposed to, that's what people expect of it, but it can't. The best it can do is keep everyone away.

Also worth noting is the fact that the inventor of the Push suit is the same Dr. Susan Welles who goes on to become ARGENT Presents Silver Belle. So, she tried very hard to be what the system wanted her to be, and when she finally tried to retire from it, it destroyed her in order to keep her from just being herself.

Finally, the woman who actually is Push is never even mentioned. She's just a girl stuck in a suit of armor that is designed to keep everyone away from her, and when she finally takes the helmet off, she discovers she no longer has a body of her own, at all.

Blast Radical


Ship's Log, S.C.V. Kimbra Lee Johnson

I have taken over command of the S.C.V. Kimbra Lee Johnson, in accordance with all standing operational procedures regarding change of command, after exposing Captain Hardaway as an alien infiltrator. I theorize that he may have murdered the actual Captain Hardaway and taken his place, due to the Captain's long and illustrious career with the Fleet. I find it less plausible that Captain Hardaway was always an alien agent, as an Ensign would not have been a valuable covert asset. Although I am not certain of much other than that Captain Hardaway is a spy of some sort, I will continue to refer to him by that name until contradictory data presents itself.

He escaped the ship using an E.C.H.O. system, but in pursuit of him, both the S.C.V. Kimbra Lee Johnson and his ship were sucked into what my science officer describes as a "temporal-spatial vortex," which has transported us not only physically a great distance from Fleet Headquarters, but also some additional "distance" through time. We cannot be certain if we have gone forward or backward, however, and our star charts are of no use to us in this foreign system.

However, I am absolutely certain that Captain Hardaway's E.C.H.O. is on this planet, which some of its inhabitants creatively refer to as "Earth." We believe he landed in what the natives call the "Western Hemisphere," but beyond that, we have little to go on. I have been working with the natives to secure their favor and hopefully find clues to Captain Hardaway's whereabouts, while the ship remains in orbit, ever vigilant, scanning for any sign of technology from our own world, or any of those of our known enemies.

In order to facilitate Captain Hardaway's capture, I have engaged various groups of metabeings on Earth. Perhaps by working directly with some of them, I may discover his whereabouts.

Major Blast Radical, Commanding
S.C.V. Kimbra Lee Johnson

Okay, first of all, yes, I am a huge Kimbra nerd. Beyond that, let's see...

I had always envisioned Blast Radical, even back to his City of Heroes iteration, as a complete asshole. He was basically my version of Disney's Gaston. Very fun to role-play, but not anyone you would ever actually want to be friends with in real life. Which leads me to want to examine his prey more directly as a cipher for me, or for trans people. And what's that look like?

The Captain, whose name sounds an awful lot like the "hard way," has achieved great success, but when a secret to his identity is exposed, when it's revealed that he wasn't, on the inside, what everyone assumed he was, based on the outside, he's immediately unseated, and hunted. "Alien" here is pretty clear code for "other," of whatever kind, and apparently Blast Radical, in Champions Online, at least, is an agent of The System.

Le Baton Rouge


Le Baton Rouge est une heroine de la France, fameuse pour arrêter beaucoup de voleurs et criminels. Pourtant, la police ne lui aime pas, parcequ'elle travaille dehors la loi. Après vaincre un fonctionnaire du gouvernement qui était corrompu, elle s'enfuit la France et elle a venu aux Etats-Unis.

Okay, so, clearly I was in French classes when I invented this character. But even in this case, I'm still seeing obvious metaphors. She's a famous hero, she's a valuable member of society. Until she exposes government corruption that leads to the arrest of a member of the establishment. And then, though her cause and life are both just, she is driven out, and has to try to be herself, and survive, somewhere else, in another culture entirely.

Pandora


Appearing just a few short months ago in Millenium City, Pandora has yet to speak a word to anyone. If she has family, no one knows. Whether she's from Millenium City, or somewhere else, none can say. Her apparently technological minions defy reason; after she helped Defender break up a gang alliance council, he took the remains of one of her so-called Attack Toys back to Harmon Labs and analyzed it. It was found to be a simple stuffed snowman toy, without any circuitry to speak of.
Closer examination of Pandora's "costume" at a later battle showed that her wristband, originally assumed to be some sort of advanced control device for her "robots" was little more than a broken calculator that had been affixed to an elastic wrist band wrapped in aluminum foil. Even her now-famous multi-function pistol is nothing more than a simple ping-pong ball gun.

Still without uttering a word, the child submitted to mystical examination by Witchcraft, who could not discern the source of her powers, but had a guess as to their nature. She posited that her unique ability was to bend reality itself to her whim, that whatever she imagined became real. Thus far, Pandora manifests this power chiefly by willing her toys to life, but her true limits have yet to be explored. Witchcraft stressed to all the Champions the importance of keeping themselves available to Pandora as guides, in order to direct her development in positive ways - or at least in ways that would not ultimately be catastrophically destructive.

Last one, and it is, like the others, pretty consistently easy to read as a metaphor for trans existence. In this case, rather than playing a character existing in a hostile world, and trying to work around that reality, even to the extent that Vex does, I made a character who basically just reinvents reality, instead. And again, she is instantly evaluated as a threat, even though all of her appearances have only ever been on the side of justice. The Champions fear Pandora because they cannot control her, and they know it. So instead, they seek to manipulate her, to ensure that she grows up to enforce their norms, rather than inventing her own.

What about now? What about stories I've written since realizing who I always was? I haven't made any new characters in Champions Online, but some people I used to play with a lot have bumped into me and messaged me. So far, the response has been more or less like this:


He said all that to me because he read my updated eponymous character bio. Now, in Champions Online, Seranine is basically a fourth-wall-breaking me:

Seranine 


Hi, my name is Seranine, and I'm here so you can get to know a real live trans woman!

Find me at seranine.com.

I like to RP my characters, but I play this character as essentially a Champions Universe analog to me. So, like me, her legal name is Seranine, and like me, she's a transgender model, musician, actress, and advocate. Like me, she loathes violence and conflict. Unlike me, she has amazing otherwordly powers. But, I've tried to imagine them as variations of what I do in real life, just in a more fantastic and comic-book way.

I view her powers not as damaging enemies, but rather as either shining the light of truth upon them (with Radiant powers), or drawing out the ugliness of ignorance (with Darkness powers). In this way, while I can navigate the game and its demands for combat, I can also stay true to my own personal ideal of pacifism. In RP terms, I would say that the purging/drawing process is exhausting, and that's how she "defeats" enemies.

I tried to use the character creator to build a model as close to my appearance as possible. For the costume where she's opaque with normal skin, I couldn't quite recreate the dress I wore to a modeling shoot on Alki Beach, but I put together something close. My shoulders are a little broad for a girl, so I set hers to be the same way.

In terms of RP, go ahead and walk up. If the area is crowded, use /t as an aside. Or something.

In general, I encourage open dialogue as much as possible, and try to avoid punishing people for not knowing what they don't know they don't know. HOWEVER, I am not here to necessarily be myself, although this character is supposed to basically be that. I'm here to play. If your character wants to talk to mine, that's fine. But if you, the player, want to talk to me, the player, and ask questions or whatever, please do so through my Public Figure Facebook Page, instead: http://bit.ly/sera-9

Thanks, stay safe!

Her Nemesis, an original villain the game let me create, is Transphobia, a generic-looking, vaguely threatening male figure who looks like the default Nemesis icon in the game's instances menu. And while she can't take him down alone, he also can't kill her. But once her friends show up, fellow superheroes, they make short work of him.


She has powers because that's how the game works, but I conceptualized her to be me, as much as possible, even down to the character model's proportions. I role-play her giving people my card, and talking very openly and honestly about being trans. So far, I've had a wonderful reception. The only transphobia I've seen (not to be confused with that villain, Transphobia) has been indirect — written into other people's character biographies, for example; but not actually directed at me during a conversation. The messages I actually get from strangers look like this:


And this:


The closest thing to possibly-coded prejudice that I saw was one player character, Rose, talking to another player character, Jean, about how my "magic" was unsettling to her, after they both thought I was gone. She said that she didn't feel comfortable around people who looked like me, that she felt threatened because she did not know them. Jean pushed back, saying that she knew who I was, that I was a famous model, and that she really looked up to me. And sitting at my desk, I wept.

Friday, March 11, 2016

Can You Take Me

So, there's no more hashtag-girlfriend. I don't think there ever will be again, for me. Not that I won't have another girlfriend ever, but that I can't use that name for them. Whatever Kim becomes to me in the future, #girlfriend was what I called her on all my public social media, and I wouldn't want to call some future girlfriend #girlfriend, too. No one else can ever be that to me again.

If all goes well, this will be the last daily outfit pic I take with this phone. My friend Justine is basically giving me her old iPhone 5, and assuming I can switch carriers and still have a no-contract service plan that I can manage to pay, that'll be my new hotness for awhile. Which will be nice, because this phone has been frustrating to use, though I'm grateful when it does actually work. Before that, I've got to stop at the community college to clear up a few things related to the graduation ceremony, and then meet another friend to drop something off at her place when she's done with work for the day. Chin up, Sera. #😊 #Seattle #Washington #transgender #veteran #musician #model #actress #trans #girl #girlslikeus #ootd #outfit #outfitoftheday #selfie #nomakeup #nofilter #black #skirt
A photo posted by Seranine Elliot (@aggressivefrontpocket) on

Kim and I went to dinner on Leap Day with our mutual friend, Justine. Justine had an old iPhone 5 that she wasn't using, so she was going to basically give it to me, because my phone was barely working anymore. She asked for $20, which Kim volunteered to pay, and now I have a phone that is very nice. We set up the date, and all met at Café Flora, in Madison Park.

Kim sat next to me at dinner, and I felt the same sort of distance from her then as I'd been feeling for the previous several days. Not enough to have me melting down about it, but enough to make me worry. We all chattered away amiably and normally, and then Kim and I went back to her place while Justine headed off alone. On the drive back, I resolved to ask Kim for some reassurance once we got to her place. Things felt distant and tired and crumbly, the way they had in past relationships that were past their expiration dates.

But I had just walked out on her about a month earlier, thinking that I was making the best and kindest decision for both of us. I regretted that mistake terribly, but I did it, and it drastically changed the timbre of our relationship. She had said it would take her awhile to fully relax around me again, and that it would probably be a very long time before she felt emotionally safe giving me back the keys to her place. (I'd left them there when I walked out.)

Since I had left in such a manner, with this unilateral decision that I did not consult her about, one of the things she wanted from me was reassurance that I'd never do something like that again. That if things were bad, and I felt like we should end them, that I'd come and talk to her, and not just decide. So I promised her that. It was an easy promise to make, since I viewed just deciding and leaving as a mistake in the first place. Over the next few weeks, I'd promise again, with a pinky-swear, and a third time, with a double-pinky-swear.

But I never asked her to give me the same courtesy.

So we got into her place, and I was as open and vulnerable as I could make myself. All ports available, ready to communicate in whatever ways we could, no matter how challenging for me. I didn't just have my guard down. I had everything as exposed as it possibly could be. I was ready for any kind of dialogue, and I was trying to think of the right way and moment to bring up my need for reassurance.

She asked me to come sit by her on the bed, after I'd changed into pajamas for the night. I stopped whatever I was doing, and clambered past her to my spot.

"What's up?" I asked.

"I don't want to be in a romantic relationship with you anymore."

Everything fell out from under me. I couldn't breathe, I felt like I'd had the wind knocked out of me. As if I'd been shot in the chest, but with the impact spread through a SAPI plate. And then directly into my heart, over and over and over.

I started sobbing, gasping for breath, rolling over to one side. She said more, but I couldn't understand a word. I got up and started wandering aimlessly, looking for anything to steady myself, emotionally. Any kind of anchor. And then I made out a little of what she was saying, again:

"You can take the futon for the night," she said, right as I happened to look at it. That was where I would sleep. Not with her. Not next to her. Not by her side, warm and safe, drifting off while she read. Not hearing her talk in her sleep. Not ever again. More rounds into my chest.

"I have to leave," I said, shakily. She tried to talk me out of it, saying I was not in any shape to drive. I frantically packed my things as she followed me around trying to convince me to at least stay until I was calmer. I couldn't take her telling me that. Every time she suggested I stay, I thought about it. And I thought about how utterly rejected I felt, not just by her, but by the space itself. "I have to go, I have to go, I have to go," I said over and over, until finally she stopped talking.

She stood between me and the door, pleading with me to not just leave. "What about your other things? The vase and the flower from your friends?" she asked.

"I have to leave, I can't be here," I said, and I meant it in every sense of the word. I could not exist in that space while I felt as though she and it were both casting me out. Forever.

She sighed and stepped aside, and I stumbled out to my car, still in my pajamas.

The drive home was thankfully uneventful. I don't even think I considered my old favorite go-to suicide fantasy of pulling the wheel hard when I was on the freeway, and going off a bridge. Those kinds of thoughts came later.

Kim had posted something on her Facebook about us breaking up, apparently. I didn't look, and I've still never seen it. I don't know that I ever will. Our roles had reversed. For once, I wanted to be invisible, hidden to the world, while at the same time, she was posting about what had happened between us on her social media. But by the time I got home, I had friends rallying to me, sending me messages of support and love. Thankfully, none of them asked me to tell them what had happened.

The next morning, I posted on my personal Facebook about it, saying that I didn't really want to talk about it, but since people were messaging me, I felt like I had to. And then I went to the first day of the interpersonal communication skills class I'd signed up for at the VA. They were supposed to help Kim and me stay together. But I'd started too late.

Much higher resolution means y'all can see my stubble way more clearly. Which is fine, 'cause it's there. My girlfriend broke up with me last night. Today, after I go chat about being in a paid medical study because I'm that poor, I'll be at the VA hospital for day one of the interpersonal skills class. The one I signed up for when it was clear we had problems, like, two months ago. So, that's a downer. But, being down doesn't pay the bills, so off I go, just with a slightly more wan smile than usual. Wistful, sad, but grateful to have met her, all the same. And eventually, looking forward to reconnecting with her as friends. That's been one of the great blessings of my life, with #myfavoritemistake. #seattle #washington #transgender #veteran #musician #model #actress #trans #girl #girlslikeus #ootd #outfit #outfitoftheday #selfie #nomakeup #nofilter
A photo posted by Seranine Elliot (@aggressivefrontpocket) on

All throughout the class, I kept stifling hysterical laughter. I knew it would be awful for everyone if I just started sobbing, so I held it down as much as I could, and that was what happened instead. I kept losing it, because everything seemed so clear and simple and sensible, and I'd come to that too late for it to matter for Kim and me. It was the emotionally devastating equivalent of walking around your house for an hour, looking for your sunglasses, only to realize that they'd been propped up on top of your head the whole time.

The first packet asked plain and straightforward questions. "When is it difficult to express yourself appropriately? When do you become angry or hostile? Blame yourself or others? Deny your feelings or theirs? Be specific."

In answering those kinds of questions, I realized something that was probably obvious already to any outside observer. I struggle to express myself in very close relationships with anyone with whom I believe I have a power imbalance that places me in the submissive role. When I was a little girl, I learned very quickly that the best way to keep the peace was to never say anything. To never offer an opinion on anything, to never share what scared me or made me feel happy. I did that because I perceived my parents as having power over me, and the fact is that they did.

In my intimate romantic relationships, I have always historically disappeared more and more, and I can see that now as a continuation of that same maladaptive survival mechanism. As my romantic partners got closer to me, I was subsumed more and more, until the person they fell in love with was all but invisible. It helped me survive my parents, but it has gone on to wreak havoc in my partner relationships. It was like taking a tank to war, but then, when the war was over, continuing to use it as my main mode of transportation, oblivious to the roads I was destroying just by driving on them.

With Kim, the power imbalance was large and obvious. She has means, and I do not. When she said "get whatever you like," at restaurants or stores, I would, with the exuberant gluttony of the long-starved. And I appreciated her for it. Not so much for what she provided, but for the fact that she found me worth providing it to. No matter how many people love me in how many ways, I still fundamentally automatically believe I am not worth loving, because that was what I grew up with. That was my earliest estimation of myself, and I have never really challenged it.

Resentment piled up as she felt more and more taken advantage of, and worried I was with her mostly, or only, because she lavished me with gifts. I worked diligently to keep myself from being so carelessly greedy on her dime, and to reinforce my truth to her: that all I wanted from her was her. Her time, her presence. Just her.

Once, we went to get snacks at Trader Joe's. After grabbing maybe $20 or $30 worth of dried fruit and such, I saw some green tea mints at the point of sale. Green tea? And mint? Together? I lit up, and grabbed a tin to put onto the pile with the rest of our things. She paid, and I put the tin directly into my purse. But once we got outside, she told me how upset she was that I'd grabbed that one extra thing. That I'd already taken so much, and then had the audacity to take more, without even asking.

The tin is still in my purse. I never opened it, and I don't think I ever will. It lives next to my wallet, and every time I reach in there for my own money, my hand brushes against it, and I pause. I remember that everyone else has limited resources, too. That Kim's wealth only seemed so fabulous to me because I have so little. That if she shared it with me, it was a gift of limited resources, not the keys to the kingdom. I needed to be more mindful of her limits, even if I didn't know exactly what they were. I needed to think about how much things cost, which was a struggle for me even when I was making very good money during the boom times of the dot-com era.

A photo posted by Seranine Elliot (@aggressivefrontpocket) on

It was a good lesson to learn.

I looked down at the worksheets in my class, and paid attention as we were given our first tool. "Assertive Communication: 'I' Statements," it read. A simple formula for devising a three-part statement centered only on myself and observable fact, two of my favorite things, was laid out. Label the situation, state how it affects me, and make a specific request of what I would like to see happen to improve things.

"This would have been everything we needed, two months ago," I said, when the class was asked to offer thoughts on the course materials. I shook my head sadly, kept doing my best to not cry, and finished the session. Our homework included trying to practice using those "I" statements over the coming week, and I resolved to try with an email to Kim. I quickly discovered that there was a reason this class is in eight parts.

Trying to express all of the complex emotions I was struggling with in the aftermath of a break-up with only "I" statements for tools was like trying to build a house with only a hammer and a few nails for tools.

One of the automatic thoughts assailing me repeatedly after Kim dumped me was that I was not sexually desirable, and never would be to anyone. I probably fixated on this because Before, I never thought of myself as sexually desirable in the first place, and also because Kim was clear that she didn't want a romantic relationship with me. My translation of that was that she wanted a non-sexual relationship, which of course could only mean that now that we'd had enough sex for her to be able to judge, she decided I was not worth the effort.

Obviously, this is absurd, and I can see that, now. Kim had pointed out, several times during our relationship, how many more pictures of me she had than anyone else she'd ever been with. At first it was just "more." Then it was "more than twice as many as the previous top spot holder." Then it was "more than everyone else combined." When we had sex, it was incredible. She was the only partner I'd ever really felt connected to and seen by. Which makes sense, since she's the only partner I've had since realizing who I even was in the first place.

But in the moment, with the automatic thought of the plummeting value of my sexual worth amplified by the black hole in my chest, it seemed more than just plausible. It seemed absolutely true. (As an aside, these kinds of experiences are why I have empathy for transphobic people, for bigots in general. Fear + Mythology > Observable Fact, if we don't actively work to dismantle our fears and our mythologies.)

I set up my Tinder profile again, and spent my nights sobbing and frantically pawing through piles of people, desperately wanting to connect. Not to any of them, but to Kim. There was a Kim-shaped hole in my heart, and I knew I couldn't fill it with her. I knew that the best thing I could do was hold on through the pain, until it closed up and healed. But I initially failed to keep a grip on that idea.

I started to think, "maybe if I find some guy and let him fuck me, I'll feel like I'm desirable again. Maybe I'll believe that I can be."

Then I thought, "but maybe he will kill me." This is a relatively common end, sadly. A cis guy has sex with a trans woman, and then flips out about it, and becomes terrified that maybe that made him gay. So he kills her. And yeah, okay, we can all understand that if you're a man who has sex with a woman, that's not really gay, is it. And yeah, okay, we can all understand that if you're having sex that you perceive as gay, you were already pretty gay to begin with, because otherwise you wouldn't have sought out something you think of as gay. And yeah, okay, we can all understand that if you murder someone, you're objectively awful in a way that simply being gay could never make you, or anyone. But it happens.

And here's the thing: I didn't care. I was in so much pain that I honestly was briefly okay with the idea of some random dude fucking my brains out, and then blowing my brains out. I would feel desired for a moment, and then I would feel nothing. The pain would stop.

Hanging onto myself through all of that was hard. Like Before, when I constantly wished I was dead, because the pain of living was unbearable, I was too overwhelmed by that same pain to actually get up and do anything about it. I never even left my bed. I cried until I couldn't breathe, and then I cried some more. It felt endless, like I was in a fog. I could barely see reality, so I was left alone with my worst thoughts about myself.


At some point, I did start interacting a little bit on Tinder. One woman suggested I check out some Tara Brach podcasts, saying that they always helped her when she was struggling with her self-concept and loving herself. I thanked her, and ultimately did check one out. It was called The RAIN of Self-Compassion, which I picked after scrolling down a list of all her talks, and feeling like it was probably the most immediately relevant one. It helped tremendously, and I can't overstate that, but the more interesting direct interaction was with a man.

Christopher started messaging me very much like most men seem to, with some variation of "hey, sweetie" or whatever. And ordinarily, I would've ignored him. I would have bristled at being called anything other than my name, by a stranger, especially a man, but in the state I was in, I didn't care. I was just happy to be courted. I rolled my eyes, and we started chatting. His sexual interest in me was only very thinly veiled, and that was the amount of veiling I wanted right then.

I switched gears often, allowing him to be sexually expressive for awhile before demanding that he keep up with me on a change in topic. That's a reflection of my stubborn demisexuality, demanding that I have a more complete connection with someone before thinking very seriously about sex. Or at least demanding that I feel like I have that kind of connection. I want to feel desired, but in a complete way, not like a hole in the wall.

As I started to feel more and more comfortable with the idea of meeting Christopher in person, I had to address one last worry. I still believed that I was fundamentally unattractive. So, after yet another round of him proclaiming how hot he thought I was, I pointed out that if we went to bed together, he wasn't going to wake up to me in that blue Boho Republic dress, with professional makeup and hair. I pointed him to an Instagram picture I'd put up, right after waking up the other day, with a little bit of visible stubble, bedhead, a comfy tank top, and a smile.

"This is what I look like when I wake up," I said.


"Gotcha."

That was all he said. I burst into tears, told him I was tired and going to go to sleep, and rolled over to try to do just that. Everything I was afraid of was proven true in that one word. Once he really looked closely at me, even as my photograph smiled back at him, he didn't want to look anymore. I read this shift in language as being basically "YOU'RE SO HOT YOU'RE SO HOT YOU'RE SO HOT... oh."

When I woke up the next morning, I thought, "I should try this 'I' statement stuff." I assumed he didn't think I was attractive anymore, so I should get back to the facts of the interaction, and then talk to him about it, right? Simple. I showed him a picture I was worried he might not react to favorably, and he said one word, and I made up an interpretation and ran with it, right off a cliff. I sat with my worksheet and started to write him, and it was plain right away that my interpretation of his one word was way off.


What I thought he was thinking was actually almost the exact opposite of what he was thinking. I related this anecdote to Jenn, my best friend, #myfavoritemistake, a little later. She pointed something out that should be obvious, but wasn't, to me, at the time.

I'd been so invested in these classes as a means of helping Kim and I reconnect and stay together. But the fact is, it was a lot easier to use this simple tool in a simple conversation with someone I really don't know at all than it was to write that email to Kim. Instead of trying to frame and build a whole house with a hammer and some nails, I was just trying to board up a busted window. Seeing how easily I could navigate these situations if I had the right tools for them made it dawn on me — that even if I could never really read non-verbal cues, it wouldn't matter in my interpersonal relationships if I learned these skills. These mechanical, teachable skills. And I've always been a quick study.

As soon as Kim had broken up with me, I talked to my therapist just before the first skills class (she runs that, too). I told her I wanted to have a one-on-one appointment to make sure I was experiencing normal feelings, and making good decisions around them. Since she was the therapist that helped me navigate the emotional minefield of the emotional trauma swamp I was stuck in after being groped on the street, My First Sexual Assault™, I knew she'd be able to help me very effectively.

I told my therapist all of this, everything I've written above; and more. About all of the automatic thoughts and how I tried to fight them. How I'd gotten hung up on the skills as being tools to help Kim and I stay together, not just generically good tools for any kind of interaction. How I'd worried that nobody would ever find me sexually desirable, and that maybe no one ever had. How I'd gone to a call for a modeling job (which I then won), while feeling uglier than I'd ever felt in my life. How I wrote most of Queen Anne before and after that appointment.

I told her how I'd realized that I was always going to be unsure, at the end of any future relationship, whether my partner had abandoned me in whole or in part because I was trans. How I'd wandered the house, sobbing, asking myself (and my cats, let's be honest), "why did she do this?" over and over. Just wandering around bawling, babbling, and how Jenn, when I asked her the same thing, had answered, "because it's the best she could do." How I saw the truth of that in that moment, and how my sadness broke like a fever, and I felt more compassionate sorrow for Kim than anguish for myself. For how bad things must have been for her that she felt she had to end our relationship, no matter how much she wanted me.

At one point, my GRS came up. The fact that it's a couple years out. My therapist asked how I felt about that, and I told her. Which is basically that I'm fine with it. That I'm not fine with it, but it's how reality is, and I accept that. That I'm not 17 anymore, and I know that something that's a few years away now will be a few years in my past before I even realize it, and that I'll be okay until I get to it.

I told her that I was expecting emotional responses after a break-up to be like what I saw in movies, because I'd never really been emotionally present to experience my past break-ups. I'd been insulated from them, like I had insulated myself from all other emotional pain. My ideas about how break-ups were supposed to work were rooted in Hollywood fantasy, and nothing more. So I thought the aftermath of the break-up would be profoundly and consistently sad, until it wasn't anymore; until the next plot development, when I'd be profoundly and consistently happy. It was a square wave. All the way down, and then all the way up.

But the reality was more like the long tail ripples in a body of water. The break-up was an emotional seabed quake, massively disrupting my emotional ocean. It was a tsunami. A humongous wave, but still fundamentally just a wave. It went all the way down, and then all the way up. But then it kept going and it went not quite all the way down, and then not quite all the way up. The disruption became less and less severe, but that confused the shit out of me.

I drove to the modeling call feeling really sad and anxious, because I was focused on how much I missed Kim, how badly it hurt, and the song I was writing to express that. I went into the actual interview space itself feeling bright and happy and excited, because I was focused on the amazing and very necessary concept behind Léo Roux as a clothing line. And then I left the interview and returned to deep sadness, and finished writing my song. The next week, I went to my fitting with Leo and Pennie, skipping and squealing on the way out, and then went to Kim's place to pick up the last of my things, and had a 10-minute sobbing meltdown in my car.

"It sounds like you were emotionally present for each of those feelings as they were happening," my therapist said.


"Yeah. Yeah, I guess I was," I answered.

I asked her how I could tell when I was really ready to actually see anyone romantically again. I feel like people have this idea that you shouldn't date, after a break-up, until you're completely over the last person. But when I think about what that would look like in the wake of understanding sadness as a wave system, it would mean never dating again. Kim opened Seattle's doors to me. I will probably spend at least the next several years crying at least a little bit every time I go back to or even pass by any of the places we used to go to together. The places where she took me, into days I never knew.


On the other hand, I have these communication class tools, and I would really like to get to practicing with them with a partner. I want to feel connected and understood, and I want to understand them, too. I told my therapist that I knew I had a void in my chest where Kim used to live. And that I knew that no one else could ever fit there, and that trying to make them would just be awful and unkind to everyone. That jamming them into that space would just keep it from closing up and healing at last. But that I thought that being aware of that would be enough, that I'd be able to monitor myself and my own responses to someone new, and keep them appropriately distant until I was whole again. That as long as I was aware of whether or not I was trying to use someone's affection as a substitute for healing and recovering my own self-esteem, I could avoid making the wrong call. And finally, that I needed to be vigilant about my tendency to worry so much about whether a partner will leave me that I ultimately drive them away, by becoming a quiet shadow of the person they had fallen in love with.

She said that all sounded perfectly reasonable, and that in her estimation, I was insightful enough to manage it capably. After all, a break-up is, as Kim said, "just normal relationship stuff." My little wave lifted me up. And I smiled.

Thursday, February 25, 2016

Basic Science

Science is our best attempt to accurately describe reality.

That's all it is. It is not the arbiter of what is or is not real. It does not prescribe anything; that is, it does not tell us things are a certain way, and thus compel them to become so. It is a means of description in which accuracy and alignment with reliably provable fact are paramount. This is why it evolves. It is our best collective understanding of everything, and as we evaluate everything with the benefit of our current understanding of it, we can arrive at newer, better understanding of it. We achieve this primarily by hypothesizing as to how or why a thing is, and then testing that hypothesis as narrowly and specifically as possible.

For a very long time, in western culture, trans women were regarded by science as men who had a disorder. But as that description did not feel right to any actual trans women, the study of whom necessarily included interview, the description had to evolve. With new data, such as strikingly similar experiences of gender and body described by a wide variety of otherwise disparate and unrelated people, it became clear that trans women are in fact women, and we find new evidence to support that constantly. The pace of accepting this as fact is picking up, because we have started asking the right questions. Trans women, and the people who study us, are over the question of what we are, and have moved on to other questions, built off of the foundation of understanding that we are women.

One common refrain from cis people who do not understand what being trans really means, especially when it comes to this kerfuffle about bathrooms and locker rooms, is that girls like me "should just get the surgery" if we want to be in the women's room, with other women, since we claim to be women (a claim we make because, as women, we're women). This is said without any awareness of what is involved in these processes, by people who still fundamentally believe we are delusional men with a psychological disorder, and that gender lives in genitals.

But getting The Surgery is not as simple as going to Wal-Mart and hitting the Genitalia aisle and seeing what's in stock, picking up an affordable, American-made vagina, taking it home, and following the installation instructions. It's not as simple as stopping off at the local Genital Reconstructive Surgery shop after work and getting it taken care of. And it's not even as simple as getting other surgeries that require a multi-step insurance authorization process.

One challenge is dealing with multiple medical professional bodies who have been incrementally catching up to the reality of our existence. For example, nearly all trans health providers rely upon the WPATH Standards of Care for guidance. Most, if not all, insurers require adherence to them when they cover transgender services. The first edition of the WPATH SoC was released in 1979. Even though the version 7 standards are available, many insurance carriers are still referring to the version 6 standards, despite their outdated and inaccurate information about trans people. But even when version 7 was released, DSM-IV was the current DSM for mental health professionals, and it still referred to the condition of being transgender as a disordered one: Gender Identity Disorder.

When DSM-V was released in May, 2013, one of its changes was to formally de-pathologize the transgender existence. Like homosexuality before it, being transgender was finally recognized, through years of the application of rigorous scientific examination, for what it always was: not a disorder, but a natural variation. Something less common than most developmental tracks, but not actually wrong in any sense.

There is no longer any diagnosis in the DSM for being transgender because, as science has advanced, we've collectively learned that it is not a mental illness. Instead, the DSM-V recognizes Gender Dysphoria, a type of stress that only trans people experience, and one that underlines many trans experiences. It's the stress of knowing you are one thing, and being told by everything around you, from your culture to your body, that you are something else. Interestingly, a "diagnosis" of this non-problem, for lack of a better word, is required in order to access services. This is the first step of many on the road to Genital Reconstructive Surgery (GRS, sometimes called "SRS," Sex Reassignment Surgery). As many of these steps are built around the now-outmoded pathologized model, they are regarded by a number of trans people, myself included, as unnecessary and draconian. Ironically, the "just go get the surgery" crowd and I agree on this. I should be able to just go get The Surgery. But I can't. Nobody can.

There's a more sinister problem around class and economics when it comes to figuring out who is "really trans," as many (understandably confused) cis people demand. Sometimes, even other trans people demand that. I was extremely lucky to be where and when I was when I realized I was female. I had no romantic relationship or job to worry about offending. I had reliable income, though it was an extremely tight stream. And I had access to some pretty comprehensive gender-affirming services through the VA. This meant I was able to "prove" I was trans by seeing a psychologist, who agreed, during our first-ever meeting, that I had been incorrectly designated male at birth. I didn't wheedle and beg, I just told him about my experiences, and he said I hit more than enough criteria for the diagnosis. It also meant I was able to afford the fees associated with legally changing my name and gender. People can change their legal names, for a fee, to whatever they like, whenever they like, generally speaking. But the gender marker can't be changed without the diagnosis, and in Washington, requires the use of a specific form.

Where I'm concerned, "proving" I'm a woman has already been done. But not everyone has access to that kind of healthcare, and even if they do, they don't always have the money to take legal steps to correct their gender or update their name. And since trans people are routinely denied housing, healthcare, and employment on the basis of their being trans, many of us find ourselves crushed under the weight of overlapping systems that each individually say they don't want to deal with the fact of our existence.

As a trans woman, I have to constantly prove that my gender is real. Not only that, I have to constantly prove that it's not what a lot of people insist it must be. I have the benefit of a lot of documentation from very well-qualified people behind me. But I was female well before any doctor said I was female. In fact, I was female before the doctor who took me out of my mother said I was male. That realization is why I can't support a requirement for trans people to have medical documentation supporting the validity of their gender unless it's in the context of a single-payer, guaranteed-as-a-right healthcare system with robust and modern transgender services.

It's been suggested that the changes to the DSM between the fourth and fifth editions were achieved through political means. This suggestion tends to come from people who view our existence as a political problem. It also tends to come from organized religious groups. The idea is that trans people, a number of whom, like me, did not really know that being trans was even an actual thing until they realized it applied to them, somehow are all connected and organized in the same way as the churches that come up with ideas like this. And that we've used that powerful (haha!), unified (are you serious?) community to lobby for these kinds of updates. It's the idea that trans women, for example, are a bunch of men who are essentially playing a dirty prank on the entire world. It's the idea that being transgender is not the singular trait, like eye color, that it actually is, but rather is one that is coupled necessarily with some kind of predatory sexual nature.

And yet before I knew I was trans, I did not know any trans people, personally. I had, to my knowledge, directly met and interacted with all of three trans people. Two were trans guys I met peripherally, and barely interacted with, and the third was a trans woman with whom I went on one spectacularly uninteresting date. I was not part of some massive secret society, bent on dismantling "traditional" marriage or gender roles. I was just a girl who didn't know she was a girl, and I mostly spent my time wishing I was dead, for a reason I did not know or understand. And ironically, I was doing my best to uphold "traditional" marriage and gender roles, when it came to my own life.

When I did see those trans guys, I thought something to the effect of "that's kinda weird, but whatever," and did my best to treat them as they asked to be treated. I used their pronouns, I used the names they gave me, and the idea of either or both of them in a public restroom with me meant nothing to me at all. I treated the one trans girl with the same kind of acceptance, with the exception of expecting that she'd use a women's restroom, and not be in a restroom with me, since I was still under the impression that I was a guy.

This is largely what I'm after from other people now. I don't expect them to understand the how or why of my womanhood. I don't honestly even care if they do. Reading up on all this shit is a big commitment that a lot of people don't have time for, because none of it applies directly to them. What I need is acceptance of the fact that I'm a woman. What I need is for other people to accept that reality, even though it seems incomprehensible to them, in the same way that (most) people accept that the earth is more or less spherical, and not flat, though that idea, too, was once the height of radical thinking, and widely rejected.

The rejection of facts does not nullify them.

It makes sense to me that groups that are organized around ideas or beliefs might also automatically perceive other groups as being similarly organized. But we're not a group. We're a demographic. Just like people with heterochromia, or mid-digital hair. And for trans people like me, the ones who knew something was wrong, but not what, for decades before realizing that the problem was an incorrectly designated gender at birth, that demographic was Them for a long time before it was Us.

When children who do not know each other, around the world, in multiple languages, are clearly declaring their gender as something other than what it was designated at birth, that is just natural variation. There is no cult leader. Because there is no cult.

Today, I completed my application for vaginoplasty with Dr. Marci Bowers. Dr. Bowers is the only surgeon contracted by Washington Health Care Authority (Medicaid) to perform this procedure. Her clinic is in California. It would not surprise me to learn that she is not just the only GRS surgeon for WA HCA, but for other states' HCAs, as well, in addition to California. In any case, there is a long, long line for GRS through WA state Medicaid.

If I were an out-of-pocket patient, I could get processed and into the queue right now, with a non-refundable deposit of $1,000. Without that, I am told it's an average of four to five months before the clinic receives pre-authorization from Medicaid. And that's when I get on the list. Not when I get the surgery done. When I get in line.

That line is two years and four months long.

I was told that, for patients who don't mind rescheduling their surgery date, cancellation openings can shift the queue a bit, and shave up to about six months off of the wait time. But there are some requirements before one can even submit an application. They include:
  • Usually 12 months of continuous hormonal therapy for those without a medical contraindication.
  • 12 months of successful continuous full time real-life experience.
  • Demonstrable progress in consolidating one’s gender identity;
What all that means is that though I knew I wanted The Surgery the moment I realized I had always been a girl, back on August 10, 2014, I had at least the following to go through:
  1. Receive a diagnosis of Gender Dysphoria from a therapist
  2. Begin Hormone Replacement Therapy (requires referral from psychology)
  3. Be consistently on HRT for at least one full contiguous calendar year
  4. Live publicly and privately, 100% of the time, in gender expression coinciding with declared gender for at least one full contiguous calendar year
Even if I'd gotten the first two done on the day I realized what the problem was, I'd still have been looking at a full year of "proving" my gender was real before I could even apply to get in line for The Surgery. But I couldn't get it done that day, and based on what I've heard from other trans people, my track was an extremely rapid one.

I was able to be seen by a psychologist about my gender dysphoria before the end of August, 2014, just a few weeks after I first realized it was a thing. That's very fast. I was diagnosed on the first visit. That's atypical. I legally changed my name and was "out" as a woman in all aspects of my life, full-time, within one month of realizing I actually was a woman, and had always been female. I was started on HRT by the end of October, 2014. As a veteran, I have access to these medications, and they are provided to me with no out-of-pocket cost. This is also not the norm.

Because HRT was the last of those to start, it is effectively the only start point that matters, when it comes to the one-year requirement. This means that the soonest I could have possibly applied for this service with Dr. Bowers was October 24, 2015, about four months ago. That date, itself, was barely a month after GRS was even covered by WA Medicaid. The earliest possible surgery date for me would have been around two years from now, and with the best possible cancellations scenario, I'd have been looking at late summer or early fall 2017. Instead, I'm looking at late summer or early fall 2018.
But consider that phrase: "12 months of successful continuous full time real-life experience." This means that to get the surgery that people who insist I don't belong in the women's room say I must get in order to be there, I have to use those kinds of spaces for at least a full year before I can even get in line to get that surgery in the first place. If trans women are legislated out of women's facilities, we cannot ever meet the requirements for vaginoplasty, requirements which have been developed to confirm as absolutely as possible that we are really women in the first place.

This massive network of requirements and dependencies, both medical and legal, was not sketched out on a bar napkin and put into place worldwide a couple days ago by irreverent, free-wheeling doctors and legislators who were drunk when they wrote it. This has been developing for decades, as the science on what people like me really are has come to better describe us. The fact is, we have always been here. And we always will be. Even if you managed to somehow eradicate every transgender person alive today, another one would be born tomorrow, because that is how natural variation works. I chose my gender no more than I chose my skin color, my genetic risks for cancer, or my height. There is an uproar around our existence because it's not just new data on a thing that was previously considered solved by most people, but because it's about something fundamental to all of us.

When people say that penis = male and vagina = female, they tend to cite "basic science," and that is part of the problem. They will sometimes even say that they've known that this is how things are since some early grade, say, second, or maybe fifth. Maybe they'll talk about XX and XY chromosomes, and refer to their high school biology class.

What else did you learn back then, whenever "then" was, that turned out to be false, or at least overly simplified?

Someone who has earned a PhD is very far removed from a fifth-grade understanding of their area of study and expertise. They're well past high school biology, and they're relatively far beyond even a Bachelor's level of understanding. They have devoted years of their lives to understanding their subjects, and if they are currently licensed professionals, they are generally required to participate in continuing education. To make sure their knowledge continues to evolve with the rest of the scientific community. And those are the people who, through constant and continuous application of the scientific method — that process underlying all valid science, by which people like McHugh have been proven overwhelmingly biased and wrong — have concluded that trans women are women, that gender is a function of mind and not body.

Highly focused, dedicated and well-educated people are studying sex and gender, and they are the ones laying out these guidelines. The furor that people raise in objection to them is rooted in ignorance, and nothing else. It would be akin to me launching a massive political campaign against Tesla Motors demanding that they stop trying to trick us by calling their products "cars," because I learned that cars run on internal combustion engines when I was a kid, and I once took an engine apart in a shop class in middle school.

Transgender people are not a new phenomenon. What's new is that science is finally starting to understand us.

Sunday, January 31, 2016

Beggars Would Ride

I just had surgery. I was going to write a post that was about the surgery. My whole experience with the staff, and so on. It turned into a post about how strange it was to be on oxycodone again, when I'd been on it for about five years, then off it for the last few. How different it was to use it while depressed, versus not.

And then the fight happened.

Kim, whom I had been joyfully and frivolously calling hashtag-girlfriend, had had a very rough morning and day the previous day. While she was hunched over her laptop, visibly tense and upset, I lay next to her in a haze of opiates and sleepiness, worry and far-off pain. I tried to think of what to do to help.

A week or two prior to that, we'd come home... home, as I still automatically call it, together. From a couples counselor. And true to form, coming out of the session felt great, for me. I had felt heard and validated in a way that had become increasingly absent from our toughest talks. I have this sharply directly correlative internal relationship between how small I feel, and how unsafe I feel speaking my mind, when I'm in a close interpersonal relationship. Such as having a boyfriend or girlfriend. Or a spouse. Having a counselor in the room to echo my sentiments with more assurance, in probably clearer language, has always been a help to me with a partner.

But Kim had felt attacked and demonized, and I didn't understand that until hours later. Until long after she'd curled up on the couch, and told me to comfort her or leave her alone, but not to ask her any questions, in response to my asking if she'd like me to run her a bath and make her a cup of tea. Without any real idea what else to do, I put on water for tea, and went to change. She told me later (again) that 99% of the time, when she's stressed or upset, she just wants a hug. A real hug, to be held. But that night, that wasn't in my array yet. It wasn't an option to check for, simple as it seems. I have a whole host of other issues around touch-as-affection, but that's another post.

So I learned that night: hugs are the 99% solution. Priority option. When she is distressed and I want to help alleviate that, hug her if I can. Touch her in some affectionate, platonic, connected and present way. And when that morning arrived with its bad news via the internet, I found that sitting up seemed like perhaps too great a challenge, in my drugged and weakened state, but she was within arm's reach. So I reached out and gently lay my hand on her lower back. I'm here. I love you. I hoped to say.

She shifted away from me.

I had no idea what to do at that point. Thinking that if a hug or some kind of physical expression of presence and love didn't work, if the 99%-of-the-time solution didn't work, I was pretty sure tea wouldn't, and I was positive that drawing her a bath would be an actual bad idea. Not just not helpful, but actually bad.

I thought again on what to do to help her. She was still hunched over the computer, muttering to herself and tabbing back and forth now and again. I thought, maybe I should just ask her.

"Baby, what's wrong?" I said. My voice was thin and weak, a voice to match my body, thinner and weaker still for the state I was in.

"Don't talk to me," she answered sharply.

I get very anxious when I believe that my romantic partner is in any way distressed by me, or by something I've done. At this point, I'd completely lost sight of the fact that whatever I was doing was a trivial annoyance, compared to whatever news she'd woken up to. I flew into my high tower of great anxiety, surrounding myself with the constant grinding and creaking of its accusing gears.

She set the computer aside, eventually, and talked to me about the problem. I didn't know how to react, or what to do or say. Every choice I'd made so far that morning had been wrong. I froze, and said nothing. She became upset that I was ignoring her talking to me about what had upset her. Her becoming upset with me for doing that compounded with my distress over her being upset with me for having touched her, or asked what was wrong, and I came apart.

She left for the day, for work, and I mostly laid there, crying or sleeping by turns. I was still recovering from my surgery, I still had heavy-duty pain medication, and I was a nervous wreck about how upset my girlfriend was with me. When she returned home, the tension from that morning came with her. It was like re-inflating a giant carnival bouncy house. Before, it had been in the room, still, but flattened out and nearly ignorable. When she came back, it filled the space between us. And our bitter doors.

She talked about her PMS at some point, reminding me that she had learned how it often alternates with each ovary in terms of specific symptoms. That she has one relatively normal ovary, and one crazy-bad-angry ovary, and that it was looking like this was a crazy-bad-angry ovary month. And that helped a great deal, but I was still physically locked into a high-anxiety state. She asked to be mostly left alone that night, and I complied.

I had felt very far away from her, so, when we finally laid down for the night, though I was curled up facing away from her, I reached back to touch her again, just for the bare, simple contact. She shied away again, told me not to touch her. She explained later how, when it's bad-ovary time, she's hypersensitive to everything, and that touch, along with most other sensory stimulus, is painful. But at the time, I lacked the benefit of that perspective. Even though she'd likely told it to me before. What I felt most was cold and alone, and like that was my fault. The tension remained in the room, shoving us apart, pushing me down.

She left again for work the next day, returned home, and felt less tense to me, in the air, but still with a sort of spiky edge to her speech and movements. She at one point asked me if I could find her a good picture of a girl not wearing a top, but in overalls, and I said that that sort of outfit seemed like a bad idea, and that if a girl was dressed that way, it was probably for porn of some kind. She seemed displeased with that answer, so I Googled it anyway, and showed her what I thought she was hoping to find. She made an exasperated sound and said she would just do it herself, and I felt again like I'd completely failed to be of any use to her at all.

I remained on high alert, unable to focus for that, and even more so for the drugs in my system to point my mind away from the pain. Because of the constipating effects of the oxycodone, I was on a very high-fiber diet suddenly. Because of the stitched effects of the surgery, I was instructed to not push or hold back bowel things, as much as possible. I was a very gassy antelope, which is, as an aside, one of the trump cards for me in Cards Against Humanity.

So it was that, though she later actually told me she had been in a good mood, key word "had," when she came to sit by me to show me a drawing she'd been working on with her new HitRECord account, I farted because of the motion of sitting up, and felt impossibly even more sheepish and ashamed of my presence by her. She made a disgusted face, and I apologized.

She showed me her drawing, a tinkerer character she'd dreamed up and illustrated, in overalls. And the gears someone else had drawn, which she had incorporated into her piece, her own first example of the intent of HitRECord and collaborative creativity. I made a sort of fleeting, uncertain, wincing smile and tried to think of what to say. But I was too slow.

"You know what, just never mind," she said curtly, returning to her chair. I rolled back onto my side, near tears, anxious beyond measure and confused besides. Not long after, the actual fight started. She called me a shitty girlfriend, at one point. And every adage about how many failures are necessary in order to find success flew from my mind. I had never been anyone's girlfriend before. And here was the grade on my first attempt: shitty.

I told her I was done. I could not stand to keep hurting her just by being with her, hurting her in some way that I did not even understand, and therefore worried I would never be able to fix, or even improve. Something so fundamental to who I am that I could not see it.

She went off to her room, while I cried on the futon. Eventually, against my best friend's urging, I went to try to talk to Kim again. I asked her why it was so easy for her to believe I did not love her. And she told me, and I heard in her the echo of everyone I'd ever been with. That I'm so flat when it comes to expressing love that she's honestly not sure whether I care about her at all. And while that gave me an idea of what the problem was, though I still couldn't really understand it, it made a darker point. This wasn't just what I was, it was what I had always been. It wasn't something I could blame on the Jason Construct. It was Sera, clean through. And that made me feel deeply hopeless about ever being able to change it.

At some point after I'd finally fallen asleep, alone on the futon, I was startled awake by her stroking my arm gently. Sitting beside me and touching me lovingly. What I'd hungered for for days. This simple expression. I burst into tears, and turned away from her. It was already over, I thought. She would never touch me this way again. She got up and left. Later, she would ask me if I'd not heard her. She had said, "I'm sorry," but I didn't hear it. I don't know what hearing it would have done, for sure. But it would have almost certainly helped in some way.

She's emailed me just now, between the time I started writing this, and here. It sounds like things are going to be okay. Or at least not horrible. I think. I hope. I wish. Oh, how I wish.

I suppose this is as good a time as any to explain that what I'd been trying to set up between us all along was what most people refer to as "a break." As opposed to "a break-up." So my calling it a break-up was a huge part of the problem, a tragic comedy of communicative errors that nobody would believe if it was the plot of a sitcom; it was too perfect in its awfulness. But my intent from the start had been for us to have some big space between us, space to go work on our own problems, space to lick our wounds and come back and try again.

Since I met Kim, I've had literally zero interest in even thinking about being with anyone else. With even looking. In the past, especially whenever I'd fight with my partner, I didn't engage in much introspection. What was the point? I hated myself anyway. I'd ignore the problems, get lost in MMOs, and flirt up a storm with other women. I would imagine happy, problem-free, new relationships with them, as if such a thing could ever exist.

These days, I turn all the criticism harshly on myself. And with my very shallow depth of perception for emotional examination, I lose sight of just how big (or not) a problem my problems really are, in whatever context. I get incredible detail on what I'm looking at, and zero perspective on anything else. In the context of being a problem for a girlfriend, for example, I can be absolutely ripping my own heart out over having injured my partner in whatever way, while they are actually complaining to me about a problem that is, say, 10% of their net life stress. In other words, nothing to break up over.

But I was far too close to the problem. As the problem was, and is, literally inside me. At least, I should say, that's how it seemed from where I was looking, which was inside myself, at the inside of myself. When she left for work the next morning without a word to me, when the sound of the door shutting behind her was what really woke me up, I burst into tears again, and the song that had started writing itself the night before finished vomiting itself out of me.

I was beyond certain that I needed to be gone by the time she got home that night. I made small tests of how I could do without my pain medication, so I'd be clear-headed enough to safely make the drive. The drive that would be about two hours long by the time I'd be able to attempt it. I took down some of my things, in small loads, since I am supposed to refrain from lifting more than 10 lbs until March. This wore me out, but more worrisome than that, made me hotter than I felt it ought to have. I stopped moving my things, then started again, then stopped and started once more.

By about four o' clock, I was standing in the doorway between her kitchen and living room, my head tilted all the way back, wincing, whimpering, begging the pain to stop. "She will be angry with me still when she gets home," I reminded myself, still unaware that she'd apologized to me when she woke me in the night. I made my way out one last time.

When I was nearly to my car, I realized that I still had the keys she'd given me. I didn't want her to worry I'd just show up crying one night or anything, so I knew I had to give them back. I started crying, and shuffled back towards her place. I went down some stairs to make sure I was giving her back a building key, and not my key to my place. Then I laid the keys out on top of her laptop, so she'd not miss them, said good-bye to Widget, and left.

She had just gotten out of her own counselor's meeting when she texted me, letting me know she was on her way home, asking if I needed her to pick anything up. At a dead stop in the middle of Mercer, I texted her back. I had already left, I said. She asked what that meant, but before long, my lane moved again, and I was on the freeway, unable to answer her anymore.

By the time I realized how grossly I had misread everything, and how badly I'd decided at every possible turn, we weren't talking to each other. She wrote how, from her perspective, she'd found out I had dumped her when I referred to her place as "my ex-girlfriend's apartment" on my public figure page. We had both been so sure of the other's message and intent. And we had both been so wrong.

For the past couple days, since coming home early and running out of pain meds while grossly over-straining myself, I've had bad pain feedback loops. I'll have some nerve pain from the surgery fire off, and start crying. Then, my brain, being helpful as always, tries to make sure I am crying for a reason, so I'll start thinking of Kim again. And start crying harder. I'll be convulsing with sobs, which set off more nerve pain. I am out of heavy-duty pain meds, and methodically burning through my small and previously recreational weed supply. It doesn't do much for the actual pain, but it does help keep me from focusing too intently on anything.


Even when I thought to myself, I wish I'd never done any of this, I wish I hadn't been in such a rush to get my surgery, I wish I'd just waited until things were better between us, I would remember how just the other week, Kim and I had been trying to remember what old adages there were around wishes. The futility of them. And with the warmth of the memory, I'd start sobbing again.

We had been driving home from another of my open mic performances, and all I could remember from expressions around the futility of wishes was, "If wishes were _____, ______ would _____." She could find nothing, when she finally pulled out her phone to Google it. I found the expression a few days later, in a book I'd been reading. I was at her place, of course. "If wishes were horses, beggars would ride!" I shouted.

Those kinds of exchanges between us were achingly recent, but felt, until just a little bit ago when she emailed me, like they were as far as they could be. Like they'd never happen again. If wishes were horses, beggars would ride. Yes, I suppose I will. Lucky girl.