chomiji: Akari, the shaman from SDK ... more to her than you might imagine  (Akari - autumn colors)
chomiji ([personal profile] chomiji) wrote2014-02-26 09:34 pm
Entry tags:

This Story Sounded Very Familiar

Growing Up Gender Nonconforming

I wasn't in exactly the same place as the author was: I always considered myself a girl. But I didn't think I was very good at being a girl. And mostly, I didn't want to improve at it, either. I didn't want to be other people's idea of a girl. My poor mother, daughter of a garment industry family, really never did understand it. She'd take me shopping for clothes, and I'd go hide under one of the garment racks with a book.

The one period in my life that I tried hard to be gender conforming was when I was a new mother. I really didn't like it. No matter how hard I tried, I didn't seem to have much in common with the other mothers I met.

Most of the time when I feel like being girly, I do it by myself, for myself. This includes shopping for clothes and very rarely, cosmetics. Makeup, for me, feels like a lie. I don't think it's a lie on other people, mind you! But for me, it's a lie.

I do like jewelry, though. But it has to be smallish and folk-arty or simple and not get in my way. Earrings are good.

rroselavy: (Default)

[personal profile] rroselavy 2014-03-01 06:42 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, I never fit into the girlie-girl mold. I dabbled with make-up, but mostly due to the SO's profession at the time, in which I had to be a "presentable" wife. In HS I was grunge before it was invented, so much so, that I was once mistaken for a boy (even though I was .... er .... well-endowed from way back when).

I find it hard though, to feel beautiful or womanly, when I don't fit the media standards. However, I'm not willing to make the sacrifices to feed into all that.