by Ivan Coyote
TOMBOY SURVIVAL GUIDE
Copyright © 2016 by Ivan Coyote
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any part by any means—graphic, electronic, or mechanical—without the prior written permission of the publisher, except by a reviewer, who may use brief excerpts in a review, or in the case of photocopying in Canada, a license from Access Copyright.
ARSENAL PULP PRESS
Suite 202 – 211 East Georgia St.
Vancouver, BC V6A 1Z6
Canada
arsenalpulp.com
The publisher gratefully acknowledges the support of the Canada Council for the Arts and the British Columbia Arts Council for its publishing program, and the Government of Canada (through the Canada Book Fund) and the Government of British Columbia (through the Book Publishing Tax Credit Program) for its publishing activities.
“What We Pray For (The Tomboy Hymn)”: based on the hymn by Arthur Seymour Sullivan; Lyrics by Veda Hille, taken from discussions with Alison Gorman, Sally Zori, Pebbles Willekes, and Ivan Coyote
“Will You Come With Me?”: Music by Veda Hille, lyrics by Veda Hille, taken from discussions with Alison Gorman, Sally Zori, Pebbles Willekes, and Ivan Coyote
Efforts have been made to locate copyright holders of source material wherever possible. The publisher welcomes hearing from any copyright holders of material used in this book who have not been contacted.
Cover and text design by Oliver McPartlin
Cover illustration by Dan Bushnell
Edited by Brian Lam
Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication:
Coyote, Ivan E. (Ivan Elizabeth), 1969-, author
Tomboy survival guide / Ivan E. Coyote.
Issued in print and electronic formats.
ISBN 978-1-55152-657-7 (ebook)
1. Coyote, Ivan E. (Ivan Elizabeth), 1969-. 2. Transgender people—Identity. 3. Tomboys—Canada—Biography. I. Title.
HQ77.8.C69A3 2016306.76'8092C2016-904381-9
C2016-904382-7
I dedicate this book to Alison Gorman, Pebbles Willekes, and Sally Zori, the other three members of our all-tomboy band, for their talent and heart. Many of the stories in this book have been put to their music and brought to the stage. This has given these words another life and other dimensions, and for that I will always be grateful.
I would also like to dedicate this book to Leanne Powers, Soo Jeong, Roxanne Duncan, and Lee Del Vecchio. Behind, beside, in front of, and surrounding these brave tomboys there is a friend, a wife, a non-wife, and a husbutch. I would like to thank them all for their love, support, bathroom accompaniment, and for seeing us and being our family. Without you there would be a big empty space shaped just like you.
Lastly and especially, I dedicate this book to Patricia Daws, my mother, my friend, my mentor, and my first hero. The words love and respect are not big enough to hold everything that I feel for you. You were with me, in my blood and in my heart, while I wrote every word.
CONTENTS
Not My Son
Hopeless Causes
A Dark Blue Bike
I Shine My Armor Every Night
I Believe You
French Kissing
Work Equals Force Times Distance Over Time
Journey, Man
You Can’t Handle the Truth
Tomboys Still
Shouldn’t I Feel Pretty?
Dear Patricia
How to Build Your Very Own Unicorn Trap
Be Careful in There
Will You Come with Me?
None of These Words
Whipper Snapper
Stronger than the Skin
Steve Said It Would Be Okay
I Wish My Son
We’ve Got a Situation Here
Kraft Singles for Everyone
Lonely Stripper on Christmas
A Circle Goes Round
“Should” All Over Everyone
Middle Seat
Baby Strong
Vul-ner-a-ble
Uncomfortable
Learn People Better
Write Through
Heat and Hot Water
What We Pray For (The Tomboy Hymn)
Acknowledgments
“I was not ladylike, nor was I manly. I was something else altogether. There were so many different ways to be beautiful.”
—Michael Cunningham, A Home at the End of the World
I’m waiting in the insurance place to renew my plates, along with a woman and her daughter, about five years old. The kid keeps talking to me, asking me stuff, showing me her Lego helicopter. “Leave her be,” the mom says. The kid looks right at me. “I don’t think he is a lady,” she says. “I think he is a man with very pretty eyes.”
NOT MY SON
I’m trying to think back to the very first time I knew. I probably knew before I even knew what knowing was, but the first time I really remember, I was maybe five years old. It was summer in the Yukon, I remember that, there is no mistaking summer in the Yukon. It was early in the evening when the shadows fall long and sideways under the midnight sun, stretching slender from the tips of my sneakers all the way across the dusty parking lot next to the Qwanlin Mall downtown. I was wearing a baseball hat that was too big for me, I had to heat up a safety pin and melt another hole in the plastic strap at the back to make it small enough to stay on my head at all. My mom and I had just finished grocery shopping and our cart was loaded down with brown paper bags. I held the glass door open for her to push the cart through.
A tourist man wearing tourist shorts and a tourist shirt was on his way in to the Super Valu, and he stopped to let us exit past him. “You’re a good boy, son, to help your mama like that,” he drawled at me.
My chest puffed up like a little rooster and I stood taller, like I thought maybe a soldier would, or a doorman, someone with a uniform and a purpose. Nodded quick, without smiling.
My mom sighed and squinted into the sun in his direction. “She’s not my son, she is my daughter,” she told him, without any edge in her voice, just the facts.
“Pardon me, ma’am, my apologies.” He cocked an eyebrow like a question mark at me, and then headed inside.
My mom didn’t mention the incident again, ever, but I remembered it. Rolled it around in my head after like a small, smooth pebble. I liked being mistaken for a boy. Liked how it meant I was expected to do things: to stand up tall, open doors, be strong, to help my mother. How I got approving nods from tall men with accents from other countries. I didn’t know why it made my heart sing loud to itself that a stranger thought I was a boy. It just did. Made me feel like he could look inside me and see some part of the truth of me in there.
But it did make me inexplicably sad that a stranger could see me, and my own family could not.
The summer I turned six was the first time I intentionally passed as a boy. It had always just happened incidentally, accidentally, before then, before that July and those summer swimming lessons at the Lions pool. My mom had made the mistake of buying me a bikini. The bottoms fit like circa 1974 polyester shorts, blue with red pockets, and the top part was a little tank top, red with blue pockets. It was pretty butch, come to think of it, as bikinis go. It was so easy, that first day. I didn’t give it too much thought, really, I just didn’t wear the top part. Left it scrunched into a ball and shoved deep into the toe of my running shoe at the bottom of a rent-it-for-a-quarter locker. I pinned the key with the hard plastic orange number on it to the waistband of my trunks and padded barefoot out to the side of the pool. I fell into line with the boys that first day, and it only got easier after that. The short form of the birth name my parents had given me was androgynous enough to allow my charade to continue
through all six weeks of swimming lessons. I didn’t get busted until report card day. “‘He has progressed through all of the requirements of his beginners class and is ready to proceed on to his level two’?” My mom read aloud in the car in the parking lot outside of the pool, shaking her head slowly. “I knew that bikini was a mistake from the get-go.”
I stared at the toes of my sneakers and said nothing. I didn’t understand why it was easier to do cannonballs and tread water without a flotation device without being afraid of the deep end when nobody expected you to be afraid. It just was. I still remember that too-good-to-be-real feeling of the water sliding over my bare chest. It’s not like I thought I was a real boy. I just knew I was not really a girl.
I was never taught to believe that women were inferior, just different. In fact, I was raised in a family of mostly single mothers. My maternal grandfather was a drunk who died when I was nine, shriveled and yellow and full of bitter. My gran had three jobs and kept everybody fed and spotless and patched and darned and in school, and showed us all with her bent back and arthritic fingers curled into her palms what hard work was. My other grandfather had excised himself from his family and responsibilities in exchange for the sun and winterless shores of New Zealand, and it was well-known family lore that he couldn’t hold down a decent job or treat a woman right.
The women in my family handled most of the practical details of everyday life. Men were skilled at some things, at the same time as being inexplicably incapable of performing other seemingly simple tasks. I grew up believing that men were faulty creatures, a little untrustworthy, childlike, even. They needed a woman around to keep them on the tracks. To swipe their paycheque out of their calloused hands right after work every other Thursday before they went and spent it on something stupid like a snowmobile, or a bigger boat. Men swore at the table and were prone to fighting on account of dubious slights, and hardly any of them even knew how to work the washing machine. If you needed something done right, or to get picked up on time by someone after gymnastics or whatever, it was always best if that someone was a woman. Men were mostly just good for fixing or building things and for hauling firewood. A lot of this work happened out of town in the bush somewhere, or in camps my dad and uncles talked about on their four days off. This work seemed far away, and out of mind, and had little to do with the day in front of us. It was just the way it was.
I didn’t not want to be a girl because I had been told that they were weaker or somehow lesser than boys. It was never that simple. I didn’t even really actively not want to be like the other girls. I just knew. I just always knew that I wasn’t. I couldn’t. I would never be.
HOPELESS CAUSES
My grandmother Flo was not a cuddly woman. She was far more likely to cuff the back of your head than she was to pat the top of it. Maybe that is why this memory jumps out so stark and solo in my head.
My gran had a wicker chair with a removable cushion on it, and for years that chair belonged to her dog Pug. Pug was a pug, of course, and I guess that was a good enough name for a dog. Pug slept most of the day away in that chair and if you tried to sit next to her or even accidentally got too close to her chair while on your way to the kitchen or the back door, she would snap and bite at the air in front of your face, sometimes catching your bottom lip or a piece of your cheek, and my gran would swoop out of the kitchen with the broom in her hand and accuse you of teasing that poor old hound, screeching at you to just leave the dog in peace. Before my grandfather died he would fry up a bit of fresh liver and chop it into tiny bits, and then blow on it until it was cool enough for Pug to snarfle and gulp down. My uncles would roll their eyes and complain that goddammit the old man never bothered to cook anything for anyone else. Then my grandfather got sick and withered and died, and then Pug died, too. I was too young for funerals when my grandpa died, but I remember my aunts sobbing and leaning on each other when that grouchy old stinky dog got buried in the back yard under the wild rose bush, between the slumping shed and the poplar tree.
After Pug was gone, my gran unzipped the cover off of the cushion from the old wicker chair and washed it and hung it on the line, and hung the pillow over the railing on the back porch and pounded the dust out of it with an old ping pong paddle. One afternoon when all the other kids were out playing but I got to stay in because I had a bad cold, she sat back in that chair and had herself a proper smoke, and then patted her lap for me to come and sit in it. This was rare enough that I remember every detail: her cardigan pulled closed and buttoned around her spindly frame, her cigarette still smoldering a little in the green glass ashtray on the side table, the spoon rack in the shape of the Yukon that my uncle made for her when he was in rehab hanging on the wall over her shoulder.
I climbed up into her bony lap and tried to balance there without letting my full weight rest on her thighs. She wrapped one of her gnarly-old-smoker-lady-bingo-fingered hands around my hip, and opened her other hand in front of me, palm up. Shining in the wrinkled bowl of her palm was a silver medallion.
“This is for St. Jude,” she told me, leaving a little space in between each of her words so I knew this was serious. “He is the patron saint of hopeless causes. I want you to have this. We will pin it inside your new jeans jacket, right over your heart. He will be your patron saint. You can pray to him whenever you need to. Some of us have hard roads, but the Lord never gives anyone a burden without also giving them a gift. Your job is to find out what that gift is and use it, y’hear me? God doesn’t make mistakes. Never forget that. You are exactly who God meant you to be. You listen to your old gran, there’s a good girl. Do you want a hot dog for lunch? Now how does that sound?”
I still have that St. Jude medallion. I kept it for years on a key ring with a couple of others I collected over the years: a solid silver St. Christopher’s for travellers that I found in a thrift store in North Vancouver, and a St. Catherine’s, the patron saint for unmarried women. They were in the right front pocket of my jeans the day my house burned down in 2005, so, unlike most of my belongings I started out that day with, I still have them, even more precious to me now because they escaped with me. I have a little wooden box on my dresser in the bedroom. I keep them in there.
In 1981 my grandmother announced that she was tired of the long Yukon winters, and put her little house on Alexander Street up for sale. It was tucked in right next to the clay cliffs in downtown Whitehorse. She got a decent price for it and bought herself a small house in Nanaimo, on Vancouver Island. It was halfway down a little dead-end road named Rosamond Street, in a working-class neighbourhood of the blue-collar pulp mill town. She brought me and my little sister Carrie and my younger cousins Christopher and Dan with her for that first summer, because my mom was going back to school and my aunt was going through a divorce, and both women needed all of us out of their hair for a while. We were eleven, nine, eight, and seven years old.
Carrie was sixteen months younger than me, and we shared very little other than the wall that separated our bedrooms. I kept my room spotless, my books in order from tallest to smallest, my toys stowed in the wooden trunk my dad had built me. My mom had to inspect my sister’s room at least once a week to make sure she didn’t have half a moldy sandwich stowed away between her mattress and the wall, or orange peels growing green beards in a bowl shoved under her bed. The floor in her room was a carpet of anything and everything she had touched, played with, read, or worn since the last time my mom had made her tidy up in there. I was the first off of the diving board; she wouldn’t even try. She was lactose intolerant, but nobody said anything like that back then, so her nose ran constantly. She sometimes still peed the bed and wasn’t interested in what my dad was building in the shop. Sometimes at school it was hard to tell which of us was pretending not to know who the other one was most convincingly.
Christopher was a little less than a year younger than Carrie, my mom’s little sister Roberta’s eldest son. He was scrawny and awkward, built a little like a preying mantis
crossed with a little boy. All right angles and pointy bits, he was prone to tripping over his own feet and walking into his own booby-traps. He liked guns and tanks and knives and slingshots and matches and should never, ever have been trusted with any of those things. He got picked on mercilessly in school the minute any of the rest of us turned our back even for a second.
Danny was my favourite. Round and sunburned and nearly always smiling, he loved to draw and paint and had an imaginary dragon as his best friend. He would politely tug on the skirt of a lady my Gran was chatting with at the supermarket to inform her that she was accidentally standing on his dragon’s tail, and if she wouldn’t mind moving a little to the right? One whole summer he pretended to be a dog, and my aunt Robbie just humoured him and played along whenever my gran wasn’t home. Gran claimed that crawling about on all fours was wearing out the knees of his trousers too soon and it would cost us an arm and a leg to keep him looking decent if we let him keep up with that being a dog nonsense.
As much as we all bickered and pushed and shoved each other all the time, and fought over who got which piece of cake or pie or who ate the last of the raspberry jam and put the empty jar back into the fridge, I think we managed to love each other pretty good back then. But my default on the surface emotion was mostly hating having to look after them, until someone else threatened or hurt one of them, and then a fierce and protective surge of red hot blood would flood into my chest and thrum past my eardrums, curling my hands into fists.
Nanaimo felt and smelled like a big city to us Yukon kids: we could find all kinds of radio stations on my little transistor radio, and we only had two stations back home. There were huge-to-us shopping malls off of the four-lane highway, and the buses ran on Sundays, too. Pee-yew, we would yell and hold our noses and reel around on the front sidewalk on muggy mornings when the rotten egg smell of the pulp mill hung everywhere in the air all around us. Our gran would cluck her tongue and shake her head at us and say, “You smell that? That’s the smell of a good union job, that is what that is. You should be so lucky to grow up and get yourself a good job at the mill. Pay all your bills and then some. You’re spoiled, the lot of yous.”