Reykjavík Grapevine - Aug 2021, Page 9

Reykjavík Grapevine - Aug 2021, Page 9
9 The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 08— 2021 or how people saw me. That changed pretty soon and I felt 'agender' wasn't appropri- ate anymore. Since then, I haven't really been able to come to a conclusion about it. I don't have much of a strong gender identity, which would point to agender, but still I'm not completely sure. It's a tough call to make. I sometimes use the label 'trans feminine' because I think it describes me well most of the time. But otherwise I'm just comfortable with 'nonbinary'." When asked to describe what gender even is, things begin to get more nebulous. Ari Logn describes themselves as a gender abolitionist, citing how the concept “seems to completely control what we are ‘allowed’ to do or be.” Regn believes that “each and every person on this planet has their own gender,” as no two people will have the same understanding of what their gender— whether assigned at birth or discovered in time—means to them. Reyn, for their part, takes a whimsical approach, saying, “I always think of this sign I've seen in pictures from some Pride parade which said: 'People think gender is male and female, when actually it's just a big ball of wibbly-wobbly gendie- wendie stuff'. I agree with that.” Getting to know you If you’re raised in a binary community, how do you even come to understand that you’re nonbinary? For many, it comes from either chance representation, or simply meeting other nonbinary people. “I never heard the word 'nonbinary' until I met other nonbinary people,” Regn says. “I was a really androgynous child. People wouldn't mistake me for a boy but I felt like a boy most of the time, since I was like 8 or 9. I also realised really young that I was pansex- ual. I came out in 2018, when I was 20. I was working with children at the time and there was this tiny little child who pointed at me and said, 'You're a woman!' and I never felt so confused in my entire life. “Then I went into this self-reflection, asking myself if I was being a misogynist, like, do I hate women? Why don't I want to be a woman? I was a really big feminist, I was the president of the feminist committee at MH [Menntaskóli vi! Hamrahlí!, a second- ary school]. So I thought of course I don't hate women, I love women. What is this? Why am I reacting like this? This sent me into a spiral of an existential crisis, and was really reflect- ing.” They continue: “Then I met a queer person at [the nightclub] Gaukurinn during the summer, and they were like 'how do you identify?' and I said 'I think I identify as nonbinary' and it felt so good to say that. I let people use whatever pronouns they wanted, so I was always 'she' for like half a year after that. After I came out, I became so much more confident in myself, so I started asking people to use they/them, or hán in Icelandic.” “I have this memory of seeing Boys Don't Cry as a kid,” says Ari Logn. “I was just amazed. There was something in my brain that was like 'I connect to this'. I watched a lot of things as a kid and I hadn't connected to anything like I did to this. I didn't even really know about gender at that age; I just saw it and thought ‘this makes sense.’ Having that experience as a really young person, It took me some time to realise how transness related to me, though. “My life hasn't really been very traditional, so I really didn't have gender expectations put on me by family, apart from 'you have a vagina so you're a woman'. If there had been pressure I never noticed it, anyway. I feel good about that. But you notice society putting expectations on you, which subconsciously puts in your head that you have to do things a certain, very ‘traditional’ and capitalistic way to be a successful human. That has definitely had an impact on me, and that's why I felt such relief when I realized I could just be ‘me’. I'd say that in the last five years since coming back to Iceland I've definitely settled a lot more into being comfortable in my skin as a nonbinary person. I would say it's definitely safer for me to be who I am here, compared to the UK. I have a lot of privilege as a white Icelander.” Not wanting to bother anyone A common theme that came up in these interviews was not wanting to make binary people feel scared or uncomfortable when confronted with the reality of nonbinary people. This desire to spare the feeling, real or imagined, of binary people can keep many nonbinary people in the closet, months or even years after understanding their own gender identities. Another closeting force is growing up in a binary culture and having societal expectations based on one’s assigned gender at birth foisted upon you. “When I hit puberty I had a lot of guy friends, and they sort of expected me to become a woman,” Regn says. “They kind of all slowly evaporated around me, which was really hard, so I became preoccupied with male approval, which is really bad for anyone. I became really obsessed with becoming as feminine as I possibly could; I wore dresses all the time, I did a lot of tradi- tionally feminine things even though I didn't really care for them. That led to eating disor- ders, depression, I was just very sad all the time. “Then I went to MH, which is a school that has a reputation for [allowing students] to be whoever [they] want to be. When I figured out that I was nonbinary, everything just fell into place and made sense in a way that I could actually feel comfortable with myself. Being my whole, true self, which is so liber- ating and I still feel so blessed that I actually came to this conclusion. I've never looked back.” Adds Reyn, “I think if there was any exter- nal pressure, it would have been from society as a whole, media and maybe some friends— most of my friends for most of my life have been straight cis boys, who have a tendency to maybe think more about these things than some other groups might.” “I wasn't really bound by these things at all, but I did start to notice after I realised I was nonbinary that these expectations are everywhere. Continuously being labelled by gendered terms by other people. You can never just be a person. I think that's what bothered me the most, because I wasn't following gendered expectations. Coming out helped with that, because I could finally have a reason for not wanting people to address me in certain ways. I think also, to some extent, it alleviates some of the pres- sure to conform to societal norms. It was mostly just a relief to be able to stop pretend- ing that there was nothing going, so as to not rock the boat before I was ready. People understand better now why I feel the way I do and why I've been the way I am.” “I think a lot of people are scared of nonbi- nary people, because we're not comfort- able,” Ari Logn says. “We're outside of society's comfort. I've sensed in people that I've encountered this uncomfortableness. I don't really know how to address it though. I've tried, like 'hey these are my pronouns, no big deal, if you want information I can give it’. And I try to give information but some people will just make you feel bad about even stating and asserting your pronouns or iden- tity. Funnily enough I’ve encountered a lot of well meaning people who think that because I’m not woman, I’m automatically 'man'. It's the other default. I will have men, more of the time, asking if it's OK to use 'he' instead. I'll say 'hán' and they'll hear 'hann'. It's like they realised that it's 'not woman' so they go to 'the other one'. But there's more than just man or woman.” Confronting misconceptions Even after coming out, nonbinary people will very often find themselves having to contin- uously educate binary people on who they are and what their gender identities mean. "You see around you soci- ety putting expectations on you. It puts in your head that you have to do things a certain way to be a successful human." "I always think of this sign I've seen in pictures from some Pride parade which said: 'People think gender is male and female, when actually it's just a big ball of wibbly-wobbly gendie-wendie stuff'. I agree with that."Some of those aforementioned wibbly-wobbly gendie-wendies

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