Personal Life

Kara has Gender Feelings

Recently, I have been having big gender feelings again. As you may or may not know, I’m nonbinary, and I use they/them pronouns. I’m fairly out about being nonbinary, but it comes with the annoying side effect of being absolutely invisible to non-trans people (and to some trans people as well).

Binary trans people, especially trans POC, are often more visible than nonbinary people. They are clocked easier by cis people if they don’t 100% pass, which can mean more danger for them. Nonbinary people often have sort of the opposite problem where they are invisible and no matter how queer they look, they will still be seen as man-lite or woman-lite by other people. While this means less chance of violence, it also means being constantly misgendered and having your identity invalidated by the people around you. At some point, you start to get a complex where you want to scream, “I’m trans too!” at everyone who doesn’t immediately clock you.

For me, being trans is an intrinsic part of my identity, just like my autism or queerness. From a young age, I have struggled with dysphoria. I didn’t have a word for it back when I was a kid hitting puberty at ten years old, but from that point on, I stopped feeling comfortable in my body. Suddenly, against my will, my body was different. I had boobs, which ended up being fairly large quickly, so I was forced to wear a bra and feel that all of my clothes hit all the wrong places. Growing up in the early 2000s, everything for girls was tight and close-fitting. Between sensory issues and dysphoria, I was ready to claw out of my skin every time my clothes clung to me. My mom didn’t fight me 90% of the time about not being feminine, and I settled into oversized t-shirts and cargo shorts.

I remember reading Cry to Heaven by Anne Rice as a teenager and fantasizing about being a castrati or a eunuch. The body I wanted most was flat chested, slightly taller than I am, and sex-less. Delicate-featured like a woman but flat and tall like a man. Daily, I am reminded that even with modern hormones and surgeries, the gender presentation I want isn’t possible. Well, technically, I could forgo any hormones and suppress my estrogen, but my bones would turn to dust and my organs would get out of whack. I desperately wish someone could create a sex hormone cocktail would allow for man shape without the facial hair or drastic voice drop. Microdosing is possible, but I don’t want most of the side effects of masculinization. I just want to not be a woman.

Being perceived as a woman makes me feel dysphoric.

I used to feel so guilty in college when my professors would expound upon how proud of us they were for being such smart women, and my brain would whisper, “But I’m not.” I’m not ashamed to be a woman as some people assume when you say you aren’t cis but AFAB. Woman always chafed like shoes that didn’t fit. There are a thousand ways to be a woman, but I never felt like I was any of those things. The label made no sense when held against me. Yes, I came genetically preprogrammed to grow boobs, have periods, and only be 5’6″, but that doesn’t mean I’m a woman. The image of me in my head isn’t a woman and never has been.

What’s really funny is how not feminine I feel and am next to my trans woman partner. She revels in being a woman and is so much more herself than she was before. It has been so heartening to see her grow into herself through transitioning. It also has made the contrast between us so much starker. My gender discomfort feels so much louder as I see her become more comfortable, and the worst part is that I’m not sure how to quiet it. I would love to get a mastectomy, but I can’t afford it and my job is only on a contractual basis, which means I don’t get paid time off to recover. There’s also the fear of not being able to drive in an emergency and the potential for giant autoimmune flares due to my chronic issues that could come with having major surgery.

When your brain and your body don’t align, it really messes with your head. It hinders me from dressing how I want or being comfortable in my skin. In turn, I’m not perceived by others gender-wise the way I’d like, and that messes with my head too. The worst part is my autism also fights against good change. It’s really hard for me to change my hair or clothing style because my brain rebels at the wrong-ness even if it’s good wrong. That anxiety hinders me from changing my hair too drastically or going for the more formal clothing I’d like to try. Those things might make me feel better gender-wise, but I have to white-knuckle through the initial discomfort of change. I hear a lot of trans people talk about gender euphoria, and I fear I will never have that because my brain’s first instinct is to scream no at change. Never in my life have I ever felt beautiful or handsome or attractive. I’ve only felt cute or passable at best. I’m not fishing for compliments; I’m just telling you the reality inside my head.

One day I hope I get to have the same gender euphoria that my partner feels, but I don’t know if that’s possible. That doesn’t mean I shouldn’t try; it just means it will be harder for me due to autism and chronic illness. Still, I worry that being androgynous or the vision of gender I have in my head is impossible, and while HRT has come a long way, it still has a ways to go for nonbinary people.

Writing

Why I Write What I Write

On Twitter a few weeks ago, I asked if anyone had anything they wanted me to blog about, and my friend Char was kind enough to toss out a whole list of potential topics that were really intriguing regarding my writing process, why I write certain things, how I write, etc., but the one that caught my eye first was “What draws you to M/M romance and what do you specifically find delightful in writing the male gaze from the male gaze?”

At first, I sort of stared at the prompt because I’m currently editing an f/f or sapphic romance, which will go out to my newsletter subscribers at the end of the month (which you can join by clicking here). My immediate answer is that I don’t write M/M romance so much as that I write queer romance. I think a lot of newer readers might assume I write M/M only because Kinship and Kindness and The Reanimator’s Heart, my last two releases are both M/M, but if you look at my previous series, The Ingenious Mechanical Devices, you’ll see that there’s an ace-allo M/F(but would be enby in 2023) couple, a gay couple, and a pan-bi M/F couple with various other queer side characters. And subsequent books in the Paranormal Romance series will have a lesbian F/enby couple as well.

It’s mildly annoying that M/M romance tends to get the most attention and sales, which on one hand I am grateful for, but I like to write about all sort of queer characters. Within the queer community, there are those (like myself) who will read about anyone and just enjoys queer couples in general. Other readers tend to be more insular and only read MM or FF, which is fine, but that really isn’t the audience I write for.

My choice of genre/romantic couples stems from my own gender and sexuality. I tend to just say I’m nonbinary and queer for simplicity’s sake, but if we’re getting more granular about it, I’m agender nonbinary (slightly masc leaning, slightly) asexual omniromantic. Aka, gender is *giant shrug* but basically Anne Hathaway in Twelfth Night and my sexuality is that I like people of all sorts but don’t feel sexual attraction.

Because of my gender and sexuality, I am attracted to different genders and my identity in relation to those genders is complicated at times since we don’t really have commonly used words for nonbinary attraction to men or women or other enbies. Because I am slightly masculine leaning, M/M romance made sense in my head. Before I knew what being nonbinary was, I used to say I felt like a gay man trapped in a woman’s body. I felt queer, I felt like that feminine masculinity that I often saw with queer men (highly related to Nathan Lane in The Birdcage as a tween/teen because being a woman was a parody of who was I, but I couldn’t put that into words. Besides that, Anne Rice’s books, which were highly influential in my tween/teen years for realizing queer people even existed, were mostly M/M or focused on queer men. Gay men of the late 80s/early 90s were a major touchstone in figuring out my gender identity and that what I was feeling was queer attraction, so M/M tends to be the attraction I relate to most.

Complicating this was that I dealt with dysphoria, which made it difficult to write cis F/F romance. I often joked there are too many layers of Victorian Era clothing and that’s why I avoided F/F romance, but no, it was that trying made my dysphoria kick up horrifically. For a long time, I had a very hard time reading or writing cis F/F romance, but once I realized I was nonbinary, that lessened greatly. It was strange, but somehow realizing I wasn’t a woman despite the body I came prepackaged in gave me distance enough that I could enjoy those books without my brain rebelling. This is why I’ve actually been able to think more about Ruth’s book (Tempests and Temptation) and write Flowers and Flourishing (though one MC is a trans woman).

Sexuality and gender are complicated, writing is complicated, and dysphoria bleeds into the creative side of your work whether you like it or not. For a while, I was ashamed that I couldn’t write F/F romance. I wanted to, and I am attracted to women. I couldn’t understand the mental block, but once it fell away, it was like, “Oh, yeah, that revelation seemed to clear a lot up.”

The crux of this long digression is that I don’t write for the M/M gaze. I write for the queer gaze because I write queer characters of all genders and sexualities. If you’re looking for exclusively M/M content, that certainly isn’t me, but if you want series with trans characters, nonbinary characters, gay/lesbian characters, asexual characters, and bi/pan characters who get happy endings, then I’m the writer for you.


As a side note, Sarra Cannon’s Publish and Thrive course is going to be running soon. This 6 week class is what helped me restart my career last year, and it was certainly worth the money. If you’re new to indie publishing or want to get back into the swing of it by refreshing your knowledge on best practices or marketing, I would take a look. I wrote out 40+ pages of notes when I took it, and now that she has expanded it, I will be taking it again since I have lifetime access to the course. She also has payment plans set up if you want to join but can’t pay in full upfront. If you use this link to sign-up, I get a commission as a former student.

If you would like to know more or have questions about the course, I would be happy to answer them!

Personal Life

How Being Nonbinary Helped My Dysphoria

For most of my life, I have had a complicated relationship with my body.

The first thing to keep in mind is that I had severe eczema over most of my body until about 2 years ago when I started taking a biologic and the eczema was beaten back to nearly nothing. I mention the eczema in a post about being nonbinary because I want to be clear that a lot of my covering up with hoodies and long pants was because people are weird about rashes. They will give you dirty looks, stare at open sores, and generally be rude. On top of that, eczema burns like a bitch when it’s exposed to the air or the skin touches other skin, so covering the folds of my arms and legs helped to mitigate that constant pain. Due to the eczema, I covered up most of my body, and people often took that for being uncomfortable with my body. I was but not in the way they thought.

My build is what some people would call sturdy. I have muscle on my calves and straight, strong shoulders. Neither fat nor thin, just in the middle but sturdy enough and tall enough (though still average) that I am certainly not petite or slight. My chest is disproportionately large, but I’m not really curvy either. Before I realized I was nonbinary, I didn’t always like my body. A lot of this has to do with growing up in the late 90s and early 00s when the in look for women was thin, almost prepubescent in terms of build, and wearing 85 layers of tight clothing. The alternative was big boobed bimbo. No shade to the bimbos of the world, I love Dolly and Elvira, but the thought of people seeing me that way because my genes decided to grace me with a disproportionate amount of fat on my chest was alarming to say the least.

At that age, I couldn’t articulate how I felt, but the fact that I couldn’t control how people perceived me terrified me. I hate that people saw me as a woman and sexualized me the moment I wore feminine clothing. I already didn’t like feminine clothing. That had been an ongoing war with my mother since I was in late elementary school. I hated dresses, hated skirts, and only wore them when my mom insisted I had to dress up. Around 10, I discovered anime tshirts and cargo shorts in the boys section of Target and let out a sigh of relief. There were other options than the booty shorts or feminine capris the girls section had to offer. T-shirts and cargo shorts hid the things that made me uncomfortable. Puberty had been a special sort of hell as a neurodivergent person and as someone who, unbeknownst to them, was experiencing dysphoria.

By the time I got to high school, the thought of putting on feminine clothing filled me with a special kind of dread. Every time I had to wear something feminine for a school event or a holiday, it felt like I was wearing an incredibly ugly costume. You know the scene in Beauty and the Beast when Beast is in the tub and they give him that ridiculous haircut and he just deadpan says that he looks stupid? That’s how I felt. This was compounded upon by the ease of my cousins’ transition into adolescence where they (seemed) to happily wear makeup, feminine clothing, played with their hair. I constantly felt like I was doing a really bad job pretending to be a woman. The label chafed and sagged, like I filled out all the wrong places. At some point, I stopped caring. I was bad at womanhood, so be it. I kept my hair pulled back, wore t-shirts, jeans, and hoodies/pullovers while giving zero shits, but the fact that people still perceived me as a woman nagged at me.

It wasn’t until I was in graduate school (so around 24-ish?), I stumbled upon the term nonbinary, and it was like everything clicked. In the past, I had debated if I was a trans man. I saw Chaz Bono on Dancing with the Stars when I was in college, and while I felt not-feminine, I didn’t think I felt that masculine. I was caught in a weird middle ground between masculine and feminine, none of which particularly appealed to me. When I finally understood what nonbinary people were and that they existed, it was like oh, so there’s a word for all these feelings I’ve had for years. All those moments of panic and revulsion made sense. They were dysphoria. It also helped explain why some things that were seen as feminine by others didn’t bother me.

I didn’t hate my body, per se. I hate how others perceived my body. That it was simultaneously seen as feminine yet not feminine enough because I wasn’t petite, because I had strong shoulders and legs, because I didn’t like to wear makeup or wear dresses. None of these things are inherently masculine or feminine, but society arbitrarily ascribes gender to them (aka don’t @ me for this, you know what I mean). Suddenly, my body felt less wrong. I was never a woman. I have always been nonbinary but didn’t have the word for the feelings. My strong body mixed with my long hair, chest, and generally, neutral clothing felt right.

This mix of hard and soft feels right to me and has settled the war between my body and mind substantially. I still panic at the thought of clothing that is too gendered in either direction (or what my brain deems gendered), but my dysphoria has subsided. The freedom to buy clothes I want and to say, “F it, I’m buying from the men’s department,” without caring about other people’s judgment feels right. The more I branch out, the happier I am, and it’s been nice to see my partner exploring more feminine options (often my cast-offs) and loving how he looks.