Always practice proper care and storage of your valuable comic books. |
- Ten years ago, it was cold. It was bitter cold. I was living in a shack on the outskirts of Rutland, Massachusetts - and I say shack because that's what it was, really. The cabin was sixty or so years old. It didn't have any heat or insulation. It broiled in the summer (central Massachusetts can be very humid and there was a swamp in the backyard) and froze in the winter. We didn't have a bathroom - just a toilet on a bare wood floor. All the other bathroom fixtures had been torn out because they were rotten. We bought a gym membership in Worcester so we could drive 20-25 minutes to bathe. A wing of the house was closed off because it had been destroyed by water damage. (Link)
I
wrote those words three years ago, on the occasion of the tenth anniversary of
this site. At the time ten years seemed like an immense amount of time. But the
days keep tumbling down. Now we’re a teenager.
I am
happy to report that in the year since I last contemplated this site’s
birthday, not a lot has really happened. It’s been a very quiet year, not
much to report.
- January 2004 was a very cold month. (Did I mention it was cold?) The temperature never rose above freezing for the entire week of the 17th. My wife (now ex-) had been hospitalized, and I was alone, freezing, with just our dogs for company. I read Journalista! every morning and followed every blog to which Dirk Deppey linked. I was bored, depressed, lonely, looking for something to keep my mind off the cold. I don't remember the exact moment I made the decision. But somewhere along the line on Saturday, January 17th 2003 I registered for a Blogspot account and began The Hurting. The name fit my attitude at the time, and I guess it still does - even though I'm no longer living in a shack in the woods and my life has improved by every conceivable metric, I'm still as mordant and droll as ever. When will the hurting stop? Good question.(Link)
Funny thing.
If you haven’t checked in for a while, you might not have
caught that there was, uh, a pretty big change around here. Massive. I mean –
big.
So this is a thing that happened. You won't be seeing that name again. That guy’s gone, save for
legal ID and documentation (such as the above excerpt) and credit cards. All
that stuff takes time, and I’m motivated to move quickly. There’s no reason to
wait another minute. - One of the more distinctive - perhaps to its detriment - attributes of this blog is that over the years I've settled into a pretty peculiar rhythm. I don't post a lot, obviously, but sometimes I post more than others. On a good week I'll manage a full essay and maybe a couple other smaller things. I may bewail my unproductiveness, but that's where I'm comfortable, and trying to push for more than that never seems to work out. I got out of the habit of doing shorter text posts a long time ago, for whatever reason - it's easier for me to write at length, as opposed to producing something more concise and pithy. I've been told point-blank that writing such long essays turns off as many readers as it may attract, but I think that's changing - one side-effect from so many established media companies colonizing the internet (and so many start-ups replicating that format), is that the length of articles and the attention span required to read them online appears to be expanding. That's fine. I do this as much for myself as anyone else, and that's the format in which I'm most comfortable writing. Why have a blog if you can't do what you want with it? (Link)
Early on the morning of Tuesday, October 11th
2016, I posted my essay “One Hundred and Sixty Four Days.” To say the essay
provoked a response would be an understatement.
I wasn’t trying to make a statement, really. It made sense to me that since it had been a long time
since I had posted anything, I should probably come back with something good
for anyone sticking around after (almost) thirteen years of diminishing
returns. The problem was that I had more than a couple good ideas about how to
go about doing so. I worked through each idea in its turn and couldn’t make up
my mind which to use. The original draft of the essay began with far more
modest goals, simply to announce the big news, maybe in passing come up with
something cool and memorable.
Oh, hmmm, I wondered throughout, should I say that? I have a
good idea for a bit about that. I could spin off the Star Wars sections
to their own essay. I could split it up to run over a week. It keeps getting
longer, Jesus. How honest should I be? My mom will probably read this. Everyone
I know could potentially read this. Fuck. I don’t see any way out of just
putting it all up at one gulp. If I cut it up people would try to guess and
given the nature of the revelation that’s not a good idea. I guess if I’m in
for a penny I am in for a pound, I am cutting nothing. I'm playing fair: all the clues will be there right in front of the reader – if
they know what to look for. If you knew the ending, you read with that
awareness. If you didn’t? You had no idea and got to be surprised.
How do you get people to sit through a 6,000 word personal
essay about Star Wars, gender, and suicide? Admittedly it was about Star Wars
only on the surface, gender pervasively but subtly, and suicide – well, yeah,
that’s right there. You turn it into a murder mystery where the reader
gradually discovers that for months they’ve been talking to a dead man.
I used the opportunity to write a coming out essay as an
opportunity to reshape my life. Everything leading up to that fateful evening
of April 30th felt like it could be formed into a story, a life told
in shards, incident and observation all leading inevitably to –
Why am I doing this?
Why am I writing about my life?
It felt remarkably important that I produce something good.
Something that might in some way explain my recent absence. As the essay grew
however it became a means of explaining quite a bit more, years and decades of
regret and uncertainty all leading inexorably towards the kind of
once-in-a-lifetime earth-shattering epiphany that they write about in those
modernist novels on which I’m supposed to be writing a dissertation. It’s
seemed, on a moment’s consideration, that it was actually a remarkable story.
I don’t really get the option of living a private life
anymore. If you know I’m trans you already know my most intimate secret – so secret even I didn't know. I’m also stuck carrying around this corpse of a dude I used to inhabit,
animated for brief moments by the able ventriloquist team of Andrew McCarthy
and Jonathan Silverman. I have been writing either in the pages of the Journal or online in some capacity or
another (most prominently this site) for sixteen years. I have to live with the
fact that it will always be a keystroke away. So – why
the hell not? I have nothing to lose. After the essay goes out? There’s no
putting that genie back, ever. I am what I am. I’m a woman.
- Longtime readers of this blog know that I'm poor. Before I went back to school in 2007 I spent much of the previous decade shuffling around a handful of low-paying, dead-end jobs, getting some degree of satisfaction from working part time as a freelance writer but generally dissatisfied with the shape and direction of my life. In hindsight it's obvious that I had no one to blame for this state of affairs but myself - I made a few precipitous decisions in my early twenties that had great, far-reaching unpleasant consequences. Usually this is the part where someone says, "I made some mistakes but I don't regret anything!" That's bullshit: although I have learned to regard my past with something resembling a sanguine wistfulness (for the necessity of my own fragile mental health, if nothing else), that doesn't mean I don't live every day with a sensation of definite regret hovering somewhere in the vicinity of my conscious thoughts. (Link)
It’s interesting to read old blog posts and see all the urgent warnings my subconscious sent up the flagpole. Descriptions of vague unease abound, the kind of open-ended descriptions that scream across the years for some kind of resolution – “a sensation of definite regret hovering somewhere in the vicinity of my conscious thoughts.” That’s from an essay wrote on November 21st, 2011, soon after the famous incident on the UC Davis quad where student protestors were assaulted by police with year gas. I knew a few of the protestors and had in fact been sitting in class with them earlier in the day, but I was home napping when the incident occurred.
It’s
been a weird year. It’s been a weird decade. It’s been a weird lifetime.
Almost
from the moment I knew I was trans I knew that I would need to one day write a
blog post to explain that fact. I knew that sooner or later I was going to be called to account for my life and to
explain – for my own benefit, if for no one else – just what had happened. It’s
very upsetting to see that your life to date had been
building towards one massive “Shyalaman Twist.” When that happens, everything gets
reevaluated. Everything. Every
incident, relationship, misadventure, success, failure, love, hate, loss . . .
it’s all different now, like it happened to a different person. Which it did,
in more ways than one. Someone else started this blog on January 17th,
2004, and that someone was me but also not and no longer.
We
all change, we’re all changing all the time. Look at a picture of yourself from
the last year, from the last decade. Sure, it’s you, but it’s not. You’ve
changed, too.
- But the image I remember most
from Episode III isn't one of the battles – it's the last shot. Obi-Wan gives
the baby Luke to Owen and Beru and wanders off into the desert. Even after
everything has occurred and Anakin has become Vader, you know that Owen and
Beru are relatively safe because of their connection to Anakin's mother - and
hiding the child with them is the safest choice, the proverbial "hiding in
plain sight". Of course, eventually things change - the Rebellion comes
home after those strange droids are found wandering the desert, and when people
start asking questions about Ben Kenobi everything starts to fall apart and
people die. But that last shot, in the wake of the storm of the Jedis' defeat
and the fall of the Republic - drawing the explicit parallel between Luke's
arrival and later Luke's departure from home at the beginning of Episode IV –
that's the shot the whole prequel trilogy was building to, the bridge between
the past and the present. It's the crux of everything that happened and
everything that will happen - a moment of bittersweet triumph, but a triumph
nonetheless, A New Hope for the future of the Republic cradled in the arms of
his family. It's, basically, the apogee of Star Wars in one single shot, all
the bluster and sentiment, epic scope and cheesy serial origins, the melodrama
and the ham-fisted intellectualizing, the emotional pull of childish nostalgia
and the legitimate gravity of melancholy adolescence. It's all there. (Link)
Coming
out isn’t the hardest thing I’ve ever done, it just isn’t. But it has still
been a long, complex, and exhausting process, a process that isn’t over yet. It
feels like I am dragging my ass when in fact I am going remarkably fast
by any standard. I'm not getting any younger – except for the strange fact that I
am? I feel now younger than I have ever felt. I have found an enthusiasm for
life I could never have imagined possible. The first thing I feel when I wake
up in the morning is no longer regret at being alive.
I
hope it lasts.
Aside
from my dealings with close family, the most critical step of the process of
transition is coming out. You only get to come out once, and I wanted to do it
right. I knew from the very beginning that I would be using the blog to do so.
One reason it’s so long is that I had almost half a year to draft it in my
head. No detail seemed superfluous.
I
knew it had to be good. And I knew it had to be honest. I’ve never lied to you.
Go
back and read my tenth anniversary post. That piece has a good potted history of the blog, such that I probably don’t
need to go over much of the same material again. It’s still accurate. Funny how hindsight plays us for
fools. Much from the my life now reads as perversely ironic.
The
gist is that this blog was started at the lowest point in my life. Literally,
the precise exact lowest moment – nothing since and nothing before comes close
to the despair and helplessness I felt in that moment. I reached out to start a
blog because reading other peoples’ blogs at the time was the only thing that
distracted me from the fact that my life had completely fallen apart and I was
trapped in a terrible situation. And I started The Hurting and that gave me
something to do. Something to look forward to.
Back
when Dirk Deppey shuttered Journalista! 1.0 I spent some time doing heavy
linkblogging myself, just like he had done. I managed a few months until I
realized that doing the job right took multiple hours a day. Even though there
was still a need for a content aggregator in the comics blogosphere, it was too
much for me, and would soon be too much for anyone. The first year of this blog
– as with most blogs – was pretty intense. Lots of writing, lots of talking
back and forth. I answered letters! Remember that? People used to send in
e-mails to my blog and I would reply to them on the blog. What a fucking
concept.
People
who come here, if you’ve come here long enough, know that the reason I have my
own website is that I need a place to write the kind of stuff that literally no
other venue would ever touch. Not just many
thousands of words on Star Wars or Secret Wars or any other kind of fictional
war. When I was in the throes of my divorce in 2005 I even wrote about that on
here, a bit. I was losing my mind so I didn’t stop to think whether or
not I should. I probably shouldn’t have, but I did.
I’ve written about povery, and I’ve written a bit about
politics. There’ve been periods where I talked about music exclusively, periods
where I go in crazy deep on one topic until I’ve completely exhausted it,
probably dozens of abandoned series by now, abandoned due to lack of interest on my part or yours. Now I’ve written about being trans. Will
continue to write about being trans. This site remains what it always has been:
my site. My life. And I’ve
never lied to you.
- Things weren't supposed to be this way. I quite college after my first year partly because I wanted to become a writer - a real, professional writer. (That wasn't the only reason, but it was what I told myself.) I worked at it - maybe not as hard as I could have, but I did. I wrote stories that were never bought. I wrote a few novels that were never published. I didn't realize until many years later that I had done the absolute worst thing to myself I could have done if i honestly wanted to make it as a writer: you can't write anything good at the age of twenty, and the effort will instill terrible bad habits that can take years to break. You just don't know anything. I never sold a novel, although I can at least say I got as far as a couple agents reading my books before deciding not to follow-up. (Link)
So what’s the takeaway?
I’ve thanked a lot of people, expressed my gratitude in many
different ways for the many things people do for me every day. I now believe
that being helpful to others is the most important thing we can do. I spend a
lot of time helping people, although you probably don’t see it unless you’re in
the trans community. I help people outside the community, too, don’t get me
wrong – but that’s where much of my attention is, and will likely remain fixed,
for the foreseeable future.
Much
of the past 2/3 of a year has been spent being considerate of others. For
all the major people and activities in my life, I’ve had to formulate a
strategy of disclosure that would accomplish my goals of (heh) a peaceful and
orderly transition. I’ve spent a lot of time thanking people, which I like to
do more often now, as I think it’s very important to express gratitude however
and whenever possibly. It’s easy to avoid saying “thank you,” but it pays
significant dividends. Smile when you do it.
So it’s time for me to thank someone else.
Thank you.
When I posted my coming out letter on October 11th
(National Coming Out Day, the link to which I obviously could not advertise in advance and
still keep the secret a secret), I had no idea what to expect. I had told a few
people in advance – basically, if I told you in advance of that date, you’re
someone I trust and someone I knew would have my back. But the reaction? No
clue. I had an idea that I’d get some positive reactions and maybe it might
cause a ripple in the corner of the comics world where my name still carries
some small currency. Maybe.
Early in the morning on that day I pressed publish on the
most important essay I have ever written. I made a Doctor Who joke (“It is the end, but the moment has been prepared
for”) and threw a match to light the bonfire of my life. I left social media
for the rest of the day – the longest I’d been off Twitter in years. I didn’t
want to know what was happening. I had a couple agents report back that
everything was going well, the reaction was positive. I wasn’t too worried. But
every time I’d peek at the website the comments section grew bigger. My Inbox
was filled with e-mails. I got DMs from people I hadn’t spoke to in years. People
I barely remembered, but who remembered me.
All told, hundreds of people reached out to express their
support and love in one of the most stressful moments of my entire life. I
can’t reply to everyone individually, I just can’t, and I'm sorry. There’s too many of you,
and too many wonderful, heartfelt comments. It was too much. Too much
positivity shut down my system just as cleanly as too much negativity. I got spooked, overwhelmed. Could not process.
How do you react to something like that? What do you do the
morning after the world – or at least your
world, your friends, your peers, colleagues, and coworkers – come together
to tell you not just that you are appreciated, but that you are loved and
respected and considered important by hundreds of people across the world whose faces you have never seen?
- I've been reading comics for almost as long as I've been alive - literally, some of my very first memories are buying Batman comics on family car trips and staring at them in my car seat. I study, write about, and teach literature for a living. If I don't have at least some ability to judge the aesthetic merits of a comic book after all this time, then I honestly don't know who does: there's my sense of entitlement for you. I write a comic book blog with a 9 1/2 year paper trail - you can look back through the archives and find every stupid thing I ever wrote, every creator I ever needlessly antagonized, every sweeping generalization I popped off and then painfully retracted. I know a few things about how comic books work. (Link
When I wrote above that, “the most critical step of the process of transitioning is coming
out,” I wasn’t exaggerating, at least for me. My life changed on the
evening of April 30th, but it also changed on October 11th.
Because that’s the day every last illusion I still held regarding my old life was
shattered into a thousand pieces.
I believed that I was forgotten. I was a name that appeared
in a pile of old issues of The Comics
Journal, another in a long line of asshole bloggers who came online to
bloviate about superheroes and rock music. I had a few people I knew who liked
my work and always spread the links around – you know who you are, because I’ve
thanked you in person. But I didn’t think anyone cared.
I was a spent force. I was exhausted. I was a blogger who
didn’t blog, a writer who didn’t write, a critic who stopped caring years ago
about “good” and “bad.” My site was a ghost town, surely just two steps away
from that final, irrevocable concluding post, you know the one – “well, it’s been a while since I posted
last, but . . .” I’m sure there were a few of you expecting to find that on
October 11th.
And then suddenly, in an instant, I wasn’t any of those
things. I wrote a 6,000 word coming out letter that went semi-viral. It ended
up on Metafilter, and especial thanks to Martin Wisse for that gift unasked.
What was the final tally for the piece?
As of 01/17/17 |
Almost 11K.
There were two things that made me realize that the essay maybe was pretty good after all, against all my low-self-esteem-fueled
expectations:
One, the essay circulated for an eternity on the internet –
at least a day – without anyone on social media giving away the ending. Think
about that: people actually read it, and the reason I know they read it is that
they knew how important preserving the final twist actually was.
Two, the essay continued to circulate, via Twitter and
Metafilter, among people who didn’t know me from Adam or, heh, Eve. I expected
people I knew to be kind, but I wasn’t expecting total strangers to say things
like:
That’s just a sample. All those people I never knew, pulled
together by the intense emotional experience of reading me talk about Star
Wars.
What do you even say
to something like that?
- Even after everything has fallen apart, there is still life enough to fill a universe, hope enough to rage forever against the brutality and ignorance of the worst evils. (Link)
In 2016 I learned that everything I thought I had known
about myself had been a lie, and then a few months later the same thing
happened again.
I truly believed that I had no talent. I truly believed that
my effectively quitting writing in 2007 was a good thing, and that getting “realistic”
about my limitations as a writer was necessary and important. I truly believed
no one but a few nerds here and there even remembered who I was. I truly
believed I was better off teaching writing than actually writing.
And then, after October 11th, I learned that all
of this was rubbish. The lesson came abruptly, violently, and without any
possibility of appeal. There was just no way for me to get around the fact that
every ounce of low self esteem I had cherished over the years, every argument
and critique and dismissal, every enemy I had made and every monumentally stupid
and ill-informed opinion I published had not, in fact, made me a pariah.
I still don’t know how it happened. I don’t know where 10,794
clicks came from. I don’t know where all these people who remembered my writing
and remembered me were hiding. All the people who must have read the essay and urged it on to their friends, family, and coworkers. I had no good answer, I have no good answer, and there is no possible
way to spin the situation from an unflattering angle. People liked the essay.
They liked me. They like me. You like
me.
What a world.
- Those of you who have been
reading this blog for a long time might be thinking that I've gone soft in my
old age. I mean, this blog used to provide at least a modicum of comic culture
commentary, now it's just leftfield indie reviews buffeted by weird photoshop
projects. I can definitely see why I may have slipped down a notch from the
ring of "A-List" bloggers -- not that I'm bitter, no. You kids today,
with your Dave's Long Box and your When Fangirls Attack. Why I remember when
all we had was Neilalien, and a rock, and sometimes when we were really lucky
Neilalien would link to the rock and it would make a hollow "ponk"
sound like someone tapping a coconut with their finger. (Link)
I
will begin by thanking the person I always thank first; he who must always be thanked first in any lineup of
comics bloggers. Neilalien “retired” years ago but you wouldn’t know it from
his website, still your best one-stop-shop for Dr. Strange news. He was the first of us, and in many ways the best of us. The
earliest community of comics bloggers was composed of people who either knew
Neil or had been helped by Neil. He doesn’t get a lot of credit for the
behind-the-scenes stuff he did to keep other peoples’ blogs working. I
know because he used to give me technical help in the earliest days, and I’m
not the only one. He cares about blogging, really cares about the medium in a
way that was inspirational to every single one of us “foundational” comics
bloggers who first congregated around Journalista! 1.0 way back in the day. Thank you, Neil.
Mike Sterling is one of a handful of people named in my coming out essay. He was a
good friend before I came out to him, and I believe he was the first person
outside my immediate family to whom I came out. The reason why is that he is
the kindest person I know, an opinion that has only been reinforced a hundred
times since then. When it was time to announce my new name publicly, I asked
him to do it on his blog because it’s the one place I know where our old
community still comes together. He makes it look easy, even if it isn’t. I’m
happy to report that I’ve been three times to Sterling Silver Comics, and each
time the store has looked more prosperous – more stock and more customers. I
sincerely hope it will remain so for many years and decades to come. Thank you,
Mike.
Bully the Little Stuffed Bull – and his pal John, of course
– is someone I have grown to care about a great deal over the years. His site
is the kind of site you used to see all over the place: knowledgeable, funny,
with a distinctive editorial voice and a seemingly inexhaustible supply of
comic book trivia. It’s also extraordinarily labor intensive, such that it is a
rare visit to Bully’s site when I don’t marvel to myself, “how the hell does he
find all the time in the day?” I am glad Bully exists and believe he serves a
necessary function in our lives: no matter how bad or weird or unpleasant
things get, Bully is always there to remind us that comics oughta be fun. It’s
been a rough few months for Bully, just like all of us. I’ll always
remember when I first saw his little ear peaking out of the dresser drawer
where he’d gone to hide out from the world after the election – that’s the
first time in those awful first weeks of this Brave New World I felt a surge of
real hope. If a little stuffed bull can find it within himself to face the
world, what excuse do I have? Thank you, Bully.
A younger blogger, but one who has become very dear to me in
the last few months, Odai Quaye has already distinguished himself for his
thoughtful and perceptive writing. He did me the ultimate honor a little while
ago by actually writing something about me! I didn’t have the words to thank
him for such a kind gesture, and I still don’t. The idea that someone, anyone,
would think enough of my writing to see me as an actual influence – I could
never have imagined that. I anticipate a bright future for him. Odai, my
friend: things will improve with time and perspective. I know that sucks to
hear, but the best thing you can do is just start writing now and never stop.
Then by the time the perspective arrives, you will have the necessary skill to
use it. You will have to write a million bad words before you will be able to
write something you are proud of, but trust me, you’ll get there. Please look
at all the bullshit I’ve done over the last fifteen years and avoid those
mistakes – go make your own. Thank you, Odai.
- I don't have anything particularly thoughtful or poignant to say, so I'll just say thanks to everyone who reads, and thanks to everyone who doesn't read; thanks to everyone, period. Extra special thanks to every other blogger in the world. So I'll just put out a blanket thank-you to everyone, even the people I hate or find annoying, because hey, we're all one big happy family. (Link)
Looking back at my life I realize I haven’t always done a
good job supporting the people who supported me. Milo George is the first
person in a position of power at any publication who liked my writing. Hell, I
don’t even know if he liked it so much as he liked the fact that I usually turn in
relatively clean copy, even if I’m usually also (always) late on my deadlines. It’s
been over a decade since you worked at The
Journal, but you’ll always be the only editor I ever had who I respected
enough to let monkey with my copy and not feel huffy about it. You were also a
good friend back in the dark days of 2004-2005, a period that I believe was
very difficult for you as well. Your life has improved considerably since The
Long Road Home, and I regret that we don’t talk much any more, but you were one
of the earliest and most vocal supporters of this blog. Thank you, Milo.
I have in the past thanked the two patron saints of this
blog, Abhay Khosla and Jon Morris (including being mentioned in The Essay), so
I don’t think I need to say more other than to say I still consider you both to
be far better writers than myself and remain profoundly humbled by every
compliment you have thrown my way. You two don’t have much in common other than the
fact that I always thank you both in the same breath – hell, I don’t even know
if you even like each other. But you were both formative influences on me as a
writer, and that has not changed in the decade-and-a-half-ish since I first
discovered Title Bout and Gone and Forgotten. Thank you both.
Of all the blogs I follow and all the bloggers I feel
privileged to know, Andrew Weiss is in a class by himself. The writing I’m
doing now is something I picked up from reading your example: confessional essays
structured around pop-culture musings, personal memories accreted around music
or comics or TV shows that open up little windows into scenes from our lives. Sure,
you’re not the first person to do it. But in our little corner of the
blogosphere there is no one quite so uncompromising or unflinchingly honest.
You’re also a walking bullshit detector, and one of the few people I pay
attention to when you call me out on something (which has happened a few times and will
surely happen again, me being me). And you’re funny, too, when you want to be,
as well as being the only person who can make me care about video games just by
describing some badly localized 30-year-old JRPG that had a limited print run
on the Sega Master System. Thank you, Andrew.
I am going to officially label Tucker Stone as my #1 fan. I
thought about embarrassing you by putting up one of your early gushing e-mails to me, but suffice it to
say they exist, I have them, and you better not piss me off. You gave me
without necessarily even realizing it the great gift of being my closest
reader. You read what I write and you actually think about it. You give it the
exact same weight and consideration as you do anything else you read (and you
read quite a bit). Sometimes you tell me things about my writing that I didn’t even know. I would also like to
state, publicly and for the record, that if you ever published TV of the Weak
again, I’d drop everything else to once again write about Grey’s Anatomy for you. Thank you, Tucker.
I don’t have space to fully thank everyone I want to thank.
If I didn’t thank you here, it’s not because I don’t love you, but because this
is a list of the bloggers and writers who, knowingly or not, helped me on my
way to thirteen fucking years of erratic bullshit, AKA The Hurting. There are
tons of Twitter pals who have excelled over the years in showing their
appreciation and support – Cormac, Mario, and Cole spring to mind, although if
memory serves me well I believe you all got started as commenters on my site. Jog
– Joe McCulloch – you’re the dean of our generation of comics writers, and the
respect I have for you based on your limitless font of knowledge and enthusiasm
about the medium is pretty much unequaled. Justin - we'll be seeing more of each other in the coming years, I'm fairly certain. Megan – well, I’ve thanked you
elsewhere but I’ll say it again: you were his good friend but my great friend.
To all the comics industry figures who forgot about me over
the years, well, that’s OK, I kind of forgot about myself too. Still, after writing
a long coming out essay with a lengthy digression about the history of comics
criticism over the last couple decades, it was interesting to see on whose
radar I still registered. I burnt some bridges over the years and that’s not
always something that you can fix with one well-timed personal revelation. Oh
well. I’ll get ‘em next time.
- I'm not living in a garret
yet, but I haven't had a shower in over a month, we have no heat besides space
heaters (during the coldest New England weather in decades, no less), this
house is falling apart, our life is falling apart and my wife is in the
hospital. Again. What keeps us going? Besides our love (which is something that
I am certain you do not wish to hear about [fucking ha ha ha I say from 2016]) it’s a dogged belief that life matters, that its important to keep
living and keep striving. This is not where I thought I'd be at this point in
my life and for this I am grateful. Pain and turmoil can only make us stronger,
can only strengthen our commitment to those things in life that do matter. (Link.)
I
began the year a mess, on a downward spiral, eating myself to oblivion and
content to let every important thing in my life slip away. My blogging output
in that time was epic Tweetstorms about the Joel Schumacher Batman movies –
yeah, I watched those a couple weeks before I figured out I was trans, so draw
the line yourself. I think, in hindsight, that this was the work of someone who
was on the way to losing their mind.
(But,
you know, they’re still funny: here’s Batman Forever and Batman & Robin. I
did one for Superman Returns but I found that movie so depressing – and it was
literally the day before April 30th – that I do not want to revisit
that moment in time or that headspace, ever.)
I
ended the year – well, a woman, for one thing.
But
also somehow 1/3 of the way into writing a book?
It’s
been quiet for the last couple months but I am already resuming work on the
next chapters. Between the election, the end of the academic quarter, the
holidays, a trip to LA in December, and of course, the stress of coming out and
getting ready to live publicly as a woman, there wasn’t a lot of writing time.
But that changes – well, now. Life won’t wait.
For
those who may have come in late, I have written five chapters of something that
will end up as a series of essays about my life. It’s not a “memoir,” let alone
a “trans memoir” – there are already enough of those. It’s just my life. I’m trying to
come up with a dozen sequels to “One Hundred and Sixty Four Days” – maybe
that’s a fool’s game given the response that one received, but I still have to
try.
I do
think “Gimme Some Truth” is a better-written essay even if the emotional
connection may well be more recondite for most readers. I wrote that one for
all the folks who stood by me all those years when my output was little
more than the occasional dribble. If you’ve been following me long enough to
develop a taste for my writing, this one is for you. I purposefully eased the safety brake on all
the wonky shit that I sometimes try to minimize for a more general audience –
so that was one for the Tuckers in the audience.
“I Am Not A Good Person” got a good response from people who recognized themselves
in my own self-hatred – a surprising amount of people. “Trifles, Light As Air”
is about Donald Duck, Carl Barks, and failure. The election happened halfway
through the writing thereof, so if you detect a bit of a response to Current
Events it’s probably not a coincidence. Speaking of which, “Someday We Will AllBe Free” is not an essay I wanted to wrote nor believed I would need to. But it was
necessary to find some hope in the midst of a very hopeless time.
I
even managed to set up a Patreon – and don’t think the money isn’t greatly
appreciated, and even if you only contribute a dollar, that’s one more dollar
than I had yesterday. It also makes me feel accountable: people are actually
waiting to get what they paid for. Best get on the stick.
- The only possible reason you
would have to be blogging about comics in the first place is the fact that you
have a special interest in comics above other arts. In all seriousness, why
would you bother writing about comics if you didn’t really care for them and about them, or liked them far less than
you did, say, movies or novels? Why not just write about movies or novels or
poetry or pottery or whatever, if that’s what holds your interest?
So the assumption is that if you’re writing about comics at all – especially with the low signal to noise ratio inherent to the medium and the extremely low rewards involved – you must hold comics in a special place in your heart. If not, well, why bother? (Link)
Some
of you may be wondering how long this website will continue. I used to toy with the
idea of shuttering it, especially during one of the periodic low points, but I
never actually pulled the trigger. There was always something that held me back
from lowering the curtain. And now, look at that. Long after almost every blog
that started thirteen years ago has shuttered, I’m still around – why?
I
think the answer can be found in the fact that as soon as I knew I was trans, I
knew it was something I’d end up writing about on The Hurting. I knew that I
needed to eventually write something to make sense of . . . everything . . . and I needed a place to
put it. Why not here?
There were times when my connection to this blog were stretched so thin as to almost break, but I’ve always come back. If I’m down on comics I write about music, and if I’m down on music I write about movies. I always need to be writing, and I’m not very happy when I’m not. But I also needed to disabuse myself of the idea that I would eventually return to daily-or-near-daily posting and linkblogging – something I think about time to time and beat myself up for not being able to do like I used to. Mike still does it, and he does it better than I ever could.
This
site is . . . well, it’s home. I’ve moved a lot. I’ve had different jobs,
different relationships. Lived all over Massachusetts and California. (Lived in
Oklahoma for a couple years there, too, but that was in the days before this
blog). Was married, didn’t take. All throughout I’ve kept the same ugly (and my
god is it ugly) orange blogger template, the very same template I set up on
that fateful day thirteen years ago. I’ll never change it. (I changed it once – to white text against a black
background. Heidi MacDonald specifically singled it out as ugly and difficult
to read, which was cool.)
I
can no more get rid of this blog than I could cut off a part of my body. It’s
who I am. It’s a mess, irregular, erratic opinionated, digressive,
hyper-verbose to a repulsive degree, insular, poorly coded (I mean, I let dead
links pile up in the sidebar for years between cleanings),
sometimes simply infuriating. Just like its owner. But also just like its
owner, there’s something here that keeps people coming back year after the
year, long after most similar websites have faded into the digital dust. I need to stop questioning it. I
stick around. I’m still here. I’m still alive.
If
you’re still reading? Thank you, sincerely. I don’t know what I did to deserve the
things this blog has brought me – the friends I have made, the colleagues I
have connected with, the violent arguments and the terrible jokes. The one
constant remains a devotion to comics trivia that manages to be as scattershot
as it is far-reaching.
I
don’t know what the next year, what the next five or thirteen or thirty will
hold. It’s a weird time to be alive. But I am optimistic. I am always
optimistic these days. I have a new lease on life, and that’s no hyperbole. In
the last eight months I have begun the process of changing everything in my life,
and will continue to change my life until it is eventually
unrecognizable. There is always continuity,
though, and for me the form this continuity takes is The Hurting, my home and
my heart.
Sometimes
I’m gone for months. Sometimes I post three times in a week. I’m happy where I
am now – periodic serious essays and maybe, once I establish more of a rhythm
in the new year, other updates as well. I don’t know. The Hurting has no other
function than to reflect my life and my thoughts, and as those change the site
will continue to change as well.
But
whatever happens, don’t worry about me coming back, eventually.
I
always have, and I always will.
The feeling is mutual, Tegan.
ReplyDeleteI recall following back one of your Fanboy Rampage comments to the site, saw shelter animals and that you were MA-based at the time, then added you to my bookmarks.
I'm glad I did.
I feel that if it were possible i could gush about this
ReplyDeletebut the most i can honestly say is
holy shit thank you
In an Internet where many people are wary of even giving out their (actual) first name, this is awe-inspiring.
ReplyDeleteCongratulations on all you have achieved with your year and your writing.
Happy blogiversary, and many more!
ReplyDeleteYou're a swell cat, Tegan.
ReplyDeleteI am absolutely touched by the so-very nice things you have said about me, Tegan. I will strive to continue to bring the fun!
ReplyDeleteHappy Blogoversary, and many many more!
I'm one of the folks you don't know who commented on the October post, Tegan. I said it then and I'll say it again: your blog has long been a favorite of mine, even if I haven't commented much (or at all?) in the past. I'd dip in and out, catching up on months of posts at a time, just living inside your words and finding myself thinking about things in new and exciting ways after each visit here. Your blog was most definitely one of the most important influences on own blog when I started it almost two years ago. Not to say we write similarly, just that you're style--brutally honest and endearingly self-effacing, among other qualities--is one I've always striven for myself. Years ago when I discovered your blog I though, "Ah! A kindred spirit."
ReplyDeleteSo, thank you for all you've written and will continue to write. As an avid follower of the AV Club's comics coverage (I comment quite a bit over there, in fact), I always love seeing your work there, too. I wish you the best with this twelve part series, and beyond, of course.
Loved your writing when we knew you as Tim, will continue to love it as we know you as Tegan. You, Tucker Stone, and Abhay Kol...Kolsahs...Abhay K. are my favorite past-and-present writers on the form of comics without a doubt.
ReplyDelete