#and yeah i feel this way about being trans sometimes

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inkskinned:

it’s the levels of scrutiny too.

a movie that has a largely-female cast has to be well-written, well-shot, well-acted, well-advertised. people will spend 2 hours on youtube talking about a single plot hole; about a moment of bad pacing, about a singular background character’s poor scripting. if there isn’t something obvious, they will say - well there’s nothing specifically bad, but it wasn’t specifically good either.

they will turn out another all-male movie, and it’s just a movie.

a book that has queer representation in it has to defy every convention of writing while also being true to traditional plot, structure, format, and pacing. it must have no boring chapters, no missteps, no awkward dialogue. it must be able to “prove” that any queer relationship “makes sense”, their sparks must fly off the page and their love must be eternal. the writing must be clear and beautiful, the storyline original and fresh, the values traditional but with an undercurrent that is modern and saucy.

they will turn out another book without queer rep, where a man and woman just-fall-in-love, and it’s just a book.

i am latinx. i am queer. i am nb & neurodivergent. my father said to me once: you will need to be exceptional to be just-as-good, and you will need to be beyond exceptional before they see you as just-a-person, and not your labels.

i am not beyond exceptional. i am a human person. i am skilled because i worked my ass off to be skilled.

i am currently reading a book that’s so-bad-it’s-good about a girl that falls in love with a vampire. i was 64% of the way through the book before she figures out tall-dark-fanged is not natural. i like books like these, i like letting myself relax while i just enjoy the read. but i do spend a lot of time wondering - would this have been published if it was about queer people? would this have gotten past the editors if the characters weren’t white and sexy?

i want to write a movie about being a woman in a male space, and i want to start that movie with a 10 minute scene where the woman is lectured with the exact same whining that occurs in the youtube comments of even the trailers for those movies: “haven’t we had enough diversity?” “we’ve had enough girl power movies” “sorry, this is just pandering. it’s boring.”

here’s what’s fucked up: it shouldn’t matter, you’re right. my identity shouldn’t fold after my name like a battalion of stars: a cry of what i’ve gone through. what we all know i had to move past and through. i should just be a writer, plain and simple, without my work being shifted through with tweezers - i know everything i make, always, i am incredibly responsible for. beholden to. i don’t like knowing that if i fuck up, i am also fucking up for every person like me. every person in a community i belong to.

once, back in undergrad, i wrote a short story about a girl who had been kicked by a horse. it was my first time writing about my experience with my ocd; i felt proud of it. the story was mostly about grief and slow recovery. the queerness of the main character was not important to the plot, my main character was just-queer. there wasn’t even a romantic interest in it.

i remember one of my classmates being disappointed. “i just feel like you always write about girls who like girls, and i’m bored of it,” he said. “you’re a beautiful writer, but i’m like - oh, at some point, it’s gonna be gay again.” during the workshop, he folded his hands over my story and said, “and okay, i’m just going to say it. she’s ocd, she’s gay, she’s depressed - it’s a little much for me to believe is all happening to one person.”

it is a little much to be that person (and more besides). i have therapy weekly, after all.

over and over, belonging to exception.

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