Jump to content
  • Welcome to the TransPulse Forums!

    We offer a safe, inclusive community for transgender and gender non-conforming folks, as well as their loved ones, to find support and information.  Join today!

Untitled


Guest Liam H

Recommended Posts

Guest Liam H

[ Not strictly a poem, but I didn't know where else to post it. A short story for my literature class. First draft, feedback appreciated.]

STUDENT FILE No. 8462

MISS ALEXANDRA MOORE

THIS FILE IS PRIVATE AND CONFIDENTIAL

11th of January, 2003 – Entrance interview with Headmaster.

“Miss Moore is a troubled young lady, she is very shy, but polite and intelligent. The majority of the interview was standard, but a few answers stood out. When asked what she thought the school could help her to achieve, she said that she could not provide an answer. When further prompted, and asked what she wanted from the future, she replied – politely enough – that she was sorry, but she really couldn't see herself in it. She seemed uncomfortable and even a little distressed throughout, which is somewhat strange in an eleven year old. She avoided eye contact and often we sat in silence for long moments. She seemed uncomfortable at being addressed, no matter what question followed. However, I believe these issues are a consequence of shyness, and will be resolved as she finds herself in the coming year within our school.”

ACTION SUGGESTED: None.

“Year sixes, line up please!”

Two lines of students, one of boys and one of girls, assembled outside the classroom for roll call. The first school day of the year, and they buzzed with gossip and laughter, and openly stared at the new students. Clean and awkward, Alex stood in the despised blue and white dress and shiny black shoes of the new uniform. The lines of children broke ranks, and Alex disappeared in the fray of moving pupils, trying to hide amidst the throng of bodies, feeling out of place. The roll had been marked, and the thought of seven years in this place felt like a prison sentence.

Physical Education class would prove to be the best and worst that the school could offer. Standing outside the change-rooms, staring between the two doors opposite each other, Alex was struck with indecision. The thought of changing was uncomfortable, but a teacher looked on.

“Quickly please, Alexandra.”

Skittish and shy, Alex fled in shock through one of the doors, and passed the pair of girls plaiting their hair in front of the mirrors. Stopping just ahead of the door to the main changing area, Alex turned and went instead into a bathroom stall. Changing here would be more comfortable. After all, the tracksuit pants and loose red sports shirt was much better than that dress. It would be changing back that was difficult.

The class made their way down to the oval, running and laughing. Feeling less trapped, Alex joined in an impromptu game of tag with the boys, sprinting back and forth until they were called to order. Perhaps things mattered less when you were allowed to run. With that in mind, when they were told to run laps for warm up, Alex sped ahead and led the pack, free as the others tried to keep pace. Perhaps things would be okay here. But the lesson ended, and the sense of freedom went away. The blue and white dress and shiny black shoes demanded their place, and the roll would be called again. The days would blend together, divided between the dress and the tracksuit; between being carefree and being caged.

Months went by, and the feelings only got more extreme. Undercurrents of doubt twisting through the shy half smile and constant silence. It never slowed Alex down, it simply gave rise to the irreconcilable sense that something was deeply wrong. But without any sense of what that could be, the only solution was to keep moving.

By October, Alex was twelve years old. The school was preparing the class for their graduation to high school, to their indoctrination to the world of the teenager. In honouring this stage in their lives, the school arranged personal development classes; classes on drugs and alcohol, on cigarettes, on sex. As one teacher led the boys from the class away, Alex's throat felt tighter and tighter. As they explained the rights and wrongs of puberty and human physicality, the pressure only became worse. At morning break, there was only one thing to do. Alex went to the change-rooms, pulled on the loose red shirt and the tracksuit pants, and traded the shiny black shoes for battered old runners. Rain was pouring hard outside, and thunder scared most of the students to stay indoors. That only made things more simple. By the time the bell sounded for class to resume, Alex was gone.

STUDENT FILE No. 8462

MISS ALEXANDRA MOORE

THIS FILE IS PRIVATE AND CONFIDENTIAL

11th of October, 2003: Disciplinary Meeting.

“On the ninth of this month at around 10 AM, Miss Moore ran away from school, and was found several hours later at a playground. She had mild hypothermia due to the extreme weather, but still resisted attempts to be taken either home, to school, or to the hospital. This is a disturbing event, as she is not normally a difficult student, and has no record of skipping class. She was highly distressed, even to the point of illness. While I believe it is unnecessary to punish her this time, I have scheduled time for her each week with the school councilor. It seems she has issues which are affecting her ability to happily attend school. Ideally, I would hope that it can be resolved before she moves on into high school.”

ACTION SUGGESTED: Appointments with school councilor.

Alex lay in bed, staring through tear stained eyes at the blue slip of paper resting on the chest of drawers. Picking it up and stumbling towards the mirror, Alex read the time and date on it and felt the unease stirring. Tomorrow morning. Glancing from the paper to the mirror, the feeling only deepened. They would want explanations of things that there were simply no words for. Critical eyes observed the too-long hair, the blue and white dress, the black shoes which now were scuffed and worn. The cheekbones which were too high, the hands which were too soft. The frightening new contours forming across the chest.

The horrible feeling became a physical kind of pain. A kind of sickness – the hidden anguish of a beaten, trapped creature. Losing the battle again, Alex cried. Silently, because there was simply nothing to say. How can a frightened twelve year old explain having no idea what was happening to him?

Link to comment
  • 1 month later...
Guest CariadsCarrot

Awesome piece of writing Liam. I can so identify with Alex even though I wasn't consciously acknowledging my gender issues at that age. I especially love the way you've avoided all gender pronouns in the descriptive parts until right at the end which gives the 'him' more of a punch even though you suspect it's coming.

Link to comment
  • 1 month later...
Guest Sotha

Very well written. I can also identify with his feelings, even though it was the opposite for me. I couldn't stand P.E.

I really liked the segments of changed perspective, the Administrative notes. They did well to break up the story, and show the ignorance of the outer world.

Katie

Link to comment
Guest Avery F

WOW. Fantastic story, man. Not only are your spelling and grammar actually good (which is fairly unusual in this day and age), but the way you didn't use pronouns to describe Alex until the end, not counting the 'student file' notes, really added to the impact. Do you post writing on any websites or in magazines?

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Who's Online   2 Members, 0 Anonymous, 185 Guests (See full list)

    • MaybeRob
    • Betty K
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.7k
    • Total Posts
      768.6k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,031
    • Most Online
      8,356

    jacobb
    Newest Member
    jacobb
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. Adele Svetova
      Adele Svetova
      (25 years old)
    2. BROOKSGLASS
      BROOKSGLASS
      (34 years old)
    3. FinnyFinsterHH
      FinnyFinsterHH
      (16 years old)
    4. fool4luv
      fool4luv
      (26 years old)
    5. itsaddison
      itsaddison
      (20 years old)
  • Posts

    • atlantis63
      thanks. good to be back
    • Carolyn Marie
      https://www.cnn.com/2024/04/27/politics/lgbtq-health-care-biden-administration-rules-affordable-care-act/index.html   Personally, I think this is a very good thing.   Carolyn Marie
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      I'd love to have a dinner party with Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, Voltaire, and Ayn Rand.  Would definitely be an interesting time. 
    • Abigail Genevieve
      In the forward I learn that transgenderism is bad, and somewhere else that transgender ideology is bad.  I have not yet read a definition of either in the document.  I assume they are the same.  I know Focus on a Family has a definition of transgenderism on their website, or did, but I am not sure this is the same as that.  I might agree that transgenderism is bad if they use a definition I condemn (e.g. transgenderism means you always pour ketchup in your shoes before you put them on - I could not agree to that).  Is someone who believes in transgenderism, whatever it is, a transgenderist? I never see that term.  There may be other definitions out there, but I don't think there is an Official Definition that we all agree to.
    • RaineOnYourParade
      Crazy fact, was gonna go to the school where this went down at before I moved, have a lot of friends there. I know at least one of my friends met the guy on one occasion, not knowing who it was.
    • Abigail Genevieve
      They are thinking of Loudon.  The problem there was the girls were not protected from a known predator, who was moved from one school to another instead being effectively disciplined.  Outlaw school administrators? <sarc>
    • Abigail Genevieve
      How ironic.  I agree with the governor "“You cannot change your gender; you cannot pick your gender…there is a confused group of people that somehow think you can,”    - we are what we are, we are fighting the fact we CANNOT change our gender, which we did not pick.  Many if not all of us would not have picked a trans condition and have sought to evade, deny or move out or resolve it anyway we can.  Those who are confused on this issue are not trans folk.  They want us to change our gender but they deny we can.  Confusion.  
    • Vidanjali
      @FinnyFinsterHH no one can satisfy your questions about what will the future hold. But I can advise you to slow your mind down as much as you're able. Take it slow and one moment at a time. This advice goes beyond the practical reality that that's truly all you can do - further, try to enjoy each moment. It's clear you have a lot of aspirations regarding transition. But it's best to try to accept the bounds of your life circumstances at present because if you develop worries or even resentments about them, that will only make you bitter and more anxious. Instead, try to focus on anything you find affirming. Practice positive self-talk and give yourself affirmations too. Try to let go of expectations of your family members - they can only deal with change to the capacity they're able due to their own life conditions. Allow them grace as you wish they would allow you. Practice patience.   Try this exercise - read through your post and make one list of the positive developments and another of things you cannot control (including the future). If you have a sense of spirituality, offer the second list as a sacrifice to however you understand a higher power - leave it in their hands. If you're not spiritual, then offer it up to hope. Then throw that list away. Keep the list of positives and leave some room on it because guaranteed you'll have more and more to add. Look forward to that, but don't let your mind think it can rush things. Try to enjoy the ride. 
    • Vidanjali
      Happy birthday, Sam! Lotsa love!
    • Abigail Genevieve
      I still have not read much of this.  Very little of this document pertains to trans folk.  Some of the statements are more than problematic concerning trans folk.   It certainly was not written just to get us.   " those with gender dysphoria should be expelled from military service."  and "Reverse policies that allow transgender individuals to serve in the military. Gender dysphoria is incompatible with the demands of military service,"  https://static.project2025.org/2025_MandateForLeadership_CHAPTER-04.pdf are two lines out of hundreds if not thousands regarding the Department of Defense, targeting trans folk in an almost off-hand manner.    So if a fighter pilot, say, or a ship's captain, highly experienced and trained at enormous expense, is determined to be transgender (method unknown) the US loses someone badly needed due to the personnel shortage who is ready, willing and able to perform their duties.  Many trans folk have served well and transitioned later.  I don't think this point is well thought out.    A number of policy recommendations I would disagree with.  I am not sure there is a method to discuss those with the authors; I am attempting to find out.  I have good conservative creds.    They are fully intending to implement this, regardless of who the president is, as long as that president is conservative. It is not Trump centered.  I don't think he had anything to do with it. 
    • April Marie
      I wear a Delimira Mastectomy sleep bra with Vollence sleep rated breast forms. The form fit inside pockets so they don't touch your skin. I bought the bras on Amazon and found the forms on eBay. They were much less expensive than buying through the other sources. 
    • Ashley0616
      I wore an olive corduroy coverall dress with a navy blue shirt underneath. 
    • Ashley0616
      @LittleSamCongratulations on one of the biggest decisions. Looking forward to your progress. 
    • Ivy
      I don't wear a bra to bed.  The girls aren't big enough to need it, but still enough to appreciate.  Just a flannel nightgown suits me fine.
    • Ashley0616
      You're welcome. I'm here quite often if you need me. 
  • Upcoming Events

Contact TransPulse

TransPulse can be contacted in the following ways:

Email: Click Here.

To report an error on this page.

Legal

Your use of this site is subject to the following rules and policies, whether you have read them or not.

Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
DMCA Policy
Community Rules

Hosting

Upstream hosting for TransPulse provided by QnEZ.

Sponsorship

Special consideration for TransPulse is kindly provided by The Breast Form Store.
×
×
  • Create New...