From: M. Taylor Saotome-Westlake Date: Wed, 4 Jan 2023 06:49:43 +0000 (-0800) Subject: Nevada annotations X-Git-Url: http://534655.efjtl6rk.asia/source?a=commitdiff_plain;h=55d90e01cd1c5d2cefb4f42bdb3ded39ff9121db;p=Ultimately_Untrue_Thought.git Nevada annotations I didn't think I was going to get around to writing a Nevada review, but I realized I did want to mention it in my memoir (as one of the earlier clues in my 2016 Blanchpilling), and just dumping my annotations is easier than writing a proper review of a book in which nothing happens. The double-underline CSS is not working, but maybe I'll try poking at it again later. --- diff --git a/content/drafts/book-review-nevada.md b/content/drafts/book-review-nevada.md index f109207..30479bf 100644 --- a/content/drafts/book-review-nevada.md +++ b/content/drafts/book-review-nevada.md @@ -1,15 +1,15 @@ -Title: Book Review: Nevada +Title: Selected Annotations I Wrote in the Margins of My Copy of Imogen Binnie's Nevada Date: 2020-01-01 Category: commentary Tags: autogynephilia, review (book) Status: draft -> You sound so innocent -> All full of good intent -> You swear you know best -> But you expect me to -> Jump up on board with you -> And ride off into your delusional sunset +> _You sound so innocent +> All full of good intent +> You swear you know best +> But you expect me to +> Jump up on board with you +> And ride off into your delusional sunset_ > > —"King of Anything" by Sara Bareilles @@ -17,8 +17,142 @@ I don't get why this book is so popular. I mean, I get why this book is so popular, but I'm not happy about it. -_Nevada_ is the story of 29-year-old trans woman Maria Griffiths, who w +_Nevada_ is the story of 29-year-old trans woman Maria Griffiths, who steals her girlfriend's car and goes on a cross-country road trip. +In Star City, Nevada, she meets an autogynephilic + +https://slatestarcodex.com/2014/12/02/book-review-on-the-road/ + +[...] + +------- + +[Steph is Maria's cis girlfriend.] + +> She acts like she's into it. She's thrashing, hands at Steph's wrists, pulling. Not that hard, although Steph is probably stronger than Maria, so it's not like Maria could + +less probable than Imogen Binnie would like us to believe + +> Then it's Maria's turn. She already knows she's going to fake it. Maria's relationship to her body, it's a mess, she can barely get it together to be naked in front of anybody, much less get off with someone in the room. You'd think it would be impossible to fake it, with junk like Maria's got, but you can. Maria knows some stuff about faking it. One time somebody told her that when she came in their motuh, they could tell she'd come because when that pre-come stuff turned into regular come, it got saltier. + +I thought the noun was [spelled differently](https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/cum#Etymology_2) + +> People tend to assume that trans women are either drag queens and loads of trashy fun, or else sad, pathetic and deluded pervy straight men, at least, until they save up their money and get their Sex Change Operations, at which point they become just like every other woman. Or something? But Maria is like, Dude, hi. Nobody ever reads me as trans any more. Old straight men hit on me when I'm at work and in all these years of transitioning I haven't even been able to save up for a decent pair of boots. + +that you know of (& James will, in Part 2) + +> But when she started working there, she was like, Hello, I'm a dude and my name is the same as the one that's on my birth certificate. Then when she had been working there a year or two, she had this kind of intense and scary realization that for a really long time, as boring and clichéd as this is, but for as long as she could remember she had felt all fucked up. +> +> So she wrote about it. She laid it out and connected all these dots: the sometimes I want to wear dresses dot, the I am addicted to masturbation dot, the I feel like I have been punched in the stomach when I see an un-self-conscious pretty girl dot, the I cried a lot when I was little and don't think I've cried at all since puberty dot. Lots of other dots. A constellation of dots. The oh man do I get more fucked up than I mean to, every time I start drinking dot. The I might hate sex dot. So she figured out that she was trans, told people she was changing her name, got on hormones, it was very difficult and rewarding and painful. + +really + +> There's this whole thing now where rich young white people like Maria colonize Brooklyn history because in these messed-up, post-modern times everybody is desperate for something real + +is this code for class? Maria works in a bookstore + +> She doesn't hate trans guys who are working on the fact that they've acquired male privilege outside the queer community, but also in a weird way inside the queer community, especially in the way that their presence tends to eclipse or eliminate or invalidate that of trans women, so they're working on it and starting conversations about it and being accountable to trans women. + +/r/GenderCritical would "love" this book + +[Steph has disclosed that she cheated with Kieran, a trans man.] + +> She probably doesn't even hate Steph. Like, as a couple they are fucked, and obviously Maria sucks at changing things her life that she really needs to change. Such as: she totally needs to break up with Steph. But for real though, Steph rules. She and Keiran, y'know, that sort of thing just happens sometimes, especially in a queer relationship, right? And it's not like Maria never fucked Kieran while she was with Steph. + +what + +what + +> Maria's been mentally outlining a zine about this stuff that will lay it out clearly and solve everything since, like, before she started transitioning. + +ARTISTS SHIP + +> He managed to kind of fuck her with a packer in a tiny, dirty yellow bathroom downstairs in the Burritoville on Second and Sixth. She managed to keep her skirt on the whole time and not to let him touch her junk. She certainly didn't come. Maybe he did. + +what does this entail, exactly + +> Turns out Piranha texted Maria last night, too. Fuck. Mostly her texts are just a bunch of cussing, because Piranha knows that Maria likes cuss words. She's a good friend. But last night she was like, Dude, where are you? Maria texts back: Sorry dude. Hang out soon? + +interesting choice of address + +> Maria used to have a pretty strong body, back when she was an energetic little college kid who looked like a dude and journaled obsessively about gender in top secret notebooks all day every day. + +!!! [I did this, too.] + +> She wakes up around four thirty and feels rested. Do other people feel like this all the time? It's fucked up. Her head feels all clear and she thinks for a second about pouring herself a glass of breakfast wine, but then she thinks, no this is perfect! I have four hours until I have to be at work, which means I can shave, put on makeup, then go to Kellogg's and write for two and a half hours. As the sun is coming up, no less. + + + +maybe I shouldn't doubt her work ethic + +> She has another sip and opens her notebook, one of those fancy Moleskine fuckers Hemingway used to write in even though Hemingway and his patriarchal, strong silent type can suck a dick. + +❤ ✶ Moleskine ★ ☆ + +> She doesn't actually write or diagram or make a list or anything. She doodles. + +I take back what I said about work ethic + +> Maria was this trans girl whose friends were all straight dudes she'd met when she'd been telling everyone [she was a] straight dude too + +[Underlined without comment.] + +> In one of Michelle Tea's books (maybe The Chelsea Whistle?) she writes this thing about how coffee is the greatest thing in the world, it makes your eyes bug out, it makes you want to write and produce and create and it's like speed except, something something, who can remember exact quotes. Maria's like, I'll get it tattooed on my forearm so I can remember it. + +who has a blurb on the back cover of this book—quid pro quo? + +> She buys a small coffee and gives the girl her driver's license to get a computer. It's weird but nobody has ever once given Maria shit for the gender on her license, not in the five years or whatever that she's been presenting F but still an M in the eyes of the law. + +that is surprising—is this detail autobiographical? + +> No big deal but Maria is kind of popular and famous on the Internet, but so if everybody, so it's not very interesting. + +so true + +> She doesn't post there as much as she used to but she still has that blog. People read it. Kids who are figuring out that they're trans look up to her. It's kind of nice although since there are so few decent resources for trans women that aren't for rich trans women or boring trans women, sometimes being the big sister is exhausting. + +it's even worse for gender-dysphoric males who don't buy the "trans" framing + +> Her name is Julia Serano and like most figureheads, she's very smart and sweet and right-on and almost entirely unproblematic, but her acolytes totally get obnoxious, taking her writings as doctrine. + +high praise + +> I know, Maria says. I just ... I've been thinking about trans stuff, like, all the time, and I don't feel like I can talk to anybody about it, because I totally fucking hate everybody else who's trans, and I don't want to deal with it. + +I know the feeling + +> But she's on the couch, in her work clothes, with a bottle of organic red wine because she knows that estradiol and non-organic red wine don't mix + +somehow I doubt this + +> Maria reads so much that she assumes that one day she'll have an idea and put together a Great Anti-American Novel or two + +unfortunately, it doesn't work like that ("assume a novel") + +> Rain rules. She's all ebullient, and weirdly can't wait for her lunch break so she can write in her journal again. + +I remember those days + +> On top of which, you dated what, three, maybe four girls before you transitioned? + +better than me + +> On top of which, sex has always been super problematic for you. Even before you knew you were trans, it stressed you the fuck out. You thought you were into it, you definitely liked the orgasms. It's not like you had any reason you knew about to be mad at your junk, but jacking off was always way easier and less stressful than actually getting and maintaining an erection when somebody else was there. + +yes + +> She gets a three-dollar drip coffee and gives the barista her license. She doesn't look at it, but she's got dyke hair so she probably wouldn't care if she saw the M. + +TERFs are a minority of dykes + +> She's been trying to get into it but she can't focus. It's a story about a girl in New York who's a knight, and she's friends with a dog, or something. It's weird. She feels like you could just flip to a page and start reading. There's no plot. + +yeah, those books, right + +[Steph is reminiscing about her relationship with Maria.] + + +------- the next time someone tell you AGP is rare diff --git a/theme/static/css/main.css b/theme/static/css/main.css index 057c4d0..d63eb71 100644 --- a/theme/static/css/main.css +++ b/theme/static/css/main.css @@ -373,3 +373,10 @@ p.flower-break { font-weight: bold; font-size: 85%; } + +// XXX—why isn't this working?! +// https://stackoverflow.com/questions/15643614/double-underline-tag +.extra-underline { + text-decoration: underline; + border-bottom: 3px double solid #000; +}