To Kiss or Shake Hands
This is a rant for all the women who
like to keep their hair short and enjoy their pants with deep and
useful pockets. Women who haven't the time or sense for make-up and
jewelry, who'd rather avoid shopping unless it involves scavenging
parts and tools for some constructive invention or spending time in
some workshop seeing how things are put together or taken apart and
imagine how they might be reassembled for some other use. Why are
these interests and habits and personalities associated almost
exclusively as “masculine,” “manly” behaviors in our western
modern society? How does the presence of certain genitalia help one
hold a hammer, or a saw, or a measuring tape? How does gender relate
to one's ability to think spatially or mechanically, to design and
have a desire to build, to create, to tinker? I am not trying to be a
man when I put on my work pants with the hammer sling and reinforced
knees. I am being a woman who happens to work in construction, who
finds that clothing designed for men is more durable and has better
pockets. I am being practical keeping my hair short in my line of
work, not wanting anything dangling into a saw blade or distractions
that might catch on my work gloves, make gripping tools harder to
reach. I do not understand how I am made to be less of a woman simply
because you perceive of me as more like a man. These judgments and
exclusions hurt both genders and insult our shared humanity,
preventing us form being a whole and well-rounded species.
When I was growing up my mom bought me
a beach towel with the following mantra printed in big letters:
Whatever a boy can do, a girl can do better. A one-sided stab, a
tongue-in-cheek jab, but a phrase that bolstered my inner tomboy and
still comes to mind every time I am faced with machista sneers
or skeptic looks questioning whether we girls actually build our
house or had a manly carpenter hired. As I have grown, moving about
the world, I have surrounded myself with talented and creative
humans, self-identified boys and girls who all know how to chop
firewood and cook fine meals, or who can perceive the subtle tones of
color, of melody, and express inner visions without a shred of
confusion as to who they are. Because in the end we are all artistic
creations, each unique as snowflakes, searching for ways to express
ourselves fully and completely, begrudgingly having to tolerate at
times the judgments of a diseased society obsessed with checking
boxes with only one of two options.
In a culture like Chile, your gender
identification is a split-second judgment upon meeting a new person:
women receive a kiss on the cheek, men a firm hand shake. To kiss or
shake hands and I see the anxiety on this new person's face if he is
a man because kissing another man's cheek is a custom only among gay
men or very close family, and no one wants to insult a woman shaking
her hand when you could be getting a kiss. I haven't got the normal
cultural markers; no earrings, short hair, practical clothing very
unisex. At first I tried to use direct action: taking the firm hand
shake presented and pulling the bewildered man in for a quick cheek
kiss, declaring my femininity, insisting on my gender recognition. In
many cases, realizing the error mid-reach for the hand shake, things
were laughed off and accepted. But recently as we meet more people in
our rural community, with gender bias more pronounced ironically even
though most women in the countryside are as tough as men and work
just as hard, I have been receiving deadly flashed of shocked eye
contact, cold reactions, and even threats. My insistent kiss when the
hand shake was clearly the judgment not only calls out their error
publicly, it embarrassingly makes a fool of the man to his face, and
everything is further complicated by the continued perception that I
am a man, or a boy as my lack of bulk and facial hair indicate,
thereby creating even more confusion that I am a gay boy being
cheeky. And a cheeky gay tween in the Chilean countryside is not in
safe territory. Norah Vincent's excellent book Self-Made Man
helped me understand the subtle gender codes I was breaking and
confirmed the danger I was sensing as real. I can not change the
societal norms of gender bias overnight and certainly have no
intention of dressing myself up in conforming, codified “gender
appropriate” disguises, so in the mean time I have decided to just
take the hand shake with warm eye contact, hoping humor fuels
recognition of the silliness of these rituals, and if upon leaving we
have an understanding, he may or may not receive a kiss depending on
how I feel about it.
In the end, to
kiss or shake hands is all about confused norms of gender perception,
calling attention to the ridiculous aspects of dividing ourselves
over gender rules and judgments. We are all a little of both genders
and a little of neither as well, but in my opinion everyone is
deserving of wonderfully designed pockets in comfortable clothing
regardless of their hair length.