By Caitlin Magness
"I just don't know how to girl," exclaimed my
friend in frustration, struggling to do her hair before an event. Watching her
trying to beat her stubborn curls into submission, I couldn't help but
sympathize with her and her statement. I've been a girl for almost twenty
years, but I couldn't tell anyone else how to do it. It's one of the hardest,
most complicated, most multifaceted things a person can do. Still, that doesn't
stop the media from telling us how to do it on a daily basis.
We live in a world of conflicting messages about what
constitutes a "real woman." Real women have curves. Real women have
long hair. Real women are feminine. Real women are financially independent. A
real woman doesn't need a man. A real woman, a real woman, a real woman . . . .
Does she even exist? I don't think I've ever seen her. Not in the real world,
at least.
We know we are called to embrace God's gift of womanhood,
and to live out the vocation of womanhood with joy and submission. But it can
be hard when you don't even feel like a woman-- when you don't, as my friend
aptly put it, know "how to girl." You try to figure it out, taking
cues from magazines, beauty tutorials, advice columns, other women, but none of
them seem to have the secret. You feel like the Pinocchio of women, made in the
shape of something you will never truly be. It's not right for a gift from God to be made into a test. But that's the reality for most women today.
It's definitely been the reality for me, although perhaps
in a slightly different way than usual. See, I've always been a tomboy. I don't
mean in the stereotypical "tough, sporty, loves playing in the dirt"
way--I'm one of the least sporty people I know, and while I liked playing in
the dirt as a little girl, I was never tough. Still, I always felt different
from other girls my age. I had trouble relating to them, and found it easier to
play by myself or with boys. Because of this, I often imagined myself as a boy.
Many of the imaginary personas I made up for myself were male, as well as the
main characters in most of my stories. I remember
thinking one day in kindergarten, before I'd fully grasped the physical
differences between boys and girls, "Hey, maybe I'm a boy in
disguise." I wasn't trying to make a statement. I wasn't trying to
"shatter the gender binary." Nor was I "confused," mentally
ill, or rebelling. I simply saw more of myself in the opposite sex than in my
own.
Over the years, I learned how to better relate to my own
sex. But my tomboyish side didn't go away, even after I reached puberty and
truly entered the world of womanhood. I still love and relate to male
characters in stories. I enjoy exploring different styles, but I still feel
most like myself with short hair and neutral clothing. Girls still sometimes
seem like a different species to me.
When you don't conform to gender stereotypes, you find
yourself in the middle of a political crossfire. On the one side, you have
conservatives fighting for rigid traditional gender roles; on the other, the
transgender and radical feminist movements calling for rebellion against God's
design. Neither side serves you well. You don't want to renounce your body or
your vocation, but you don't want to repress part of yourself, either. You feel
as if you can't be yourself--you must align with one agenda or another. What's
a gender-nonconforming girl to do?
The answer, of course, lies in God's word. He knit you
together in your mother's womb--it is because of him that you are who you are.
Your sex, your body, your personality, your vocation-- they are all gifts from
him. Being a tomboy doesn't make me any less of a woman. It just makes me a
woman who happens to be a tomboy. That may seem like a very simple conclusion
for me to have taken so long to arrive at it, but with all the confusing
messages about sex and gender in the world, it's difficult to figure out how
you fit in. This is true for all people, and especially true for women.
Maybe you're not a tomboy like me. Chances are, though,
there are still times when you don't feel like a real woman. Maybe you look at
the airbrushed images of women in the media and feel like a pale imitation of a
woman by comparison. Maybe you're constantly comparing yourself to other women
in your life, knowing you can never be that feminine, that graceful, that
confident. Maybe you read Proverbs 31 and all you can think is, "Well, I
guess I'd better turn in my woman card."
But that's not what God intended. He never wanted you to
feel conflicted, repressed, or inadequate in you who are. Nor did he intend for
womanhood to be a performance, or for it to prevent you from being your unique
self. Being a woman has nothing to do with your personality, your appearance,
your style, or your works. It's a gift, the same way salvation is a gift. It
may not seem like one at times, but like all gifts from God, it does us far
more good than anything we can come up with on our own.
Every culture, every time period, every person has a different idea of what a
woman should be, but none of them completely describes the incredibly diverse
group of individuals making up the greater half of the population. Neither can
any of them reveal God's plan for us as women. Let's forget about society's
definition of femininity and focus on what really makes us women: God's design
and His plan for our lives.
***
Caitlin Magness is the daughter of a family of Lutheran musicians and church workers. She is an aspiring novelist, college student, and thinker of too many thoughts. She lives in Oklahoma with her family.
Image: "Woman in Gold" by Gustav Klimpt, 1907
I am a tomboy like you. In fact, a lot of your post felt like it could have been written by me.
ReplyDeleteI have been a tomboy all my life, loving to play in the dirt, though not into sports. I was the despair of my very feminine mother, who wanted to play dolls with me and put me in pretty dresses. (When we played Barbies, I had them go camping and hiking and horseback riding...) For Halloween I dressed as Zorro or the Lone Ranger or a pirate. One year I agreed to be a hula girl to please my mom. One year, I was a tree.
I've always identified much more strongly with male characters in movies and TV, with some exceptions. And I've come to realize that I don't so much identify with characters because of their gender, but because of who they are -- I simply admire and relate to characteristics that generally get assigned to male characters by writers and storytellers.
I think for a while, my mom at least worried about my gender identity. My dad seemed to understand, or accept, that I was caught between what I was and what I wanted to be like, and never fussed at me to be more ladylike or girlish or stop playing cowboys and pirates. Thank God for his understanding. I think if i'd been forced to stop my boyish ways, I would have rebelled, possibly tried identifying AS male instead of WITH males. As it was, I just muddled through adolescence like everyone else, except instead of caring about hair and makeup and clothes like my friends, I cared about horses and WWII history and knights and pirates.
And eventually, like you, I came to accept that this is who I am. This is how God made me -- he didn't accidentally pour me into the wrong body. I met a guy who didn't mind that I am not very "girly." I think he was actually really happy to find a girl who watches more westerns and action movies that rom-coms, lol. Fifteen years later, we've got a great marriage and 3 kids, and I'm still a woman who likes "boy stuff" better than "girl stuff" most of the time.
(But my mom is super happy that both of my daughters are exceedingly girly and would rather wear dresses than jeans. I'm not sure what I'm going to do with them when they're older...)