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    Valkyrie
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 

2019 - Fall - Raincheck Entry

Beyond the Binary - 1. Beyond the Binary

Taylor stepped off the bus and stopped to stare at the towering brick buildings forming the small cityscape of the college campus. They ignored the other travelers who stepped around them, off to their respective destinations. The new student sighed and hoisted their heavy, brown canvas backpack onto their shoulder and headed toward the closest building, map in hand.

Taylor’s heart thudded in their chest, although they weren’t sure if it was from anxiety or excitement. Probably both, they decided. College was a chance for a new start. Colleges were progressive places more accepting of people like them. At least, that’s what they’d heard. This place had an LGBTQ dorm—well, floor, anyway. Too bad freshmen weren’t allowed to get single rooms so they could avoid the whole roommate nightmare altogether. Not that they could afford the cost of a single. They could barely afford the bare minimum, even with all the financial aid and scholarships.

Meeting their new roommate was the biggest source of anxiety. They’d texted each other once before Taylor’s phone had been shut off due to their mother not paying the bill. They snorted. Yeah, right. She’d had it disconnected the minute they’d turned eighteen. Turing eighteen meant her obligation as a parent was done. Not that she had taken that obligation all that seriously before then.

Taylor stopped when they reached the tall building coinciding with the X on their map. Donaldson Hall. Their home for the next semester and possibly next four years. They swallowed and wiped their hands on their jeans. Well, here’s to the future! Taylor raised a mental glass of champagne. I hope it’s better than the past.

After checking in at the registration desk, Taylor headed to the third floor, twirling the key they’d been given to room 307. They wondered if their roommate had checked in yet. The hall bustled with activity. Students and their parents hauled boxes and suitcases into dorm rooms. As much as Taylor tried to tell themselves they were fine with arriving alone, a pang of longing pierced their façade as they momentarily wished things could have been different with their mom.

They inhaled and put the key in the lock to room 307 and turned the knob. Their roommate had her back turned to them, unpacking the contents of a bright pink suitcase into a tall dresser. She turned and smiled. “Hi! You must be the roomie. I’m Ava.” She held out her hand, hot pink nails leading the way.

“I’m Taylor: they/them/their.” Taylor shook Ava’s hand. It was nice and soft. They waited for the inevitable look. Not many people understood the whole pronoun or gender thing.

Ava nodded. “Cool. I prefer feminine pronouns myself.”

Taylor smiled, relieved at Ava’s acceptance. Ava gestured toward the right side of the room. “That’s your side.”

“OK. Thanks.” They set their backpack down on the bed, then sat next to it. “So where do we get the sheets?”

Ava raised an eyebrow. “You didn’t bring any?”

Taylor frowned. “Didn’t know I had to. I figured it was like a hotel, and they had them for us.”

Ava laughed. “Honey, this ain’t no hotel.” She resumed unpacking her clothes. “How much stuff do you have? I brought a fridge and microwave, so I hope you didn’t too. I tried texting you, but I kept getting error messages. I was going to let you know what I was bringing.”

Taylor’s face flushed bright red. “Sorry about that. My mom turned my phone off, and I couldn’t afford a new one. I don’t have much stuff. Thanks for letting me use your fridge and microwave.”

“Need a hand bringing anything up? I’ll grab some light stuff. Can’t ruin the manicure.” She winked.

Taylor laughed and gestured to their backpack. “Thanks for the offer, but this is it.”

Ava raised an eyebrow. “You’re a light traveler. Do you have a car?”

“Nope. I took the bus here, so I couldn’t take a whole ton of stuff.”

“So you need sheets. Anything else? Shopping trip!” Ava grinned.

Taylor shrugged. “I dunno. I have all the essentials. How much are sheets? I’ve never had to buy them before.”

“Well mine were over a hundred bucks, but I have expensive taste.”

Taylor widened their eyes and wondered how sleeping on a bare mattress would feel.

“I’m sure you can find some for much less. We can try Target. They usually have good deals.”

“Uh… yeah. Sure. We can do that, I guess.”

Ava grabbed her phone from the desk and tapped some buttons. “Looks like Target has some on sale for twenty bucks. A cotton blend.”

Taylor sighed in relief. While still an unplanned expense, twenty bucks was much more manageable. “Sounds good.”

Ava grinned. “Great! I’m sure I’ll find a few things too.”

“You don’t mind driving me?”

“Hun, I’ll take any excuse to go shopping. I don’t mind at all.” Ava grabbed her car keys from the top of the dresser and headed out the door.

Taylor followed. Well, so far so good. Let’s hope it stays that way.

 

****

After the fiftieth time explaining non-binary/gender neutral to someone who raised an eyebrow and walked away, shaking their head, Taylor came to the realization perhaps colleges weren’t as progressive as they thought. The questions, comments, and looks had been bad enough in high school, but Taylor had honestly thought things would be different in the ‘real’ world. Nah… that’s not really true, Taylor thought as they dipped an everything bagel into a mocha latte. They weren’t naïve or oblivious to other peoples’ preconceptions and prejudices, especially when it came to non-conventional gender constructs. They usually enjoyed meeting new people, especially when they were curious about non-binary in a nonjudgmental way. But sometimes the lack of understanding and even outright laughter and derision was wearying.

Taylor had made some ‘class friends’—people they chatted with in classes, but didn’t socialize with otherwise—in the month since college started, but no ‘real’ friends. Ava was the only person they considered a friend. Even so, they didn’t have much in common. Ava was a girly-girl, while Taylor had never really embraced their feminine side. So maybe Ava wasn’t so much a friend as ‘safe’—someone who was there and accepted them for who they were.

Taylor sighed and took a bite of soggy bagel. Gross.

“Do you mind if I sit here?”

Taylor jumped at the intrusion into their thoughts. A young blond man stood in front of their table, shifting his feet.

“Sorry… didn’t mean to startle you.”

Taylor smiled. “That’s OK. Sure, have a seat.” Hell, yeah it’s OK. He’s freaking cute!

“I’m Lucas.”

“Taylor: they/them/their.”

Lucas scrunched his brows. Taylor braced themselves for the usual onslaught of awkwardness.

“They/them/their?”

“Those are my preferred pronouns. I’m non-binary.”

Lucas smiled. “Ah. OK. I’ve heard of that.” He sipped his drink. “So what’s your major? I’m an English major. I love reading so much, I guess I decided to make books my life.” He giggled.

Taylor grinned. “I love reading too. Especially comics and sci-fi. Fantasy is good too. Tolkien rocks.”

“Yeah, he does. I’ve always wished I could be Legolas.” Lucas sighed.

“Hell yeah. He’s freaking hot.”

Lucas took a bite of his breakfast sandwich.

“I’m taking a bunch of liberal arts classes until I declare a major. I’m not sure if I want to go in a science-y direction or go for social work,” Taylor stated.

“Nice! Either sounds good. Cool shirt, by the way. Deadpool’s OK, but Thor’s my favorite. Guardians of the Galaxy is my favorite movie so far, though. But that will probably change once Infinity War comes out.”

Taylor bounced up and down in their chair in a perfect imitation of Tigger, causing Lucas to sit back in his chair.

“Oh. My. God! You’re a Marvel fan too? I can’t wait for Infinity War!”

Lucas grinned. “I know, right? Hey! We should go see the new Thor movie together! Uh… if you want to, that is.” Lucas’ face turned bright red.

Taylor smiled. “Of course I would!”

“Awesome! Wait till you meet Nigel. He’s crazy about Marvel too. You guys will get along great.”

Disappointment flooded through Taylor. For a minute, they thought the cute boy had asked them out on a date. But the look on Lucas’ face when he said Nigel’s name made them think they were more than friends. No matter… finding a new friend was the best feeling in the world.

****

“You should come to the GSA meeting tomorrow.” Lucas stared at Taylor over his Renaissance poetry text.

“What’s that?”

“You’ve never heard of the GSA? They didn’t have one in your high school?”

Taylor shrugged. “Dunno. If they did, I wasn’t aware. I didn’t pay much attention to a lot of things in high school. My main goal was to make it through the day.”

“It’s the Gay/Straight Alliance. A safe place for LGBTQ youth and allies. It’s kind of like a support group that also does community outreach.”

“Oh. Sounds interesting. What are meetings like?”

“Typical meetings, I suppose. Lots of planning, talking… and free pizza.”

Taylor grinned and bounced on the bed. “You had me at free pizza. So what do you plan?”

“Right now we’re planning a booth for the fall festival. So far, we’ve established we’re having a booth at the fall festival.”

Taylor laughed. “Count me in.”

 

“I see we have a new member. Let’s introduce ourselves, then we can get the meeting started. I’m Mr. Richardson, the faculty advisor. My office is always open to anyone who needs help.” He turned to his right and looked at the young man sitting next to him.

“I’m Derrick, this year’s GSA president.”

“Aiden, vice president.”

“Shane, secretary.”

Taylor had no idea who else was in attendance. Their thoughts were full of the hotness that was Shane. Auburn hair. Green eyes. Tall, slim physique. And he wore a Batman shirt. Who cares if it was DC? It was still comics. Maybe he liked Marvel too. Taylor jumped when Lucas elbowed them.

“Oh… uh… hi. I’m Taylor: they/them/their.” Their face burned bright red.

“Welcome, Taylor,” Derrick stated. “So… let’s talk about this booth for the festival. Anyone have ideas for a theme?”

“Rainbows and unicorns.” Someone suggested.

A chorus of groans and laughter followed.

“How about drag queen fashion?” a small, effeminate man asked. He reminded Taylor of Ava. Too bad their roommate wasn’t interested in the GSA.

Derrick frowned. “Too specific. We want to include the LGBTQ spectrum. We can save that idea for something else, though.”

“How about superheroes?” Taylor said.

Everyone seated in the small circle looked at them expectantly.

Taylor swallowed. “We could create a superhero for each letter, and their costume could reflect the flag associated with that letter.”

A low murmur of assent and head nods followed their suggestion.

“I think that’s a great idea. I can take point on it, if Taylor will work with me,” Shane stated and smiled at Taylor.

Taylor’s stomach did this weird flippy thing. They grinned and bounced in their seat. “Totally! I mean… uh… yeah, sure. I’d like that.” They smiled shyly at the cute secretary.

Lucas leaned over and whispered in their ear. “Told ya you’d like it here.”

****

They were going on a date. Their first date with a hot guy. Well, any guy. Or anyone, for that matter. It was hard for Taylor to sit still on a good day… with this level of excitement it was next to impossible.

“Honey, if you don’t stop bouncing around this room, I’m going to duct tape you to your chair.” Ava leveled her sternest look at her roommate.

Taylor flopped on their bed and sat cross-legged. “Sorry. I’m really nervous. I’ve never been on a date before.”

Ava raised an eyebrow. “A cutie like you? Never?”

“I never found anyone interested in ‘the freak’.”

“Sweetie, I understand completely. Believe me, it’s not easy finding someone who understands us, but they’re out there.”

Taylor smiled. “So what do I do? How should I act? Am I supposed to kiss him at the end of the date? What if he asks me to ‘go inside’? I’m not ready for anything like that.”

“First thing you need to do is breathe and relax. Act like yourself. That’s who he wants to date. Kiss him if it feels right. Go at your pace. Don’t do anything you’re not comfortable with or ready for.”

“I don’t know what I would do without you.”

Ava snorted. “Well I couldn’t let you go out in ripped jeans, even if it is only to the movies.”

Taylor rolled their eyes. Ava’s sense of fashion was affronted by Taylor’s grunge/goth look. “Ripped jeans are in. Or didn’t they teach you that at drag school?”

Ava burst into raucous laughter. “Drag? Gurl… I’m all woman.”

“And I’m not a girl.”

“Or a boy. I know.” Ava winked.

Taylor glanced at their watch. “Well. Guess this is it. Wish me luck!” They stood and grabbed their wallet, then stuffed it into their pocket.

“Luck! It will go great. Trust me.” Ava rose from her desk chair and hugged Taylor. “Now go get ‘em. Or break a leg. Or whatever. Have a wonderful time, sweetie.”

****

Ava was right. Taylor did have a wonderful time. They’d decided to see the new Thor movie, even though Taylor had already seen it. It was worth seeing the movie over and over just for the eye candy. Besides, Taylor was more focused on the feeling of Shane’s hand in theirs than on the Norse God of thunder.

After the date, Taylor had a lot of difficulty concentrating on their classes, since thoughts of Shane and the feeling of his lips on theirs permeated all their thoughts. Since then, they’d kissed many more times. Which made it harder, not easier to get classwork done. Now they’d been dating for a whole month, and Taylor was worried about Shane wanting to get more physical. Taylor wanted to do more with Shane, but wasn’t sure they were comfortable enough with their body to trust another person with it. Yet.

They hoped that person would be Shane. Taylor sighed. Shane. With his reddish hair and boy-next-door charm. And perfect body. He liked comics and going to the movies. Just like Taylor. He also liked grunge music, which made him perfect in Taylor’s eyes. Well, he tolerated grunge music. Same difference.

Tonight was their one month celebration date.

Ava was away for the weekend.

So they’d be alone.

And Shane would want to take their relationship to the next level and become more intimate than they had so far.

Taylor was willing to try.

With Shane.

They took a deep breath.

Dinner out first, then they’d come back to Taylor’s room. And see how it went.

 

“Well, I can’t say I count Thai food among my favorites, but it was still good. And spending time with you made it much better.” Shane ran his hand along the back of Taylor’s neck.

Taylor sighed and leaned into the touch. “Sorry you didn’t like it. We could have gone somewhere else.”

“That’s OK. Next time we’ll go for pizza.”

“Can’t go wrong with that.”

“Nope.” Shane turned and drew Taylor closer. “Pizza and my boyfriend. What could be better than that?”

Taylor frowned. “I’m not your boyfriend or girlfriend. I suppose ‘partner’ would be closest, if that sounds OK.”

“Oh, right. Yeah, I guess. Sorry. The whole gender neutral thing takes a little getting used to.” Shane ran his thumb over Taylor’s lip piercings. “Man, these are so hot.” He leaned in and kissed Taylor. They responded, and soon were making out until they had to come up for air.

“You are so hot, Tay,” Shane muttered, kissing along Taylor’s neck.

Taylor moaned. Fuck, this felt good. Shane nipped at Taylor’s ear, causing them to melt in his arms. “I want to feel you in my mouth. I’ve been dying to give you a BJ ever since I met you.”

Taylor abruptly sat up and pushed Shane away, scowling. “What if there’s nothing to blow?” they asked sharply.

Shane furrowed his brows. “What do you mean?”

“What makes you think I have a dick? Maybe I was assigned female at birth.”

Shane laughed. Taylor’s heart plummeted.

“Female? You’re a guy, aren’t you?”

“Oh my God. We’ve been dating a whole fucking month. I’m not either gender, remember?”

“Well you have to be something. It’s one or the other underneath your clothes.” Shane looked perplexed.

“Does it matter?”

“Huh?”

“Does it fucking matter what’s under my clothes?”

“Well, of course it does! I’m gay, Taylor. I like dick.”

“Leave.” Taylor pointed toward the door, trying not to let the tears spill from their eyes.

“What the fuck? I thought things were going great between us. I really like you. So why are you acting like this?”

“Because you don’t understand… I’m non-binary. Not male. Not female. You should like me for me. Not my parts.”

“Well… uh… I do like you. For you. And… well… shit.” Shane ran his hand through his hair. “Tay, I’m not sure I can do this. I thought I got the gender neutral thing, but now I’m thinking I really don’t. Sorry.” He stood and walked out the door.

Taylor flopped onto the bed and grabbed their pillow, allowing it to absorb their sobs.

****

“C’mon, Tayley. You love Frostys. I’ll even buy.”

“Thanks, Lukey. I’m not sure I feel like going out. Even for a vanilla Frosty.”

Lucas sat on Taylor’s bed and tickled their side. “This should get you moving.”

Taylor squealed and swatted Lucas’ hand.

“Oh my God. Would you two get the fuck out of here? I’m trying to study!” Ava huffed.

“Fine.” Taylor stood and grabbed their coat from the closet. “You’re paying.”

“Happy to.”

Taylor and Lucas headed to the Wendy’s in the student union. “I don’t know how you can drink a milkshake in this cold.”

“Ice cream is good anytime.”

“I’m sorry about Shane.”

Taylor frowned. “Thanks.”

“For what it’s worth, I think you’re pretty awesome. And there’s more to life than dating. Especially people who can’t see past the surface.”

“You’re pretty awesome too. And I think I’ll take a raincheck on dating. At least for now. So what are you going to get since you’re too much of a wimp to have a milkshake in freezing weather?”

“Chili fries. With extra cheese.”

Taylor made a face. “I’ll stick with the Frosty, thank you very much.”

A huge thank you to my team, Cole Matthews and Aditus for their input with this story. A special thank you to Thorn Wilde, who proofread the story for me and helped me with some of the terminology. Thanks to all for reading. Please let me know if you'd like to see more of Taylor. I don't think their story is quite finished yet.
Copyright © 2019 Valkyrie; All Rights Reserved.
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 

2019 - Fall - Raincheck Entry
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Very interesting story. I could not not empathize with Taylor and wish him happy, so I hope you have more for us. I agree that Shane was a jerk in the way he reacted to the gender non-binary the issue, he shouldn't have laughed. And I know that Taylor probably has a much harder time that other lgbtq people. But that whole episode made me think about relationships, and how hard they can be. Because I can also understand the core of what Shane was thinking, even if his behavior was bad. I think Taylor also forgot that that while gender identity and sexual orientation are not the same thing, both exist and might clash. Humans are complex being with several forms of love and attractions. Friendship love, romantic love, sexual love/attraction are all different. So as a gay man, one might be able to feel emotional/romantic love for different genders, but need physical male attribute to sexual desire someone.

Edited by Sweetlion
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3 hours ago, Timothy M. said:

next time they may have to talk about the issue before getting to the point of intimacy, even though it's difficult.

I commented accordingly while beta reading the story. It makes the story realistic, though. Talking about this is difficult, especially being a  um first-timer. Something for their next story (total subtle hint) 

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This is an interesting story on an issue few have thought about.  I want to compliment the author on the use of pronouns. Unfortunately, the English language as currently used makes it difficult to talk about genders other than male and female. Over time, I expect that the singular 'they' will become part of the language. Note that the German formal second-person pronoun 'Sie' is actually the third person plural pronoun. I expect the process to take several years, but I am confident that languages can adapt to the needs of the speakers.

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1 hour ago, Thomas Haworth said:

This is an interesting story on an issue few have thought about.  I want to compliment the author on the use of pronouns. Unfortunately, the English language as currently used makes it difficult to talk about genders other than male and female. Over time, I expect that the singular 'they' will become part of the language. Note that the German formal second-person pronoun 'Sie' is actually the third person plural pronoun. I expect the process to take several years, but I am confident that languages can adapt to the needs of the speakers.

Well, English language is not that bad, it does have a genderless pronoun (although for things, not people normally) and the 3rd person plural is the same regardless of the gender, and that's why it is evolving slowly as a genderless singular. Romance language have "gender" in most words, and the 3rd person plural have male (used for groups of males or mixed gender groups) and female (used for groups of females only) forms. Although well intentioned, I have heard speeches that sound a bit ridiculous in "inclusive" language, unfortunately.

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On 12/5/2019 at 3:31 AM, chris191070 said:

I really enjoyed this, great characters and well written. Shane is a bit of a jerk for not being able to see Taylor for what he is, non binary. I look forward to reading more of Taylor’s story.

I'm glad you liked it, and I am definitely planning on writing more about Taylor.  It's too bad Taylor and Shane couldn't have communicated better, but it's a learning process for Taylor, and I'm guessing they'll approach relationships a bit more openly in the future. We'll have to see what happens when I get inspired again. 

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On 12/5/2019 at 10:04 AM, Sweetlion said:

Very interesting story. I could not not empathize with Taylor and wish him happy, so I hope you have more for us. I agree that Shane was a jerk in the way he reacted to the gender non-binary the issue, he shouldn't have laughed. And I know that Taylor probably has a much harder time that other lgbtq people. But that whole episode made me think about relationships, and how hard they can be. Because I can also understand the core of what Shane was thinking, even if his behavior was bad. I think Taylor also forgot that that while gender identity and sexual orientation are not the same thing, both exist and might clash. Humans are complex being with several forms of love and attractions. Friendship love, romantic love, sexual love/attraction are all different. So as a gay man, one might be able to feel emotional/romantic love for different genders, but need physical male attribute to sexual desire someone.

Excellent points, Simba :hug:  Since more than one reader has commented referring to Taylor as "him", I' want to point out I was very careful not to reveal Taylor's birth gender.  As the author, I'm not sure what Taylor's physical gender is, and I wanted to keep that in mind while writing the story to help me understand them.  I have to be honest and say using the singular 'they' has taken some getting used to, and it still feels strange to me to use it, but I'm getting more comfortable with it.  I think you're right that gender non-conforming people have a harder time than others.  Thanks for such thoughtful comments.  :hug:  

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On 12/5/2019 at 11:02 AM, Timothy M. said:

If Shane is only interested in giving blowjobs and nothing else, I suppose he wouldn't be able to cope sexually without a partner with a dick. However, all other kinds of sex would be possible with a non-binary partner. There are such things as strap-ons if needed. I can understand why Taylor was disappointed, and next time they may have to talk about the issue before getting to the point of intimacy, even though it's difficult.

Yes, you are absolutely right.  Aditus made the same comment when he beta read the story.  ;)  Taylor's learning, and next time hopefully they'll take the lessons learned with Shane and talk about it beforehand.  

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On 12/5/2019 at 2:22 PM, aditus said:

I commented accordingly while beta reading the story. It makes the story realistic, though. Talking about this is difficult, especially being a  um first-timer. Something for their next story (total subtle hint) 

Yup!  I wanted to convey that difficulty, especially since it was Taylor's first relationship.  And I think we all have an idea where the next story might go, although you never know.  :whistle: 

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On 12/5/2019 at 5:51 PM, Thomas Haworth said:

This is an interesting story on an issue few have thought about.  I want to compliment the author on the use of pronouns. Unfortunately, the English language as currently used makes it difficult to talk about genders other than male and female. Over time, I expect that the singular 'they' will become part of the language. Note that the German formal second-person pronoun 'Sie' is actually the third person plural pronoun. I expect the process to take several years, but I am confident that languages can adapt to the needs of the speakers.

Thank you for your kind words.  Language is constantly evolving, so I suspect you're right about use of the singular 'they' becoming more accepted and mainstream in time.  

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On 12/5/2019 at 8:04 PM, Thorn Wilde said:

I think people whose sole criterion for sexual attraction is genitalia should abandon labels like gay and straight and just call themselves phallosexual or vaginosexual. Would save us a whole lot of grief.

I love this story. I want to thank you for contributing to more trans and non-binary representation in the stories on this site. ❤️ 

Thank you for your input when you proofread the story.  :hug:  Knowing how much you liked it is the best validation I could have received.  :) 

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4 hours ago, Valkyrie said:

Excellent points, Simba :hug:  Since more than one reader has commented referring to Taylor as "him", I' want to point out I was very careful not to reveal Taylor's birth gender.  As the author, I'm not sure what Taylor's physical gender is, and I wanted to keep that in mind while writing the story to help me understand them.  I have to be honest and say using the singular 'they' has taken some getting used to, and it still feels strange to me to use it, but I'm getting more comfortable with it.  I think you're right that gender non-conforming people have a harder time than others.  Thanks for such thoughtful comments.  :hug:  

Sorry, while I was making an effort to be inclusive, an him instead of them escaped me. It might be due to their name which  I associate  with male, and their physical appearance being closer to a guy (otherwise Shane wouldn't have been interested). But since we were talking about gender identity  I should have written them. My point was actually a dual one in the sense of being harder for them, because for one they might have a harder time getting  into a relationship, and for others they end up having to be more "understanding" with others' reaction than sometimes they feel it (I like to put myself  in the characters position, and I admit that physically/sexually I would probably not be interested in non biologically males for a romantic relationship)

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8 hours ago, Sweetlion said:

Sorry, while I was making an effort to be inclusive, an him instead of them escaped me. It might be due to their name which  I associate  with male, and their physical appearance being closer to a guy (otherwise Shane wouldn't have been interested). But since we were talking about gender identity  I should have written them. My point was actually a dual one in the sense of being harder for them, because for one they might have a harder time getting  into a relationship, and for others they end up having to be more "understanding" with others' reaction than sometimes they feel it (I like to put myself  in the characters position, and I admit that physically/sexually I would probably not be interested in non biologically males for a romantic relationship)

I know both male and female Taylors and wanted to pick a name beyond the usual "Pat" or "Chris".  But yes, I would imagine you're right about their physical appearance leaning toward male vs female.   And I think you're spot-on about non-binary individuals having a harder time getting into a relationship and having to be more 'understanding' of others' reactions than they'd like.  One of my BFFs has a non-binary child (Taylor is loosely based on them), so I've been learning about navigating the waters, so to speak, from both the parent/friend perspective and the non-binary individual's perspective.  

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On 12/9/2019 at 6:22 AM, Sweetlion said:

Sorry, while I was making an effort to be inclusive, an him instead of them escaped me. It might be due to their name which  I associate  with male, and their physical appearance being closer to a guy (otherwise Shane wouldn't have been interested). But since we were talking about gender identity  I should have written them. My point was actually a dual one in the sense of being harder for them, because for one they might have a harder time getting  into a relationship, and for others they end up having to be more "understanding" with others' reaction than sometimes they feel it (I like to put myself  in the characters position, and I admit that physically/sexually I would probably not be interested in non biologically males for a romantic relationship)

Just thought I'd take a moment to mention that many non-binary people choose to medically transition in one way or another; it's fully possible that Taylor was assigned female at birth and micro-doses testosterone, which would make their appearance more masculine while remaining fairly androgynous.

While proof-reading the story, I found myself assuming that Taylor was AFAB. It took me a while to realise that I was projecting myself onto them. I'm non-binary and trans masculine (I use he/him/his pronouns), and I felt like I saw a lot of myself in Taylor. It wasn't until Val pointed out that it's never mentioned what gender Taylor was assigned at birth that I realised I'd been doing it. And honestly, I think that's part of the genius of how this story is written and why I love it so much. 

Edited by Thorn Wilde
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This is such an interesting start to a story! I really like the way we see Taylor from their point of view, not the way the world sees them, until later in the story. This makes me, as a reader, imagine Taylor as an androgynous person and resist the urge to immediately classify someone as belonging to either gender, a kind of reflex reaction that comes from a lifetime of binary thinking.

I think the way the narrative evolves and how it is asking us to challenge many preconceptions, among them the fact that having a romantic relationship and moving it to the "next step" should always involve sex - but what if someone isn't ready for that? There are many kinds of intimacy. I like the line where Taylor wonders whether they are comfortable enough with their body to trust another person with it. That was such a powerful statement, and it speaks to a journey of self-acceptance which many people go through, and which I can only imagine. Thanks for sharing this, Valkyrie!

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24 minutes ago, albertnothlit said:

This is such an interesting start to a story! I really like the way we see Taylor from their point of view, not the way the world sees them, until later in the story. This makes me, as a reader, imagine Taylor as an androgynous person and resist the urge to immediately classify someone as belonging to either gender, a kind of reflex reaction that comes from a lifetime of binary thinking.

I think the way the narrative evolves and how it is asking us to challenge many preconceptions, among them the fact that having a romantic relationship and moving it to the "next step" should always involve sex - but what if someone isn't ready for that? There are many kinds of intimacy. I like the line where Taylor wonders whether they are comfortable enough with their body to trust another person with it. That was such a powerful statement, and it speaks to a journey of self-acceptance which many people go through, and which I can only imagine. Thanks for sharing this, Valkyrie!

Thank you so much!  Taylor first appeared in my Premium story Deal or No Deal which explores Lucas' story.  I liked them so much, I decided they needed their own story.  I really enjoyed writing about them and the challenges they faced.  It helped me understand non-binary/gender neutral a little bit more.  Thank you for reading and leaving such thoughtful comments :hug: 

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