Sometimes things change slowly like ripples, and sometimes they change like tsunamis. The course was created to give acknowledgement to the stories of under-represented youths, as many of us pre-service teachers came from privilege, and certainly some more than others. I’m from a northern community, and it was mind-boggling to me that I was sitting in a room of post-degree adults who were learning about Residential Schools for the first time – before the topic entered curriculum by force. We were learning about supports for students with Autism before the “classroom integration” model was enforced. And we learned about gender normative narratives, and that, my friends, was a bit of ignorant bias I didn’t realize I had – but it made perfect sense. This was before the pronoun debate entered schools, and we were still trying to give voice to student-run Gay-Straight Alliance groups. It was a simple concept. Dr. Burgess just said, “can you imagine the books and movies you see not being heteronormative?”
I wasn’t planning on doing anything author-related with that information, but as a brain exercise I dug up one of my discarded ideas – The Hunger Games were very popular at the time, and I had a vague notion of a love-triangle story that took place in a dystopian prison-like-setting, but the characters weren’t people to me yet, they had no personalities, and no purpose. It was a low-risk opportunity to play around with an idea that I was still growing comfortable with (I’d like to think I’ve made some progress in this department!). I took my lack-of-personality young heroine and made her a boy. The moment I did that, the characters revealed themselves to me! They had names, they had faces, they had strong, passionate desires. Jos was fiercely protective of the younger, more naive Dotan, and Dotan passed that nurturing compassion onto his flat of roommates, earning him the nickname “Blanky” as he stayed up at night cradling Blue during his medical fits. It’s a full male cast, and I had no further agenda when writing it other than to tell their love story.
It was only afterwards, looking back, that I took any notice of the flip against what we now call “toxic masculinity” (it wasn’t a catch-phrase at the time). When I went on to write the sequel, it was one of my readers who’d bought my books at the local Expo, who came to praise me about flipping the narrative. “You never see boy characters deal with depression through cutting in books, it’s only ever girls. Thank you for showing that boys suffer in secret too.” It wasn’t a mission of mine, it’s just what Dotan had to do. Maybe because he started in the body of a girl he ended up with some form of twin-spiritness, or maybe that’s just how he is. He was always just Dotan to me. I never tried to make him more feminine or masculine. I just tried to make him real. And while there are things about that story I would probably write differently these days, those three characters and how they cared for each other, I’d never tamper with. That was who they needed to be, and how they are forever.
Life sometimes makes you shift focus. It feels like failure in the moment, but these lessons have a way of coming back around when you don’t catch it the first time. As I recently said to a complete stranger facing their own writing hurdles: the magic isn’t gone forever, it just sprinkles itself around in the places it needs us to discover. I won’t go into the years of feeling like I’d lost myself; because in truth I’m not sure I’ve ever fully come out of that, but I did find some easier ways to get some of that magic back. Games.
That was the next confidence boost I needed. My tired and broken mom-brain, my piles and piles of unfinished and abandoned story projects, and yet, I made the magic work. So what else could I do?