Kid's Stuff

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THE WHOLE "LITTLE KID THING"
by LAIKA PUPKINO

I've read quite a few stories here at BigCloset about people who feel like children inside, and who (I assume) feel that their adult bodies are wrong for them, who become kids with the help of benevolent witches, either as a temporary vacation from adult life, or permanently. The Little Kid's Camp stories for example. Some of these tales I like. Who wouldn't want to live in a world that has unicorns in it? And the adventures are usually fun (The young woman spying on the witches, not trusting what they're up to, and getting caught. Or the nasty old biddy---a real piece of work for all appearances---being rehabilitated as the little boy she'd always needed to be). And the kids are........Well, kids are cute.

But I can't say these stories really speak to a longing in my soul, the way they obviously do for others. Unless this is something I have been totally repressing. And it's possible, it wouldn't be the first time I've been struck by a realization of this magnitude. By this of course I'm referring to my Gender Identity Dilemna ("disorder" sounds too clinical), this all-too hairy body with the wrong sorts of accoutrements that I find my lovely self stuck in; An experience that I imagine brings me closer to being able to understand "Age Dysphoria" than the gender-complacent majority. But not totally understanding it.

I assume it's the same sort of thing as GID, only about age (and not an old broad's desire to be 21 again just to be sexier or add years to her life) and about body size (and not for the sake of looking good in something slinky, or wanting to be relatively powerless in the hands of one's beau...); And also, I'm going out on a limb here, correct me if I'm wrong......there seems to be some appeal in being pre-sexual; which I react to with the same bafflement that a typical male experiences when confronted with the notion of someone like me wanting to shed their teste-monials to manhood. Only without the same visceral dread and sense of indignation they seem to bring to matters of male and female. Kid-hood doesn't seem like a WRONG thing to want to me, only unfamiliar to my own sense of self...

I can have a blast being a little kid---totally grokking being 7 or 8---for about twelve minutes, and then I get bored and want to go read essays and comments and arguments about writing technique and rules and stuff. I can get into it much longer when I am hanging out with pets, chasing the dog to one end of the house and then fleeing in pretend panic while she chases me, and then rearing up so that I'M the chaser in this pointless game. It's giggly good fun, I'm good for about an hour there, tops.

I seem to recall that even as a kid I wasn't much of a kid. More like the somber, suit-wearing Barry Gordon in that offbeat 1960's comedy 1000 CLOWNS, if you ever saw that...

I may actually be more of a child nowadays. Some aspect of my personality are childlike* and rather girlish, certain toys and cute cartoon characters really appeal to me (along the bottom my flatscreen here I've stuck this adorable little plastic blue fairy that I got out of the gumball machines at the front of the supermarket, a more sensible use of my pocket change than the slot machines, who I like to pretend participates in and helps my writing, sprinkling it with pixie dust or whatever), or the happy shapes and primary colors of an Alexander Calder mobile. But these aspects seem integrated into my personality, not like there is this other, realer person inside me who feels oppressed by the age that I present to the world...

So what this whole blog is about here, is a request. I would very much like to hear from someone who experiences this Age Dysphoria first-hand. I would love to read an account of it, an essay of whatever length posted hereabouts, about what it feels like, what it means about you and your place in the world.

If you're COMFORTABLE doing this, that is. I imagine such a coming out could be scary, most of us here have had experiences with judgement of and hostility to who we are. But hopefully you can tell from what I'm saying that I am not going to judge whatever you have to say about this aspect of yourself. And I bet very few others here would either.

I just want to understand this better, to have another piece in the big puzzle of life. If not with the perfect understanding of someone who lives it, then better than I do now...

Love, and thank you for letting me be myself...
Laika.

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* Note that I said child-like. Childish doesn't count, a lot of adults are childish. In popular usage it usually just means being a jerk. We've ALL done that.

Comments

I hear you girl

Me, I carry toy model ships around

    Stanman
May Your Light Forever Shine

I hope you get some responses from some of my friends

But until you do, I'll give you my take on it.

As one of the Little Kids Kamp writers, I do not myself have such feelings, and it took a while for me to begin to understand it, even after months of email exchanges with the first little girl I met online. Even visiting her in person didn't make it totally understandable.

It wasn't until I attended one of the twice annual camps for Little Girls here in the US, as the aunt of another author who posts here regularly, where I could see her and 19 or so others interacting, that it became clearer.

All of the little girls are transgendered, at least to the point that they enjoy crossdressing, but they missed out on being one of the girls when they were that age, be it 2 or 5, or 10 or 12-14.

Some are older, some younger, but not as young as they would like to be.
Some are straight/normal in their real life presentation, and some push the limits, from a slight push, to a lot. I know one who is a little girl full time, despite being legally adult and married. She presents a bit bizarrely, but she does not care. She is what she wants to be!

Just as us who are Transsexual, out privately with just a few friends, or out publicly at least part time, having done so because we no linger wish to hide it, these little kids/little girls do not want to stay in their own little closet all the time, either

Like all of us, they come from a wide spectrum of backgrounds, and form a wide spectrum of little girls, too.

All of the characters in my stories, ‘California Girls’ & ‘Ida The Spy’ are real people except Johnny and Ida/Dean, as they present online. Though I have not met most of them in person, others in the story have, and I have leaned on a couple of them to help me in presenting them properly.

Me, I'm going to be content to be a hopefully pleasant, older lady. And though I will continue to write in this universe, I will branch out into other sub-genres as well.

Holly

It's nice to be important, but it's more important to be nice.

Holly

Butterflies...

Speaking for my own self, I don't believe I have "Age Disphoria" but more like reliving my teenage years the way they should have been. Since I transitioned some years back I've found a freedom to release my inner child that I didn't dare show back when I was acting the role of serious male. I love butterflies and my cell has a butterfly skin which some friends find a bit childish for a 50+ woman. I love stuffed animals and "girly" things that most women my age have put aside or have transferred to buying only for children/grandchildren. I think expressing your child-like nature is liberating and much more healthy than frowning down upon those who do. But, on the other hand, someone who truly is not happy with their age is in a bigger conundrum than someone with GID, as medical science has helped us find some relief from GID but (so far) there is no fountain of youth.

Hugs,

Jan

*rasing hand*

I guess ya could count me as one of 'em people that's age-dysphoric. I've kinda sorta accepted there ain't a whole lot I can do 'bout how big my body is, but I've pretty much decided it ain't gonna stop me from being me.

The beginning of TGIF is based in part on a time the Maggie and me and Aunt Holly met at my work. I don't always dress like a kid, but I do kinda push things a bit when I feel like I can get away with it, which includes the looser dress code we have on Fridays.

Of course, dressing like a kid don't make ya one. It's just something ya feel in your heart. In those times when I don't feel safe or brave enough to dress the way I feel, I still act like myself. There's times when I try to be careful to act grown up, but I dunno if actin' that way and bein' a growup is the same thing.

Urmmm...I guess I could go on, but I'm not really sure what to say. If ya got questions, feel free to ask and I'll answer 'em best I can. :)

=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
Heather Rose Brown
Author of Bobby's Rainy Day Adventure

Thanks All...

laika's picture

Thanks to all who commented! It occurs to me now that I was answering a lot of my questions as I was asking them---the power of "journaling"!---and I guess I don't need some big old treatise/confessional/ explanation on the subject after all, that some things are best not approached analytically; it'd be like asking Norman Mailer to explain "What Is Humor?" and getting 500 pages of opaque gobblety-gook that explains nothing and isn't funny at all........if this makes any sense. I liked what Jan said about reliving the teenage years but as a girl this time, things you'd previously denied yourself. That did resonate with some of my recent behavior and purchases. I do seem to have a lot of toys for a 50 year old, and if I don't run around the front yard in my Yogi Bear pajamas with them going bbbbbbrrrooooom bbrrroooooooom, occasionally my overly-proud-of-itself brain shuts up long enough for me to enjoy them; and that's good enough for me...

I'm still interested in hearing anything anyone wants to add to all this, and oh...
I do have one question for you Heather Rose, one you're probably sick of:
When are we gonna get another chapter of Bobby's Rainy Day Adventure?
---Laika

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What borders on stupidity?
Canada and Mexico.
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Bobby's Rainy Day Adventure

Hila Laika! Sorry it's taken so long to continue Bobby's story. For a while I had been concentrating on finishing Bobby's Rainy day Adventure, but as I did a backlog of other stories I wanted to tell started building up. I've been working on getting that backlog down a bit so I can concentrate better on Bobby's story. I'm gonna try my best to concentrate on her story next. :)

=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
Heather Rose Brown
Author of Bobby's Rainy Day Adventure

Building A House Starting With the Second Floor

For almost all of us that are transgendered and transition as adults we missed an important time. For us that are M2F truely playing house, the clapping songs, the sleepovers, discovering we are growing breasts, our first bra, our first date, our first kiss, our prom gown and other events of growing up. Even more importantly, as a teen we never learned how properly interact with the other teens because we were shunned by both the girls and boys.

Now we are playing catch up. Some of us can cope with the handicap, but the rest of us need to recapture that time. Like Holly above, I've discovered many who need that growing up time. I have made many of them my (virtual) daughters. Others have become my neices. I created the "Little Kids Kamp" universe for them and my sisters. Those of you who read these stories can for a too brief moment experience being a mother or daughter and the love involved.

hugs

shalimar, the RL Shelly (von Haber) Johnson