Stúdentablaðið - HINSEGINLEIKINN, október 2022

Page 29

Can’t you tell I’m queer??

Sérðu ekki að ég sé hinsegin??

CAN’T YOU TELL I’M QUEER ?? Ever since I was a teenager, my own gender orientation and gender identity has been on my mind. This has always been a large part of my self-image and I’m quite proud to be a part of the queer community. I identify as bisexual and I like being loud and vocal about it. I’m attracted to all genders, but the reason I identify more with the term bisexual, rather than pansexual, is because I don’t feel attraction regardless of gender, which is often how pansexuality is described, so I feel like bisexual is a term which fits me better. My attraction towards people is very much based on gender, and I experience attraction in a very different way depending on the person’s gender. I’ve dated both boys and girls, and I feel a big difference. Dating a lesbian woman on one hand and a straight man on the other are two completely separate things to me. I feel my standards drop when dating boys, it’s enough for them to provide the bare minimum and I’m content. However, I’ve dated some magnificent women in the past. I think this is due to the types I’m attracted to - it varies a lot based on gender. I’m romantically more attracted to women and non-binary people, but my attraction towards men is more physical. When I dated a girl I could avoid unwanted advances from men by simply saying I had a girlfriend. I often told people I was a lesbian after I broke up with that girl, because I didn’t want any men to feel like they could hit on me. I wasn’t ready to let go of the privileges that came with dating a woman. I only divulged the fact that I’m bisexual to people I was interested in, it was my way of controlling who could see me in a sexual way, and when.

We’re quite influenced by the binary structure of society, and that’s why I preferred people to think I was a lesbian rather than straight, because I felt like it gave me control over the objectification one faces as a woman, although ideally I’d like people to see me only as bisexual. I feel empowered when my queerness is noted, and also by not giving boys a chance to even think about something more than friendship with me unless I explicitly allow it. I feel quite lucky to be bisexual, and I wouldn’t want to change that. I feel like my sexuality also has an effect on my gender expression. I struggle sometimes with the fact that men see me as a woman, except when I especially want them to. I feel like it’s such an important part of my gender to be queer. It feels like a break from the male gaze. I’ve noticed subtle changes in my behavior depending on who I want to be seen by, although that seems like a contradiction. I feel like I want to be more feminine if I like a boy, but more androgynous if I like a woman or a non-binary person. I love being able to use looks and clothing to choose what type of people I want to attract and how they see me and are attracted to me, but at the same time it’s a real nuisance. What if I leave the house looking all androgynous or masculine, and then bump into a cute boy who I want to be noticed by? Or if I leave the house looking feminine and chic and then see a girl I’m interested in, and I want her to know I’m queer? I can’t carry an extra outfit everywhere I go! It’s important to note, though, that I’m not saying that being feminine and being straight is synonymous, or being a masculine-looking girl is automatically queer. I’m simply

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describing how my experience of my own gender, sexuality and infatuation with other people is very connected to my gender expression. I connect my interest in girls and non-binary people much more to my queerness rather than my femininity. My interest in boys, however, is more related to my gender, then I want to be a girl. This is only true if I’m already interested in said boy, though, I really want to be able to control when boys get to see me as a woman. Sexual orientation is both deeply personal, and varies based on personality. I’m quite thankful for the queer community and how it’s paving the way to make space within society for people to look into their own gender and sexuality. This is something I could ponder on and talk about infinitely, because it’s a large part of my self-image and shapes the way I see the world.


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Articles inside

Sigurljóð ljóðasamkeppni // Poetry Competition Winner: Mr. Doctor by Isaac Goodman

2min
page 94

Queer literature from all over the world

4min
pages 90-91

Hinsegin bókmenntir frá öllum heimshornum

4min
pages 90-91

"Get involved" - Interview with Kristmundur Pétursson

5min
pages 86-88

„Takið þátt“ - Viðtal við Kristmund Pétursson

5min
pages 86-88

Hip, Hip, Hooray for Kvára´s Day!

4min
pages 84-85

Hipp, hipp, húrra fyrir kváradeginum!

4min
pages 84-85

On queerness

4min
pages 82-83

Hugleiðing um hinseginleikann

4min
pages 82-83

Sodom, Genesis and the phallacy of homophobic interpretations of the Bible

5min
pages 79-81

Sódóma, 3. Mósebók og rökvillan í hómófóbískri túlkun Biblíunnar

6min
pages 79-81

"Sexuality is not what you do, it's how you feel" - Interview with Reyn Alpha

5min
pages 76-78

„ Kynhneigð er ekki það sem þú gerir, heldur hvernig þér líður“ - Viðtal við Reyn Alpha

5min
pages 76-78

Argafas and action: The status of elite trans female swimmers

7min
pages 72-75

Argafas og aðgerðir: Staða trans kvenna í sundi á afreksstigi

6min
pages 72-75

Fashionably queer, or queerly fashionable?

4min
pages 68-70

Tíska og hinseginleikinn

5min
pages 68-70

You okay, Iceland?

5min
page 67

Er í lagi, Ísland?

5min
page 66

Queer Art

4min
pages 64-65

Hinsegin list

3min
pages 64-65

"In a perfect world we would all be queer": Interview with Sergej Kjartan Artamonov

9min
pages 62-63

„ Í fullkomnum heimi værum við öll hinsegin“: Úkraínskt sjónarhorn

9min
pages 60-62

Intersex people & the Icelandic health care system

4min
pages 57-59

Vitundarvakning um stöðu intersex fólks í íslenska heilbrigðiskerfinu

4min
pages 57-59

Pride and prejudice: History to learn from

8min
pages 55-56

Pride og fordómar: Saga sem læra ber af

8min
pages 53-54

Hidden women: Queerness in Icelandic sources from 1700–1960

6min
pages 51-52

Huldukonur: Hinsegin kynverund í íslenskum heimildum 1700–1960

6min
pages 50-51

Samtökin ‘78 - The National Queer Organization of Iceland

5min
pages 48-49

Ekkert verkefni of stórt fyrir Samtökin '78 - Viðtal við Álf Birki Bjarnason

5min
pages 48-49

Neoliberalism in media coverage of queer families

4min
pages 46-47

Nýfrjálshyggja í fjölmiðlaumfjöllun um hinsegin fjölskyldur

4min
pages 45-46

“I like to do a lot with fake blood” - A portrait of ApocalypsticK

6min
pages 43-44

„Mér finnst gaman að vinna með gerviblóð“ - Viðtal við ApocalypsticK

6min
pages 42-43

Safety and responsibility

5min
pages 40-41

Öryggi og ábyrgð

5min
pages 38-39

Where do trans people stand in Icelandic society?

5min
pages 35-36

Hver er staða trans fólks á Íslandi?

4min
pages 34-35

Not having to define oneself is precious - Interview with Klara Rosatti

6min
pages 30-32

Það er dýrmætt að fá að skilgreina sig ekki - viðtal við Klöru Rosatti

7min
pages 30-31

Can't you tell I'm queer??

5min
page 29

Sérðu ekki að ég sé hinsegin??

4min
page 28

Musings about hán

5min
page 26

Hugleiðing um hán

5min
pages 24-26

Words Bear Weight: How to utilize one's own privilege for the better

5min
pages 21-22

Orðin þín - líðan mín: Að nýta forréttindi sín til góðs

4min
pages 20-22

Queer Word List

6min
pages 18-19

Hýrorðalisti

7min
pages 16-17

Aðgengilegt skiptinám // Inclusive Exchange

11min
pages 13-15

Ávarp forseta SHÍ - Student Council's President Address

6min
pages 11-12

Ávarp forseta Q-félagsins // Q - Queer Association Iceland's President Address

5min
pages 9-10

Ávarp ritstýru // Editor's Address

5min
pages 8-9
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