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It would only be weird if you used the urinal." So I said to my friends, "Do you mind if I use the men’s room with you? Or would that be weird?"Īnd my best friend Bryan said, "Of course not.
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Other variations included dyke, queer, butch, bitch, creep, once (oddly) faggot and other, unprintable, words. I hated it because of what was said to me: G et out! Was the nicest version. But I hated using the women’s room and not just because of being a boy. Grunge and androgyny were reasonably widespread, even in the sticks of Maine. And I wore the same t-shirts and jeans and flannel shirts and sneakers that I always wore.ĭown that hallway, I thought, which one? Easy enough to just go in the women’s room, give people a dirty look when they scowled at me. They’d been calling me Al for years, so I didn’t have to tell them that I’d changed my name from Alice to Alex. My short hair hadn’t been mentioned - I’d had it short third grade through seventh grade, after all, only growing it out at my mom’s insistence.
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Afterwards, debating Denny’s versus Friendly’s, we veered down the hallway toward the movie theater’s bathrooms. We went to the movies, five of us crammed into someone’s mom’s sedan. And also because now at 17 I was, for the first time in my life, a boy. And, for me, because though I had known these boys since preschool, I had gone away every September for the last four years to a prep school. Second, because none of us owned a car and the nearest movie theater was 40 minutes from our rural Maine town. First, because we all worked odd jobs with odd hours. I’d been back in my hometown for a week or so, and a bunch of us decided to go to the movies together. Home for the summer from boarding school, that awkward and potent summer between high school and college, I was working as a dishwasher. I’d been living as a guy for about a year. The first time I used a men’s room with friends - friends who’d known me from before, friends who’d known me my whole life - I was a few weeks shy of my eighteenth birthday. And maybe they were washing their hands when I was leaving, and that’s why I’m thinking I probably didn’t wash my hands. Both at the urinals, and so their backs were toward me when I entered. I do remember that there were other men in the room. I can’t remember if I washed my hands or not. I made a beeline for the stalls, which were the same as the stalls in every women’s room I’d ever used in my first 17 years of life. In fact, I didn’t see most of it as I walked in, head down and turned slightly away from the line of urinals. I looked about 14, probably, with my hair freshly cut short, my head still feeling light and buoyant after getting rid of the ponytail I’d carried through most of high school. BOYS! BOYS! BOYS! is pushing back against this and attempting to make it mainstream and showcasing queer and gay photography in the context of fine art photography."Īnd as if you needed even more incentive to add this Collectors Edition to your library, $1 of every sale will go to benefit the LGBTQ+ community and the fight against HIV.īOYS! BOYS! BOYS! the magazine is out now - available from as well as select newsagents and bookstores like Barnes & Nobles and other larger magazine outlets.The first time I used a men’s room, I was 17 years old. "The simple answer is that queer and gay photography is grossly underrepresented in the fine art world, and even more so in the mainstream media. "You may ask why do we need a platform and magazine for queer and gay photography?" Ghislain Pascal, co-founder and co-owner of The Little Black Gallery, said in a release. Over the years the gallery has come to represent more than 60 photographers globally putting on exhibitions and producing two sold out books. The premier Collectors Edition Volume 1 is now available for purchase and features 10 photographers from 10 different countries capturing some of the best boys their native lands have to offer. After building a fanbase for the sumptuous queer and gay photography books and online presence they've built under the BOYS! BOYS! BOYS! brand, the gallery is now producing a bi-annual print magazine. If you need more queer photography in your life, the U.K.'s The Little Black Gallery has something new for you.