We still have separate bathrooms for boys and girls…That statement highlights a rural school’s marquee as I head to a country general store.
Strangely, or maybe not, my first thought: What a bad sentence. It doesn’t convey what I know is intended. If I didn’t

We Still Have Separate Bathrooms for Boys and Girls
know what’s going on regarding trans folks choosing the bathroom that fits their identity, instead of their birth certificate, I’d be thinking, yeah, most places do have both male and female bathrooms. So what’s new? Is that really something that needs to be advertised in huge letters in front of your school? Doesn’t this facility have something better to announce? Like: Academic Excellence Valued Here! Or, Girl Basketball Champs 2016! Or even, Pancake Fund Raiser Friday night.
But I know what they’re getting at with their either bad or likely coded sentence. It irritates me on two levels: First—and I’m not proud of this, as a writer I get disturbed when sentences don’t accurately express the intended meaning—especially when I’m guilty of it. Secondly, and what’s more important, I got a snapshot of the kind of education those children are receiving in that school, both in their English classes and in the formation of their attitudes.
My stomach hurts.
I motor on through the gently rolling and bursting green wooded paradise. I love this land–it usually relaxes me, though not today. I also love rural general stores. They carry at least one of everything. If not everything, something else that could substitute, in a pinch, for what is needed. I’m doing spring repairs at our cabin, and I’m in search of wood glue. I find it and head for the cash register. In front of me is a man, I’d gauge in his early fifties, normal looking—whatever that means—talking to the store clerk. I don’t really hear her comments, but he’s going on, agitated about bathrooms. I figure the schoolyard sign has got folks talking—probably not about bad sentences. As I get closer and tune in to what he’s saying, I hear him preaching about who should be using which bathroom, and who should NOT, and the good old days when…I get his drift.
I think about a good friend of mine. She has a grandson in grade school who’s trans and all the problems that child and the parents are facing, and will face, as s/he grows up. Attitudes stick in hard-dry clay, for generations, especially out here in rural land. I stand there, horrified, with what feels like a rock in my stomach, hoping there aren’t any trans kids in this area. Wishful thinking.
The guy gets done with his purchase and turns and sees me behind him. I’m in my working jeans, T-shirt, and very short hair. He looks me up and down and says, like I had been part of the conversation: “And, if you want to pee in the girls bathroom, you’d better grow out your hair.
I say, “Around here, I’d rather use the woods.”
He looks at me like I’m from another world…I guess I am.
(To learn about my secret life, scroll down to: “My Dirty Little Secret.”)

When she’s done with her books, she asks me to send them to the publisher for publication, which, in her world, means stapling them together. Then she preforms an author reading. (She’s come to mine, so she knows the gig.) So, now, she’s ask me to build a library for all her works, hopefully, she says, it will be done before she gets dressed–I don’t know why she wants to do this, perhaps the scratchy nightgown is getting to her.
On the other hand, my wife grew up on a dairy farm. She welcomed her breasts, a sign of her womanhood, a promise of children she would one day nurture and feed. She happily nursed her two babies. Her breasts have always been a natural part of her, and their removal an amputation to her selfhood.
couched in the rhetorical. I don’t want to hear about someone’s idea of their god’s plan, or my perceived ingratitude, or that I’ll soon come to acceptance—I understand the stages of grief. But this loss has been locked in my throat, better left unsaid. But to make my way through it all, I need to scream my angst out into the universe, so here it is: Her breasts were part of our mutual love, our physically intimate moments, and my solace–and I feel like a shit for caring so much!