By Tina Carson
An earlier version of this essay originally appeared on Tina’s substack under the title Ugly Algorithms: Another Thing Being Tina Taught Me.
The purpose of poetry is to remind us
how difficult it is to remain just one person,
for our house is open, there are no keys in the doors,
and invisible guests come in and out at will.
–Czeslaw Milosz, “Ars Poetica?”
This week, Tina gets her own phone.
There has been a lot going on.
JJ’s reptile menagerie has been rapidly expanding, which Tina (JJ’s mom) aids and abets because she continually hangs from the grim cliff of knowing that trans kids easily get depressed. Tina hopes that letting her fifteen-year-old nonbinary kid keep snakes, lizards, and frogs will stave off adolescent depression, obsessions, deviances, and/or vices.
The current tally: 3 tree frogs, 1 crested gecko, 1 snake. But typing that out, Tina realizes she’s exaggerating. JJ is only getting one new snake, and it’s a baby. Very small.
“Like a shoelace!” JJ exclaims. They’re madly in love with the little black-and-white snake they met at the pet store where they volunteer on Sundays.
Tina has been preoccupied lately. More accurately, she is overwhelmed. There are at least five things a day coming up in the news that affect trans people, rising like some kind of seepage from out of the ground that threatens to ruin her shoes. These are all things Tina wants to write about, but she does not have time because she has papers to grade. Or, at least, I do.
Tina gets her own phone because she accidentally posted a sympathetic response to an ill colleague of mine who does not know who Tina is. Tina had to delete that comment, hopefully before anyone noticed. Tina and I realized that switching between social media accounts on one phone is a fool’s errand—at least for those of us old enough to remember when phones were attached to the wall. I got her a pink-and-red case at Five Below. Tina does not get a nice phone. Just an SE. That’s all she needs. She doesn’t complain. She knows we’re on a budget.
I publish a column once a month in The Bollard, an independent powerhouse of a local newspaper in Portland, Maine. I write there as Tina Carson to protect my child and myself from the haters.
Tina’s column is about raising my trans teenager (also pseudonymed: JJ). Raising this child has been a hell of a journey, and I’ve learned a lot. It is my hope to help those who struggle to get the pronouns right, or who need to get a grip. But it hasn’t been easy. Not by a long stretch.
My mom was furious with me recently because Tina quoted her out of context in the last installment of my column. Tina mentioned that her mom (my mom) questioned the cause of death of Nex Benedict, the trans teenager in Oklahoma who died after being beaten by her classmates in the girl’s bathroom at school. This pissed Tina off because she felt it was obvious that Nex was murdered, by physical and/or psychic violence.
I tried to explain to my mom that Tina isn’t me. She has her own socials, and her algorithm is entirely dedicated to the cause. She says all the things I’m afraid to say.
Tina’s algorithm reveals to her that there are many trans folks out there who are seriously, righteously happy. That there are also many mothers like Tina feeling the same way Tina does. That there is clothing designed for her trans nonbinary child. Really and truly!
This is a valuable discovery. Given that JJ has a habit of purchasing a LOT of clothes.
Let me rephrase that.
Given that Tina has purchased a lot of clothes for JJ because JJ has convinced her that THESE PARTICULAR CLOTHES are the ones that will solve everything … and then these clothes end up god knows where, maybe in a closet, with JJ apologizing and explaining that they didn’t quite have the fit figured out. Tina is excited about the clothes that show up in her algorithm. They are designed very specifically for nonbinary bodies, so maybe the “fit” will be right this time (but let’s not forget that teenagers will be teenagers when it comes to clothes).
The new algorithm is everything. It’s a complete world, purple and shiny, sparkly, righteous.
But it’s also terrifying, as it also offers up to Tina stories of trans young people who have been murdered.
When I’ve had enough, I put Tina and her phone over there, an arm’s length away on the coffee table. If I need to see into her thread, I can pick her back up.
******
As a literature professor, I’ve been trying to dig into the real work of finding trans voices, as opposed to relying on an anthology. I suspect when I read work by trans folk, and it does not appeal to my aesthetics, that my aesthetics are being challenged, and I realize that this lack of connection (between me and the text) is more revealing of my deficits than those of the trans author I am reading.
I’m becoming a little obsessed with the work of scholar and poet Cameron Awkward Rich. I teach Awkward Rich’s poem “Walking Lake Calhoun” to my class. There is a moment when the poem speaks to me so fully that I see myself and all my past selves, and I wonder if this poet lived in Minneapolis.
Because that’s where Lake Calhoun is, and I lived there, too, long ago, and walked around that lake.
So I sloop down a research rabbit hole—when all I initially wanted to find out was whether or not Awkward Rich did his undergraduate work in Minneapolis-St. Paul—and it’s then that I land on a website called Professor Watchlist, which “reports” professors who discuss or teach Critical Race Theory, Feminism, or Queer and LGBTQ+ focused stuff. These far-right folks have refashioned themselves, as you may know, as victims of an extreme leftist regime that is apparently—because we don’t have anything better to do—trying to indoctrinate them. This is narcissism on steroids.
Before I know it, my algorithm is fucked. I should have been doing this on Tina’s phone.
I’m getting adverts now from a website that claims some douche-bag kid has been “discriminated against” because he had the “courage” to wear a t‑shirt saying “THERE ARE ONLY TWO GENDERS” to school and was reprimanded, and I’m suddenly discovering a cadre of “foundations” purporting to fight inequality. Their pages display a veritable smorgasbord of “diverse” faces—some looking serious, some smiling, all looking very clean—by which I mean not one of these people wears handmade jewelry or has their hair dyed an unnatural color, and my eyes are squinting as I click further and further, finding my way into the plastic soul of one of these organizations’ web pages that appear to duplicate themselves across the Internet, indecipherable from one another, an invasive species of thought that strikes me as similar to the towering tangles of multiflora rose in my backyard, an invasive weed I’ve been fighting for years.
Multiflora rose sucks on so many levels. The worst part—aside from the fact it only has thorns and lacks flowers—is that it invades everything, wrapping itself up the trunks of apple trees, killing them.
Evil can be incredibly banal. Years ago I would have deemed that statement melodramatic. Now I consider it an observation. It would be very easy to glance at one of these websites and think they are supporting my values. Because they are pretending to, but it’s like reps from Catholic orphanages showing up at abortion clinics to counsel pregnant teens.
My point is that we must be on the lookout. I know it seems dumb: these Republican/Right-Wing douches attempting to appear sympathetic, masking themselves as victimized. I know it’s sad. It would be embarrassing if they didn’t actually know what they were doing.
I don’t for a second think they don’t know what they’re doing.
I don’t for a second assume they are dumb.
They know exactly what they are doing.
Like the Nazis knew what they were doing only eighty years ago.
Making myself aware of these deceptive practices and then pointing them out to others is the first step toward not having to raise my Prozac dosage.
I wish I could call Tina at her number and ask her to make all of this go away, but if I did, I know what she would say.
“Honey, you created me to raise your awareness of all this madness.”
TINA CARSON (she/her) is a cis het mom of a trans kid. Find her at genderdefiant.substack.com.
This story originally appeared in Stonecoast Review Issue 21.
Artwork by JJ Carson