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were still out here ......
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Not dead...
...yet anyway :)
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Alive and well !!! Best kept secret in Oklahoma !!!
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Wasn't sure how to reply to this post.
Is butch a dying breed? I would think that would depend on how Butch is defined. I believe if you are you are referring to traditional rigid male role then perhaps yes as more of the community (young/new members) break away from less fluid terms. Again not saying a stone butch is wrong or right, but how the word is broadly defined. I live in Toronto, Canada, some may believe the mecca of gayville. It is rare to see OS butches and even less butch/femme couples. I've been told I'm butch by straight people and not butch enough by some in the LGBT. I am perceived to be butch (how they define it) by what they see. I prefer tomboy, andro (with a slightly more masculine mannerism) because the duality is closer to how I feel rather than a need to fulfil someones' predefined butch label role. I thought there was a declining population of femmes as well as femmes interested in non-femmes at least it seems that way here. And perhaps more so for anyone 40+. One post asked a great question about what is it about the dynamic of butch/femme that is sought after? Is it for stereotypical hetero-normative roles? - For myself it's finding a woman where we compliment each other. Since I don't wear heels or a dress/skirts that is one opposite - maybe she might. How she thinks and feels can make us whole. A femme for me doesn't mean that she must paint her nails, wear makeup, and have some one open the door for her but one with great character. Quote:
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Paradox, I couldn't agree with you more, I am in Mississauga and struggle with finding a community that embraces the butch/femme dynamic let alone Old School in Toronto or the GTA in general. If you are interested in making a new friend I would welcome the opportunity.
As to "butch" a dying breed, I think the rigid definition perhaps is fading out, however, in this day and age there is a new label almost everyday to try and include everyone within our community. I'm not one for labels, but within the b/f community it's a necessity if only to wean out potential partners. I've been known for years as a "soft butch", because I wasn't clad in the clothes deemed to be what "hard butch"....I prefer to be me, I don't wear heels, makeup or dresses, but on occassion wear silk shirts does that make me less butch. I don't think so, it makes me comfortable with me and who I am, and I'm pretty sure a certain someone has no question that I'm butch. We need to stop letting people define "us", and embrace and be confident with who we think we are, whether it be soft butch, female Id'd, male id'd, cock id'd, stone, andro, Old School or whatever we choose. The point is "we" are Butch and we bring something different and definitive to the table. |
Merry Xmas to All !!
Hey SaltyButch. Your live in Sauga terrority. How did you survive the ice storm? I will not decline an opportunity to make a new friend - :). It is very hard to find people who are really, genuinely comfortable 'being' and the community for such a space - particularly b/f is almost none-existent. |
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This made me wonder: is Toronto perhaps not the mecca of gayville, but only the mecca of a certain subgroup of gayville? I'm familiar with the idea of Toronto as a gay mecca, although my perception was that it was more of a mecca for gay men. I'm not sure where I got that idea, and it could simply be another case of "women are often ignored in the media." Could it be that the OS b/f mecca is located elsewhere? I think in the Atlanta/Decatur, Georgia area we still have quite a lot. There are certainly lots of queer people who identify in other ways, and maybe it's because I've lived here for 27 of my 48 years, but I see butches and femmes all the time who are people I don't know and don't recall ever having seen before. Of course, I'm the one identifying them as what I would call "butch" and "femme", and I don't ask them how they self-identify. (Do work pants and a tool belt make a butch? . . . gosh, I hope so.) I'm not claiming the b/f capitol for our own, but I'm wondering what others think? (I'll need to start thinking of retirement communities fairly soon, and I don't think Scottsdale, Arizona would suit me.) |
i hope not cuz I'm still looking for a butch of my own :)
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I think it maybe something that many of us experience.
I too live in a UK town well known for it's gay population and nights out for all. However, I've not met any others that embrace the b/f dynamic. Sadly we're a very, very small subset of a small subset. :| It's my experience that there's more access to other b/f folks in the large conurbations; Manchester, London etc. but even then we're still a tiny minority. It's why we come places like the Planet to find kindred spirits and people who share our life experiences. |
I know plenty of strong, proud butches. "We" are certainly not dying out. We are not dinosaurs. As long as there are humans on the planet, there will be butches. It isn't a phase...it is human nature. I know many butch/butch, femme/femme and butch/femme couples. "We" are out there and if you haven't found your O/one yet, this person is looking for you, too.
I could put on scrubs and glove up, but it wouldn't make Me a Doctor. Moreso, I could wear a tutu but it SURE won't make Me a ballerina. Clothes are only a small part of the person whatever they may be. As is the label. It is only an outward sign of what is in their hearts, minds and souls. Granted, there are times when I dress a particular way that the clothes reinforce what is there... but it is only a reinforcement of what exists and is firmly in place. |
No but there is definitely a shortage of femmes!!!!!!
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reply to CherylNYC
I like your plan. :)
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Shortage of butches? NOPE because I'm still kicking around. LOL
In my tiny redneck town in Texas, just an hour East of Dallas, there's a shortage of just being gay and lesbian. I seem to be the ONLY one, and I"m not kidding. :( no family around here for me, no community, no nothing but straight folks. I wish there was SOME sort of community or even a couple of lesbians here to talk to. LOL I THINK I"M GONNA LOSE MY MIND!!LOL |
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From your reply it brings a thought. Are we not 'seeing' the b/f because we have a preconceived visual cues of what we believe b/f is? Maybe they are out there but the image is far more different than before. From your example; Work pants and tool belt was (may still for some) be an automatic definer for a butch. Heels, purse and make up for a femme. Like wearing a uniform you knew what team they played for and what position (in theory). Now perhaps with the uniforms removed our prejudgements are kept at bay. (This sentence can be read in such a different way - :innocent:) Is this a good thing? In some ways definitely. It's the whole 'don't judge the book by it's cover' sort of thing. The Flip side? It can make it harder to figure out a person. So maybe there are more b/f and perhaps more femme that like butches/andro than I have noticed. Have to enhance my scanning skills. :glasses: |
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Hey Paradox, I faired not too badly with the storm, I lost power for about 10 hours, the ice is still clinging to the tree's and alot of limbs are down and posing problems. How did you fair? I was recently told by a friend who has since moved to the US that there is a b/f community in Toronto which is thriving, I said really where, I'll have to check the website that she told me about. If you want to chat a bit and perhaps meet up for coffee or such just drop me a line, I would welcome it. Salty |
No they aren't. There is plenty of them around. However, if you are preferable to a specific kind of butch and thus unable to spot any other kind, you may have that idea.
There are far far more than the kind that wear jeans and a tool belt. There are more than just OF or OS US style uniforms of it. But that would require accepting that those who look like tomboys or "faggits" (the dapper/urban dressed) ones are butches. And no, black eyeliner doesn't make one a soft butch. It might make them goth or rock and roll or glam. Alternatively I would also suggest there are only seven and the rest is done with mirrors. |
I'm pretty sure it isn't all done with mirrors. I've been seeing different bf couples every few weeks in shops or out walking. I'm living in a small town too. They have all been young, high school to early thirties.
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Paradox, now that you mention the "uniform", I rarely go out in "full drag", even though I id as high femme. There's no mistaking me for butch, as I've often been told. That said, your comment reminded me that I often don't bother to get all femmed up unless it's a special occasion or at least Saturday night. My everyday femme look comes off as more "soccer mom". I notice butches and femmes, but only because I've had 25+ years practice recognizing us in my particular community. If other folks aren't seeing me as femme instead of soccer mom, that's my fault, I suppose, for not making more of an effort to show my queerness all the time. |
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