Thursday, October 27, 2022

Names

At the radio station two of the three people that I've shadowed suggested that I get a DJ name. Their motivations for this are clear: that as women, it might not be a good idea to put one's identity out there as faceless creepers sometimes gather. I witnessed this first hand in the studio, as a man called one of these DJs three times in the two hours of their show. The other DJ who I was shadowing late at night simply did not ever answer the phone. The third DJ, a man, was the only one of the three who used their own name, though I can't recall if he ever used his last name. I can't actually recall him ever referring to himself but this information is out there on the station's website, the name of a person's show and the name of the person. 

I was thinking about DJ names and what mine could be, that it might be easier to use an alias, DJ Food Lion or DJ Visiting Scholar or whatever. But whatever names I could think or or were suggested by friends were not names that I felt attached to. The crux of the matter is that my first name, Tyler, has never really felt like the right name. My middle and last name feel "right," but I've always had an ambivalence about my first name. I don't know what this feeling is exactly, or where it comes from, but introducing myself by my first name always generates a twinge of anxiety. Picturing myself saying it produces a twinge of anxiety. Seeing my name in print also conjures a twinge, though it's a twinge of disassociation more than anxiety. 

This twinge has been around for some time. I've said to a number of folks at points during the last fifteen or so years that I didn't really like my name or feel like it was my name. Certainly, I've never had the guts to claim a new name, to commit to a public declaration that that I didn't like my name. To do so would gum up the works of my relationships, public and private, and generate conversations that I don't want to have. I imagine though that after a period of questioning, my old name would fade away and whatever the new name was would take it's place. The problem, however, is that I've never found a new name that I liked, or a name that resonated with me loud enough to go through the efforts of changing my old name. 

More than that though, I wonder if I would develop the same kind of negative sentiment towards my new name. I brought this up with my therapist the other day, unsure what to make of this feeling of "name dysphoria" but taking it as a potential inroad to another, possibly insightful conversation. Predictably it lead to a conversation of past associations with the act of saying my name. A common experience when I was younger is that I would need to say my name twice because a person would not be able to hear my name clearly the first time and even if they did, that it would quickly be forgotten. I don't know how many times a person would guess that my name was Travis or worse, Trevor (a name that I associate with paragons of whiteness and privilege), and then I needed to correct them. 

There are two possibilities here: the first is that my feeling towards my name and saying my name is carried over from past experiences. Past experiences that are one part my perceptions of others and one part others perceptions of me. Psychology, and that experiences are embodied and reiterated into sensation each time encountered and like all creatures, I habitue myself to optimize encounters with my preferred feelings. This is the most likely explanation. Another possibility is that my name is in fact the wrong name. That I am actually not Tyler but someone else. This explanation presumes the existence of a second world, one where my true name resides, waiting for me to discover it. This part of me is not entirely rational but it makes valuable connections nonetheless. While I do occasionally take comfort in mysticism I have a hard time defending it. Meaning, I could not seriously argue that the sublime or nature or God or the gods know my true name. Names are not genetic or biological, but functional and ceremonial, I tell myself. They matter but not to the thing itself. 

In China people often think my name is Taylor but whatever, I can forgive them for this since it's China and being in China as a foreigner affords the freedom of not being someone else. Taylor, as in Taylor Swift, a known entity. I think of some of my Chinese students who seem quite malleable on the topic of their names, that it doesn't matter to them if I call them by their Chinese names or English names.  Whatever you prefer to call me, they say to me on the first day of class. "I'd prefer to call you by your real name." The assumption I often encounter while working with Chinese students is that it's easier for me, the foreigner, to remember and pronounce English names. I guess this is true, especially in the short term, but it also seems to me an open acknowledgement that the teacher/student relationship is a performance. My desire for authentic exchange with students, whatever that means, is hindered by this acknowledgement. 

My name, it seems, should be an authentic expression of who I am. This is the dream: one day I will open the flood gate that keeps my true self from emerging. That I will discover the key memory in therapy or that I will meditate away the pin that holds my defenses together. Or I will meet the right person and suddenly the way will open up. All of these things are possible but until then I will do my best to mitigate my cynicism. Taylor, Tyler, Trevor. I'd prefer to call you by your real name if you know it. If not, that's ok. I don't know mine either. 

Wednesday, October 12, 2022

Trust

Today I was thinking about trust. I'm always being asked by my phone to verify my identity. Recently I started to use online dating apps to meet people here in Charlottesville. Nothing has really come out of this aside from one in-person meeting in the last six weeks. This person took the bus to the coffeeshop we were meeting at and when it was time to go this person took the bus home though their apartment was a fifteen minute walk from the cafĂ©. I was walking that way to get to my own home but it was important, I suppose, that I didn't know where this person lived. The underlying assumptions here was there was a possibility that I am an axe murderer and therefore, it is a bad idea to reveal too much to this stranger (me) in case something went wrong. 

Trust. I don't expect the birds to trust that I won't try to harm them, or the squirrels. I am not to be trusted by these animals but I can understand, and can smile in the face of their fear because I know that I am not interested in harming them and can also understand that they don't know that. Whenever I encounter a snake I tend to jump, even though I don't think of myself as being scared of snakes. When I took my computer in to get it fixed I needed to create an account that required me to verify my password. I needed to first create my account and then needed to log into this account again. At this point, instead of creating my own passwords for the many log-ins I must perform to gain access to even the most basic forms of information, I just let Google come up with something for me, something like JKJ!8987vUll3. Trust is proving who you are. 

On Thursday I will shadow one of the DJs at the local radio station as part of my training (I'm volunteering at the radio station), a late night radio show from 11PM-1AM, and they informed me that their partner would be there with them. It's hard not to think that this is because I am not be trusted, that I may be an axe murderer or a rapist. On the one hand I can understand this. Trust. I can understand that axe murderers exist and that I could be one of them. On the other, it feels like distrust has been encouraged as a default setting (note the passive voice, has been and the absence of the agent). I've been out of the United States for the last five years  more or less. I've missed living in the Trump years along with the two-ish years of Covid business. I wonder how much this period has conditioned us to distrust each other. After all, you might be; I might be, some kind of MAGA Lib Tard Incel. I might have Covid and not know it, or know it and not care. You can never be too careful. I also wonder how much the internet's algorithms have worked to affirm the idea that there are far too many bad people in the world who will do bad things to you given the chance.

I'm not a woman and don't know what it is to feel threatened as I walk down the street in the way the women might feel threatened. I cannot evaluate the truth of another's fear. Yet, I know what it is to feel threatened. I know also that there is a grey area between what I am projecting onto the world and what is actually there. I know that anxiety, excitement, discomfort, and pleasure all live together and are such good friends that they wear each other's clothes. I wonder what kind of a world we live in when my friends who have children are careful not to let their kids wander the neighborhood without parental supervision, as we did when we were children. I wonder, are there more axe murderers and rapists in the world? I don't know. At the same time, even as I write this I worry that simply articulating my thoughts on the matter might raise red flags, that they only reason I am writing on this topic is because, I am, in fact, an axe murderer and/or a rapist. Trust. 

Trust is not easy. There is trusting others and there is also trusting oneself, as the confidence experts like to say. While there are times that I have been brave, I mostly consider myself to be hiding in various ways, way that are born of distrust. Distrust of the other, that they will not understand what I am talking about or why. Often on my mind is the Holy Grail of who I might be, that is, a person full of confidence and unafraid. This way I would be able to express myself fully to all, to always be ready to ask for what I need. There are times when I have reached for this ideal and was met with shame or silence. There are times when I have reached for this ideal and was met in kind. This is trust, at least for me. Today I got a haircut and the man who cut my hair put his hands on me in a suggestive way. He was looking for touch and I certainty can understand that. I was not but I admired his forwardness. I did not know him, but I would not imagine that he would think to harm me.