{"id":6447,"date":"2015-08-15T11:00:06","date_gmt":"2015-08-15T05:30:06","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.tarshi.net\/inplainspeak?p=6447"},"modified":"2019-03-26T16:06:07","modified_gmt":"2019-03-26T10:36:07","slug":"blogroll-damage","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.tarshi.net\/inplainspeak\/blogroll-damage\/","title":{"rendered":"Damage"},"content":{"rendered":"<p class=\"\" style=\"padding-left: 30px;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.tarshi.net\/inplainspeak\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/07\/Damage.png\"><img class=\"aligncenter wp-image-6448\" src=\"https:\/\/www.tarshi.net\/inplainspeak\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/07\/Damage.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"272\" height=\"272\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.tarshi.net\/inplainspeak\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/07\/Damage.png 400w, https:\/\/www.tarshi.net\/inplainspeak\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/07\/Damage-150x150.png 150w, https:\/\/www.tarshi.net\/inplainspeak\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/07\/Damage-300x300.png 300w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 272px) 100vw, 272px\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"padding-left: 30px;\"><em>When I was younger, someone took a knife to my clitoris and cut out a small but significant part of me. I blamed my mother. I despised her. I loved her.<\/em><\/p>\n<p class=\"\"><em>Washington D.C., July 2010<\/em><\/p>\n<p>The first and only time I had sex it did not go well. I was twenty-two, a late bloomer by most of popular culture\u2019s standards, and for the year my boyfriend and I had been dating, we\u2019d skirted around the issue. He\u2019d repeated that he was willing to wait, however long it might take me to be ready, and I\u2019d chafed at his understanding.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cDon\u2019t you want me?\u201d I asked after another false start, our breathing heavy. He rolled off me gently, panting. \u201cIt didn\u2019t seem like you wanted it,\u201d he replied. He was right. I\u2019d clenched every muscle in my thighs and squeezed my eyes shut when his hand climbed above my knee. That\u2019s when he stopped. For the next two days he was rewarded for his patience by my unwillingness to kiss him back.<\/p>\n<p>I couldn\u2019t explain the crawls that I felt every single time he touched me in the wrong place, or understand the debilitating anger that I felt when he nodded understandingly after I told him I needed a pause. He\u2019d had girlfriends before and I badgered him endlessly about their sexual experiences. He answered all of my questions patiently, never once lying.<\/p>\n<p>After these conversations, as we lay beside each other in his king-sized bed, he would tell me that he loved me, that if I wasn\u2019t ready, I wasn\u2019t ready. For him it was that simple. Yet while I listened to his steady, phlegmy breathing as he slept next to me, I\u2019d be filled with an uncontrollable anger; I\u2019d crawl out of bed and into the bathroom, where I\u2019d stare at my face in the dingy mirror. \u201cYou should want him,\u201d I told the wide-eyed girl in the reflection. The truth was that I had no idea what it felt like to sexually want someone so much that I was willing to lose myself to that feeling. I had no idea what it might take for me to let go of all of my fears about sex.<\/p>\n<p>After a year of dating him, I decided that I needed to get the act over with. I approached this the same way I approached most goals in my life. I researched the mechanics on the Internet, taking notes that I hid under the bed. I watched a few porn clips and memorized the way the women moved effortlessly below the men pounding into them. While he was at work I practiced making sounds of pleasure, the shower running so no one could hear.<\/p>\n<p>Then I broached the subject with my boyfriend: I wanted to have sex before the end of summer. \u201cI don\u2019t want you to stop even if I look like it\u2019s hurting me,\u201d I told him. He grimaced, but I repeated the statement again and then again. His quiet acquiescence was disarming, so I gripped his wrists tightly and stared at him directly. \u201cI need you to do this for me,\u201d I told him.<\/p>\n<p>The night I was to commit the sinful act, I drank a half bottle of wine in fifteen minutes as he watched, warily. For a blissful forty-five minutes we made out on the couch, his hands staying in all of the safe spots, the ones that months of dating had taught him didn\u2019t make me involuntarily gag. The wine turned my limbs heavy. My body was warm. I knew that this would be the night.<\/p>\n<p>By the time his body was positioned over mine, we\u2019d moved from the couch to the bed. I closed my eyes, feeling my nostrils flare as I breathed in slowly, counting to control my heartbeat and the nausea welling up inside me: IN one, two three; HOLD one, two three; OUT one, two three\u2026.After a couple of minutes we were technically having sex. Pain shot up my body. I could feel it in my teeth and in the muscles of my jaw. My insides felt like they were being scraped out by sandpaper. The pain was everywhere; I couldn\u2019t figure out what hurt and where. After a couple of thrusts, he withdrew, unfinished, kissing my forehead gently. He reminded me he loved me, and left for the bathroom.<\/p>\n<p>I sat in the bed, allowing myself to cry for the first time since we\u2019d begun talking about sex. For the first time since I\u2019d admitted to him that I might never be able to enjoy a sexual experience. That when I was younger, someone had taken a knife to my clitoris and cut out a small but significant part of me. I wanted to call my mother.<\/p>\n<p><em>Karachi, 1995<\/em><\/p>\n<p>When I was seven years old and living in Karachi, Pakistan, my mother took me for my yearly check-up to the pediatrician. While I sat on a stool, polishing imaginary dirt off the buckles on my Mary Janes, my mother quietly asked the pediatrician if it was time for me to get the bug removed. The conversation wasn\u2019t entirely unfamiliar. Earlier that month, my mother had asked me if I was ever itchy or uncomfortable down there. I didn\u2019t understand what the questions meant, and I don\u2019t remember my responses. What I do remember is my mother explaining that around the time I turned seven, a bug inside of me would attempt to grow out of me down there and would crawl to my brain. It would need to be removed, she had said. After a brief examination, my pediatrician agreed.<\/p>\n<p>A girl down the street that I\u2019d grown up playing with had her bug removed, my grandmother told me. She was also seven, a few months older than me, and after she came home from the \u201coperation\u201d she felt so good that she was able to jump up and down on her bed. It was a story my grandmother told with gusto, and it made me itchy all over. I wanted this to be over and done with, to jump on a bed in unabated joy afterwards. Be gone bug, I whispered on the night before my operation.<\/p>\n<p>My elder cousins, both girls, were each presented with a piece of gold jewelry when they returned home from their respective operations. Remembering this, I asked specifically for a simple gold chain with a teardrop pearl at the end. My mother\u2019s eyes filled with tears for a brief moment before my grandmother clucked her tongue disapprovingly.<\/p>\n<p>I did not feel well enough to go around jumping on beds after my surgery. For two days I wore what felt unnervingly like a big-girl diaper, wet with blood. Peeing was so painful that I tried to last for hours without relieving myself, until my mother explained that I could give myself an infection. For the next year, I\u2019d break out into a cold sweat whenever I encountered the kind-faced woman who\u2019d laid me down on a tarp on her living room floor and spoken to me softly as she took a knife and cut me. I received the exact necklace I had requested, and wore it at almost every opportunity.<\/p>\n<p><em>Washington D.C., July 2010<\/em><\/p>\n<p>When my boyfriend finally reemerged from the bathroom, I was biting my lower lip and crying silently. He looked at me for a long moment, until I waved him away. Years of dating had taught him that in moments of high emotion, I didn\u2019t want to be touched or spoken to. He mumbled the name of our favorite neighborhood bar, then quietly left the apartment. \u201cI love you,\u201d he told me, as he closed the door. It took me about four minutes to open up my laptop and finally call my mother in Karachi, whom I hadn\u2019t seen in more than a year.<\/p>\n<p>The last time I\u2019d spoken in person with my mother had been in August 2009. I\u2019d been hovering over my suitcase, trying to decide between two polka-dotted shirts, in the bedroom that belonged to me in my parent\u2019s Karachi apartment. I was returning for my senior year at college in Massachusetts, and did not know when I\u2019d be returning to Pakistan.<\/p>\n<p>The city, stifling hot in the throes of monsoon build-up, felt claustrophobic to me, infusing each of my relationships with a panic. I had never learned to separate Karachi, the physical location, from my hatred for my religious sect. I hated the neighborhood we lived in, I hated my grandmother\u2019s words of religious wisdom, and I hated how much I felt like a perennial outsider.<\/p>\n<p>My family, all ethnically from the Indian state of Gujarat, immigrated to East Africa three generations before I was born. My mother grew up in Tanzania, moving to Pakistan when she married my father. He had moved to Karachi with his family when he was six years old. I was born in Karachi, but soon after my eleventh birthday, my family moved to the United States, to Texas. During my sophomore year of college, my parents learned that our family\u2019s application for a green card had been denied. I was in western Massachusetts, studying at Mt Holyoke College, when my family received the news.<\/p>\n<p>When I returned to Texas for Christmas break, as I sat on my bed in my Houston bedroom, they gently told me that we would have to move. Initially, I pretended to be positive about this move, but my time in Karachi was miserable. I missed being part of a world I knew and understood. In the United States, I\u2019d figured out where I belonged, but in Karachi I found it hard to make friends, and missed the friends I\u2019d already made. A year after my family moved to Karachi, as I packed my suitcase with my mother watching, I was filled an uncomfortable feeling of finality.<\/p>\n<p>I\u2019d grown up in an incredibly close family. Throughout my childhood, both in Karachi and in Texas, I\u2019d been forced to sit through my brother\u2019s sports tournaments and he\u2019d watched me as I learned how to jump my first fence. We were required to eschew plans with friends on birthdays for family dinner, and we ate together four nights a week anyway, without fail. Even after I left for college in Massachusetts, these rules persisted when I came home for break. This time though, I\u2019d be going back to the United States without them. This would be the longest period of time I\u2019d go without seeing my mother.<\/p>\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_993086dec9f4c941f136e4f1c3bb90cb\" class=\"ant_indicator ant_indicator_for_text ant_helper ant_no_reactions\">\n<div class=\"ant ant_indicator_container\">\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_body_993086dec9f4c941f136e4f1c3bb90cb\" class=\"ant ant_indicator_body \"><span class=\"ant_count\"><span class=\"ant_react_label\">What do you think?<\/span><\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>I spent that final year of college entirely apart from my parents, missing them desperately during Thanksgiving and Christmas breaks, when I attached myself barnacle-like to the families of my closest friends. I learned to build an entire support structure from scratch. I stopped asking my parents for help, quietly plugging away on graduate school applications and financial aid forms without consulting them on my choices.<\/p>\n<p>This was one of many things my parents and I never spoke about: a silent vow that I should never return to Karachi if I could help it. It was painfully obvious that I\u2019d never fit in. Realizing how difficult and expensive it would be to go home the summer after I graduated from college in 2010, I spent the better part of eleven months convincing myself that I didn\u2019t need my parents, that the brief phone conversations where I\u2019d outline the most relatable part of my college life were enough to sustain a healthy relationship with them.<\/p>\n<p>Yet my relationship with both of my parents suffered that year\u2014I found it more and more difficult to explain to them what I was doing with my life. When I announced that I\u2019d be moving in with my boyfriend in Washington D.C., a decision born out of a stark reality\u2014I had no other place to live over the summer\u2014my parents took it in stride. No one mentioned sex. Not once in my twenty-one years had my mother and I ever explicitly or even implicitly discussed my sex life. I knew that her strong Muslim faith put her firmly in the \u201cno sex before marriage\u201d camp. I wasn\u2019t sure if she suspected that I was sexually active, but I knew that we were never supposed to mention it.<\/p>\n<p><em>Houston, 2004<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Yet my mother and I did once speak about what happened to me when I was seven. I was sixteen, and a woman within earshot at my Houston mosque had asked the woman next to her if her daughter had the \u201coperation\u201d already, and if she\u2019d gotten it done in the U.S. or back in India. Her question niggled something deep in my brain. The kind-faced woman came back to me; I could hear her no-nonsense tone as she told me it would be over quickly.<\/p>\n<p>I\u2019m not sure what I googled, but three hours after returning home from mosque I had words to describe what had happened to me: female genital cutting, clitoridectomy, female genital circumcision. Later that night, I sat with the illicit copy of Our Bodies, Ourselves that my American aunt had given me. My aunt was born in the United States and married my mother\u2019s brother, a relationship my parents sometimes still had difficulty with, even five years after the scandalous marriage. My aunt realized that her Western, agnostic upbringing was startlingly different from mine, and she gave the book to me while visiting one Christmas, gently telling me that she was around for any questions I may have. One of the things the book suggested was to put a hand mirror between my legs. In the harsh lights of my bathroom, looking at the pictures, I realized that there was something horrifically different about what I had between my legs.<\/p>\n<p>Over the next few weeks, the Internet gave me a sense of outrage that I wasn\u2019t prepared to handle. I latched onto the most controversial name for what had happened to me: Female Genital Mutilation, or FGM. Years later I\u2019d find a printout from an outdated website with the words highlighted. \u201cBecause that\u2019s what it is Mom,\u201d I wrote underneath. \u201cReligion, no religion, it\u2019s mutilation. It\u2019s wrong.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>I read article after article about girls in African villages, their labia sewn shut, dying from the cutting. This was not me. Though my parents were raised in East Africa, I wasn\u2019t black African. I was Muslim, from a small sect of Shi\u2019ites who prided themselves on their progressive actions. I googled \u201cFGM Islam\u201d and found no correlation between my religion and this horrible act. FGM in South Asia, however, seemed confined singularly to my sect. Why hadn\u2019t anyone else said anything, I wondered? I seethed internally for days, an anger bubbling inside of me. I had no one to talk to. For the next few days, I\u2019d remember my mother\u2019s cool hand on my forehead after I finally peed for the first time after being cut.<\/p>\n<p>I couldn\u2019t talk to her, I realized. She\u2019d done this.<\/p>\n<p>Yet who else could fill in the blanks? When I finally asked my mother, the two of us were cleaning my bathroom. I\u2019d been standing in the bathtub, a roll of steel wool in my hand. I hadn\u2019t meant to talk to her about it, but the porcelain was spotless from my fury and I was running out of things to clean to perfection.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWhatexactlywasthatbugthingyoutoldmeabout?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The words didn\u2019t come out spaced the way I\u2019d imagined. My mouth was full of marbles, of cotton, of peanut butter. After the words escaped, I couldn\u2019t swallow. Every last trace of spittle had dried up.<\/p>\n<p>My mother\u2019s expression was unreadable, cloaked in an emotion I knew but could not name. I was terrified that my question made no sense, that I\u2019d have to clarify further. Then, as a beat passed without her responding, I realized I was even more scared that it had made perfect sense. That she\u2019d been expecting this question since I was seven years old.<\/p>\n<p>My mother\u2019s explanation came out as fumbled as my initial question, something about women not being sexual and shortening my clitoris.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cYou removed the part of me that makes me feel good while having sex?\u201d I asked. Our Bodies Ourselves, and some of the Internet articles I\u2019d read, gave me the confidence to say this last part. At sixteen, I thought I knew exactly what had been taken away from me, even if I wouldn\u2019t have any idea what this really meant for another five years.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI didn\u2019t have a choice,\u201d said my mother. \u201cIt happened to me too.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>I understood in that very moment that this look on her face was one of naked fear. \u201cYou didn\u2019t have a choice so you didn\u2019t give me one?\u201d I asked her.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cAll seven-year-old girls have to go through this,\u201d she said.<\/p>\n<p>We didn\u2019t talk about it again, but the moment followed us around. My trust in her as my one able parent, the one who understood the supreme otherness of being a gawky, Pakistani, Muslim immigrant in Cypress, Texas, a Houston suburb where at that time there were hardly any other South Asian immigrants. My anger soured our relationship.<\/p>\n<p>She attempted to crack down on my decision to drink coffee regularly during my senior year. \u201cThis isn\u2019t good for your health,\u201d she said firmly, unplugging the Mr. Coffee from the counter in the middle of a brew cycle. \u201cReally?\u201d I shot back, glaring, and we were stuck with the weight of what I didn\u2019t say next. You know what\u2019s also not good for my health? It was one of many times when I shrugged off her authority with one glance, invoking that one unspeakable act.<\/p>\n<p>***<\/p>\n<p>My parents had a quietly rocky relationship, although they\u2019d swear up and down that everything was perfect, always. The first time the two of them ever met, in Arusha, Tanzania, my father made some vague statement about moving to the United States. He\u2019d been invited over for dinner, presumably so my extremely picky mother could approve or disapprove of him as a suitor. Infatuated with the idea of getting out of her tiny East African town, my mother decided to marry him. They were engaged for three years, their relationship blossoming on the pages of the onionskin paper letters she sent to him from Tanzania as he finished his studies at the University of Houston, where he was majoring in finance.<\/p>\n<p>My mother said her marriage vows while her mother was terminal with breast cancer, and after my grandmother finally passed away, she packed up a few suitcases and followed my father to Karachi, Pakistan, where he had returned after college.<\/p>\n<p>The two of them shared a bed for months, very slowly working their way, in a stop and go fashion, to an open sexual relationship. I\u2019d stumbled across this information accidentally, when in a rare moment of unguardedness, my father told me that while my mother had lost her virginity to him, he\u2019d lost his in Houston some three years earlier. I peppered him with questions, and in the flurry of confusion after he\u2019d said something he thought he shouldn\u2019t have, other words came out. Barely fourteen, I\u2019d only recently learned more than the simple mechanics of sex. I pieced together the first few months of their relationship with awe. I imagined that they lay next to each other night after night just like I\u2019d done with my perfectly understanding boyfriend, never allowing each other to touch. Years later, I asked my mother if this was true. Her silence was the only confirmation I needed.<\/p>\n<p>Weirdly, this made complete sense to me. The idea of marrying someone I barely knew and then having him touch me seemed unfathomable. I understood why my parents had lived with each other for months, learning about each other, falling in some semblance of love before actually enjoying sex. It wasn\u2019t until I found myself panicking every time my boyfriend\u2019s hands moved somewhere I didn\u2019t want them to move that I realized that perhaps my mother had other reasons to not have sex.<\/p>\n<p><em>Cypress, Texas, between 2003 and 2005<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Before I heard about FGM, my mother caught me with a grocery store Harlequin novel. Though she\u2019d never told me I wasn\u2019t allowed to read them, she raised one practiced eyebrow as I shoved it quickly under my covers. It wasn\u2019t until weeks later, when she was driving me somewhere, that she mentioned she\u2019d seen it. My mother was unnervingly intelligent about timing her conversations, preferring to hold me captive in a moving vehicle before embarking on a lecture. I calculated the minutes before we\u2019d get to our destination as my mother told me that sex was never really pleasurable.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThose books never really tell you what it feels like when a man is selfish, when he\u2019s able to find his pleasure so quickly. For us, it\u2019s different.\u201d<\/p>\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_0992ebf1ebb033cdc66d2cff3719209a\" class=\"ant_indicator ant_indicator_for_text ant_helper ant_no_reactions\">\n<div class=\"ant ant_indicator_container\">\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_body_0992ebf1ebb033cdc66d2cff3719209a\" class=\"ant ant_indicator_body \"><span class=\"ant_count\"><span class=\"ant_react_label\">What do you think?<\/span><\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>After I found out about my mother and my FGM, I wondered if she\u2019d meant women when she said \u201cus,\u201d or the two of us specifically. The conversation replayed over and over again in my head: the set line of her mouth as she explained that sex was almost never a good feeling, and that the movies and the TV shows had it wrong. \u201cDon\u2019t go looking for that,\u201d she\u2019d told me. \u201cThat\u2019s almost never true.\u201d<\/p>\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_87410d0e650caa0bb3fce853aa7c8d0e\" class=\"ant_indicator ant_indicator_for_text ant_helper ant_no_reactions\">\n<div class=\"ant ant_indicator_container\">\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_body_87410d0e650caa0bb3fce853aa7c8d0e\" class=\"ant ant_indicator_body \"><span class=\"ant_count\"><span class=\"ant_react_label\">What do you think?<\/span><\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p><em>Washington D.C., July 2010<\/em><\/p>\n<p>During the three days before I finally had sex with my boyfriend, the only person I wanted to talk to about it was my mother. There wasn\u2019t anyone else I trusted to tell me the truth about what it was like to have sex with a part of your clitoris missing.<\/p>\n<p>At the same time, I wasn\u2019t sure I really wanted to know that my mother might have lived her entire life without finding pleasure in sex. This terrified me. What if this was my future too? Worse, what if she\u2019d successfully had an orgasm but I wouldn\u2019t ever be able to? I worried that my hatred for her could tip in either direction. While more hate seemed almost impossible, less hate seemed like the worse option: If I couldn\u2019t hate her for this, who could I possibly hold responsible?<\/p>\n<p>It wasn\u2019t until right after my failed sexual experience that I found the courage to call her. I dialed the number without hesitation, calculating the remaining credit in my Skype account as it rang. Twenty-three minutes. That\u2019s exactly the amount of time I\u2019d have to speak, and if it wasn\u2019t enough time, it was up to her to call me back.<\/p>\n<p>***<\/p>\n<p>Both before and after I realized what my mother had done, I believed that she was my most ardent supporter, a champion of every possibility that stretched out in front of me.<\/p>\n<p>She\u2019d quit after high school, when her own mother was diagnosed with breast cancer, silently giving up on the dream of college or any sort of further education. While her younger brother went to expensive private schools\u2014and later to the United States for a Bachelor\u2019s degree, a Master\u2019s, and a Ph.D.\u2014she took care of her mother in the kind of servitude that\u2019s expected of Indian daughters. When her mother\u2019s cancer became terminal, she started trying to find ways out.<\/p>\n<p>My father provided the best opportunity: a na\u00efve optimism and the possibility of America. She chose him unfalteringly, though my grandfather told me repeatedly that she\u2019d had no shortage of suitors. In my grandfather\u2019s eyes, this was my mother\u2019s biggest talent, I realized\u2014that she could have picked any man she wanted.<\/p>\n<p>I\u2019m not sure why my parents didn\u2019t immediately pack their bags and move to the United States, as my mother had dreamed when she married him. Over the last decade, their answers to this question have changed mercurially. Sometimes it\u2019s because my father needed to prove himself to his father. Other times it is because my mother had given birth to the only grandson, and ripping him away from his family seemed like a betrayal.<\/p>\n<p>But when I was eleven my parents finally made the move. For years afterwards, I\u2019d hear friends\u2019 parents and teachers ask them what had convinced them to give up the comforts of an upper-class Pakistan life for the United States. Their answer never varied: The U.S. provided many more opportunities for them and their children.<\/p>\n<p>The truth was a bit more complicated. My mother was unwilling to let me grow up in my younger brother\u2019s shadow simply because I was a girl. For years she watched as I was ignored by my grandparents while my brother was spoiled. She wanted to raise her children to be equal.<\/p>\n<p>Thus the move to America was my fault, born of my mother\u2019s wish that I have a life that was nothing like hers. I wore this responsibility like a badge of honor; my mother\u2019s love for me and her hopes for my future were the best kind of baby blanket, soothing me every time I did something right, every time I made her proud.<\/p>\n<p>After the fateful conversation in my bathroom, though, I learned what it was like to love someone without forgiving her. The two halves of my relationship with my mother did not match. Most days we\u2019d go about our lives, her betrayal far from my mind. She\u2019d groan when I turned up the radio to a song she particularly disliked, and I\u2019d grin back at her and then sing, in the off-key, toneless voice I\u2019d inherited from her. Other times, she\u2019d say something entirely innocuous and I\u2019d be filled with a murderous rage. How could someone who claimed to love me so much have done something so horrible, I wondered.<\/p>\n<p>The last two years that I lived at home in Cypress, Texas, before leaving for college, I found a way to coexist with my hatred. I knew that it was my mother\u2019s grit and willpower that forced my father to commit to the promise he\u2019d made, perhaps inadvertently, when they first met. She held our entire family together in the United States, forcing me to take horseback riding lessons, crying when I told her I needed a training bra for gym. This mother I knew couldn\u2019t be the same one who\u2019d watched as a stranger cut me. The woman who attended every free seminar about preparing her children for college couldn\u2019t be the same person who\u2019d stared at me when I\u2019d asked her about FGM, no apologies spilling from her mouth, no admission of guilt ever assuaging the pain of what I\u2019d realized had happened. Our relationship was far from perfect, irreparably broken in so many ways. Before moving to college, though, it was her that I held onto, sobbing about going somewhere so majestically far away.<\/p>\n<p><em>South Hadley, Massachusetts, 2006\u20142008<\/em><\/p>\n<p>I attended a small all-women\u2019s liberal arts college in Western Massachusetts. There, I watched as confident upper-class women walked around with hairy armpits and greasy hair. The stark contrast to the perfectly coiffed girls at my Texas high school felt jarring for the first few weeks, but soon I realized this wasn\u2019t the only difference. My first semester in one of the student residence halls, I heard what sounded like a heartbreaking keening noise coming from the dorm room next door. As I listened to make sure she was okay, I realized that the girl was having sex. My second semester, I walked in on my roommate masturbating. She withdrew her hand from her crotch to grin at me sheepishly, barely any embarrassment visible on her face.<\/p>\n<p>I hadn\u2019t dated in high school, a combination of my self-imposed awkwardness and my parents\u2019 stern rules. And none of my high school girlfriends would have discussed their sex lives with me frankly. My roommate was different. Later that night, as I highlighted a sociology text, she asked me if I masturbated. I sputtered: No. \u201cYou should try it,\u201d she told me. She moved off her twin bed and onto the corner of mine. \u201cDon\u2019t be so prude,\u201d she said when I cringed. Then without any additional prompting from me, my roommate explained erotica and female-centric porn and what a true orgasm felt like. For the first few minutes, I feigned total ignorance.<\/p>\n<p>Excited to open my mind to the idea of liberal sex, my roommate continued. \u201cHave you ever even looked at your clitoris?\u201d she asked. I felt something squeeze deeply inside of me and I began crying, tears trickling down from my eyes as I clamped my lips shut. She sat patiently as I garbled an explanation, of finding out about FGM, of feeling so horribly violated and alone.<\/p>\n<p>My roommate and I would never be close, but she was the first person I spoke to honestly about what had happened. I\u2019d told my best friends in high school that this had happened; I\u2019d let them in on the superficial horrors of my secret. Unlike my roommate, though, my friends in Texas were devoutly Baptist, believing that sex before marriage was entirely taboo. And most of them only had a vague understanding of what a clitoris was. We\u2019d never discuss masturbation or orgasms. Though they knew what had happened to me, I was never able to tell them about my fears about what this would mean for my future relationships. Until speaking with my roommate, I had never really told anyone that I had no idea what it meant to have a clitorectomy, that I had no idea about the extent of the damage.<\/p>\n<p>To my roommate, I inexplicably opened up. I explained about the girls in the African villages and the pictures of their labia sewn shut, though making clear that this wasn\u2019t my situation. But I still had no words to explain what had actually happened. She smoothed my back, chewing on her lip. Finally, I moved my head into her lap, breaking down into uncontrollable sobs. She held me as we both fell asleep, her tears wet on my back.<\/p>\n<p>In the months that followed, we didn\u2019t get closer. After a few attempts at getting me to open up again, she gave up. Every few days, though, she encouraged me to go see an ob\/gyn at the school. Before going home for the summer, I made an appointment at student health services. I ended up in stirrups only twenty minutes after walking in, and when the doctor finally arrived, she sat down between my legs murmuring something about a pap smear. \u201cLet\u2019s have a look,\u201d she said, using the same no-nonsense tone I remembered from the lady from my childhood, the one who cut me. I clamped my knees together and started bawling.<\/p>\n<p>The doctor didn\u2019t miss a beat. She was in her late fifties and had seen enough during her quick glance to make a correct assumption about why I was crying. \u201cWhy don\u2019t you sit right up and let\u2019s talk about any questions you may have.\u201d She had questions of her own, too. \u201cWhen did this happen? How long did it hurt? Are you able to wipe yourself with toilet paper without discomfort?\u201d The doctor admitted up front that she didn\u2019t know much, but said that taking a closer look might help her out.<\/p>\n<p>By the time I finally let the doctor take a look, she let out a long, low breath. For a few long moments she looked without speaking. Then, she asked me for my cell number. She would ask around, see if anyone in the area knew more that she did. \u201cWhat I can tell you is that there is a lot of thin scar tissue, most of which looks extremely painful,\u201d she said. \u201cThis doesn\u2019t look like a full clitorectomy,\u201d she added, explaining that while she\u2019d never seen one before, it looked like a partial cut. \u201cDid a medical professional do this?\u201d she asked as I shook my head. I didn\u2019t know, I admitted. The question would linger with me, and for months I would weigh the consequences of asking my mother.<\/p>\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_9619e917749b6d480ad63eb78cd3e2c5\" class=\"ant_indicator ant_indicator_for_text ant_helper ant_no_reactions\">\n<div class=\"ant ant_indicator_container\">\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_body_9619e917749b6d480ad63eb78cd3e2c5\" class=\"ant ant_indicator_body \"><span class=\"ant_count\"><span class=\"ant_react_label\">What do you think?<\/span><\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>Later, after I put my clothes on, she came back in to hug me. \u201cCome see me anytime, with any questions,\u201d she said, and before I could stop myself, I blurted out. \u201cCan I ever have an orgasm?\u201d<\/p>\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_3480747330eec13c00f92c16e96dd534\" class=\"ant_indicator ant_indicator_for_text ant_helper ant_no_reactions\">\n<div class=\"ant ant_indicator_container\">\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_body_3480747330eec13c00f92c16e96dd534\" class=\"ant ant_indicator_body \"><span class=\"ant_count\"><span class=\"ant_react_label\">What do you think?<\/span><\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>She shrugged carefully, handing me a few printed pamphlets on healthy masturbation.<\/p>\n<p>***<\/p>\n<p>When I finally started dating, it would take me months to finally let my boyfriend know why we weren\u2019t progressing past second base. In his Washington, D.C. dorm room, I took three shots of green apple vodka, then blurted out as much as I could. My boyfriend silently listened, holding my hands as I spoke. When I was finished, we lay down beside each other and he still said nothing at all. The next morning, he sat beside me as I puked up my stomach bile in the communal bathroom. He didn\u2019t ask questions, or try to break up with me. Later that night, he told me he would wait until I was ready. I wondered if I would ever be ready.<\/p>\n<p>The early days of our relationship were mired in uncertainty and self-consciousness. A week after I told him about FGM, we were laying in bed together naked, limbs intertwined. He whispered that even if I had been cut, what he\u2019d seen down there was absolutely beautiful. I recoiled physically, pulling on a T-shirt. I spent the remainder of the night on the couch of his dorm suite\u2019s common room. I never lay next to him naked again.<\/p>\n<p>I always knew that the relationship would go nowhere. My boyfriend was sweet, loyal, and unbelievably kind, but I couldn\u2019t see us having a future. He was half American, half Dutch, and so pale that we got comments about our brave interracial relationship from servers in restaurants. He\u2019d never met my parents and was unlikely to ever visit them in Karachi. They\u2019d have rejected him immediately and he wasn\u2019t built to withstand their scrutiny. Though I loved him, I was self-aware enough to know that ultimately my parents as well as my desire to travel and to freelance, would end the relationship. Still, before breaking it off with him, I decided that I could use him as my one shot to figure out how much someone who loved me was willing to take. I could learn whether I\u2019d ever have success at a relationship, even if I wasn\u2019t ever ready to have sex.<\/p>\n<p><em>Washington D.C., July 2010<\/em><\/p>\n<p>In the seconds before my mother answered the phone in Karachi, I chewed on the words I wanted to use carefully. By the time I heard her voice, though, my carefully planned sentences had disappeared.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cIs sex ever good for you?\u201d I asked her, my voice still watery from my tears. There was a brief but important pause. I heard the click of a door and then her voice, clear, unmuffled. \u201cExcuse me?\u201d she asked.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI tried to have sex with my boyfriend.\u201d I said. \u201cIt didn\u2019t go well. It hurt so bad that I\u2019m not sure I ever want to try it again. I know you don\u2019t think I should be having sex, but I\u2019m so scared.\u201d<\/p>\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_7aa76ee95fc215fb2dd22f34d8edb687\" class=\"ant_indicator ant_indicator_for_text ant_helper ant_no_reactions\">\n<div class=\"ant ant_indicator_container\">\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_body_7aa76ee95fc215fb2dd22f34d8edb687\" class=\"ant ant_indicator_body \"><span class=\"ant_count\"><span class=\"ant_react_label\">What do you think?<\/span><\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>What I didn\u2019t say out loud, what my mother instinctively knew, was what exactly I was so afraid of. She didn\u2019t learn about her own FGM until after she was married, when my father, raised without a formal sexual education, pointed out that she looked different from his other conquests. She filed this information away until I turned seven, realizing almost too belatedly that this had happened to her too. She heard in the words I never used, my one greatest fear: that true love would escape me forever, simply because I carried the weight of what I considered a defective body part.<\/p>\n<p>During college, I\u2019d figured out that getting to orgasm wasn\u2019t going to be easy. Even when I attempted to pleasure myself, any wrong move, any sudden accidental movement, would shoot pain inside of me. The scar tissue was tender and grew inflamed quickly. The skin sloughed off easily sometimes and it was quick to bleed. I kept this information close to my chest, hardly ever mentioning it to anyone. After college, when I finally had sex for the one and only time, I told no one that it had been a disaster, that the pain had been so bad that it hurt to pee for weeks afterwards.<\/p>\n<p>Even when friends who knew my secret talked about sex, I\u2019d pretend I was just like them. I\u2019d assure them that I was hooking up randomly with people same as they were. They all knew about my FGM, something I\u2019d tried to let my closest friends in on when they saw me balk at physical intimacy, but I never allowed them to delve deeper into what exactly that meant. If they bothered to ask, I\u2019d admit freely that having sex wasn\u2019t the easiest thing ever, but would then laugh it off by joking: When was having sex ever easy? I\u2019d read enough books, watched enough television to appropriate a cavalier attitude towards my imaginary sexual exploits. To the outside world, I was as liberated as they were.<\/p>\n<p>The lies built upon other lies, tangling in a web that soon became an alternate life. The broken, scared version of me was my own secret identity, known to no one else. She prevented me from hooking up with the cute guy at the bar, from jumping into a relationship without any guarantee that it wouldn\u2019t blow up in my face. She stopped me from admitting to someone that I was deeply, madly in love with him, knowing that revelation would soon be followed by another.<\/p>\n<p>A year after my attempt at sex, a friend was lamenting his lame sex life. \u201cI\u2019m a born-again virgin,\u201d he said, wistfully. It had been three years since he\u2019d had sex, and I murmured the appropriate words of sympathy. \u201cI know how you feel,\u201d I said, almost accidentally. \u201cReally?\u201d he replied. \u201cYou\u2019ve not only had sex more recently than me, you\u2019ve had it with someone who loved you, who you loved.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>In the moments that followed, I said something apologetic, falsely conceding that his situation was far worse. But my anger was a physical pain, pulsing under my fingernails. I wasn\u2019t sure what I was so furious at\u2014him for not knowing that I hadn\u2019t had sex as recently as he\u2019d imagined, or the world because even though the boy I had sex with had loved me, it wasn\u2019t enough to make it good.<\/p>\n<p><em>Washington D.C., July 2010<\/em><\/p>\n<p>I worried that my mother would hang up. Over the previous year, I\u2019d been distant with her, but I knew she was the only one who would understand the fears that had been bubbling inside me, for years. I worried she would ignore my questions, or even pretend that her outrage about my premarital sex was more important than what I was asking.<\/p>\n<p>Instead, she told me about how, when she was a teenager, she saved up pocket change for Harlequin romances. \u201cAll I wanted was to figure out how to feel like those women,\u201d she told me. \u201cWhen your father and I first got married, him touching me would light me on fire. But sometimes, if he moved too fast, if he tried something new, that fire just became pain.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>I knew exactly what she was talking about\u2014pain that suffused into every pore, suffocating the good. \u201cI get panic attacks when that happens,\u201d I told her.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI did too,\u201d she told me.<\/p>\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_89aa5f3c2d288033948716d0eb2f94c2\" class=\"ant_indicator ant_indicator_for_text ant_helper ant_no_reactions\">\n<div class=\"ant ant_indicator_container\">\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_body_89aa5f3c2d288033948716d0eb2f94c2\" class=\"ant ant_indicator_body \"><span class=\"ant_count\"><span class=\"ant_react_label\">What do you think?<\/span><\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>For her, divorce wasn\u2019t an option\u2014culturally or emotionally. It wasn\u2019t something that would fix anything. \u201cSo your father and I talked through what felt good and we figured out a way,\u201d she explained. I told her that I loved her. I wanted her to apologize for giving me the same pain that she herself had suffered. But my mother stayed quiet.<\/p>\n<p>The Skype clock showed that I had one and a half more minutes left, and I told her that. \u201cTalk soon, okay?\u201d I said, our signature goodbye. \u201cI hate everyone else too,\u201d she said, unprompted. \u201cThose women on TV who love sex, who enjoy it. I hate them too.\u201d I knew what that last part was supposed to be\u2014the closest thing to an apology my mother would ever be able to make.<\/p>\n<p><em>New York City, April 2011\u2014Boston, June 2012<\/em><\/p>\n<p>After breaking up with my boyfriend, in April of 2011, and graduating with my masters from New York City, I moved to Boston to work at an international news startup. There, I made out with a coworker, almost a year after breaking my boyfriend\u2019s heart. It was the first moment in my life that I\u2019d allowed myself to want something with abandon, to give into the primal urge for physical contact that I\u2019d been battling for years. I wanted it. W hen his hand snaked under my shirt, teasing the bottom of my bra, I willed myself not to flinch. I wasn\u2019t entirely successful. I broke contact with his lips, turning my head so that his lips landed instead on my neck. A moment later, I pulled away, my stomach churning.<\/p>\n<p>My rejection masked what was really going on. For the first time, I\u2019d been overtaken by my own desire. While he kissed me, I wanted something more, pressing myself firmly against him. Yet when his hand sneaked under my shirt and I pulled away, nauseated, I was more upset than he was. Though we hung out for the next few months, we never made out again. When I spoke to my closest friends, I pretended that the relationship was more sexual that it really was. But I knew better, and after the incident I finally went to get answers, landing at the office of doctor who specialized in women traumatized by FGM.<\/p>\n<p>Since my first experience with an ob\/gyn in college, I\u2019d been to three other doctors. All of them had been horrified when they\u2019d looked between my legs. When I\u2019d peppered them with questions, they seemed hesitant to respond with authority. The reality was that many of them had no experience dealing with someone who\u2019d been a victim of genital mutilation.<\/p>\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_137f4891d61b638b248d9e02dc3ab38b\" class=\"ant_indicator ant_indicator_for_text ant_helper ant_no_reactions\">\n<div class=\"ant ant_indicator_container\">\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_body_137f4891d61b638b248d9e02dc3ab38b\" class=\"ant ant_indicator_body \"><span class=\"ant_count\"><span class=\"ant_react_label\">What do you think?<\/span><\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>A week later I delved into my meager savings account. I was living without health insurance that year, and when I called the doctor\u2019s office, explaining this, the receptionist told me to plan to spend somewhere around $2,000 for the consult. The money was worth it. This doctor, unlike so many of the gynecologists I\u2019d seen before, didn\u2019t wince when she peered between my legs. She didn\u2019t over-apologize, or pat my knees. She didn\u2019t murmur, in a hushed whisper like the medical resident at Columbia, \u201cOh bless your dear heart.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Instead, she silently examined me. She\u2019d heard of the religious sect that I belonged to, and had examined other girls like me. She explained that because the cutting is done in a living room, without proper medical equipment, for girls in my sect, the results varied. \u201cSome of the girls can easily go on to have great sex lives, the only part removed is part of their hood,\u201d she explained. But for me the difference was in the scar tissue, and the fact that all of my hood and a large chunk of my clitoris had been removed.<\/p>\n<p>I\u2019d read of a surgery developed in France, where a doctor was rerouting nerves from a pinky finger as part of a regenerative process. She shook her head, \u201cI wouldn\u2019t recommend this,\u201d she said.<\/p>\n<p>She told me what I\u2019d long suspected: I\u2019d probably never have the kind of wonderful, easy, glowing sex that everyone showed in the movies. I wouldn\u2019t likely even have the real, imperfect kind. Instead, it would likely involve many conversations in bed, a sex therapist, and a willingness to trust another human completely. I wasn\u2019t horribly mutilated, or defective in a way that made me incapable of sexual pleasure, she explained. \u201cThis is not terminal. This is not a life sentence,\u201d she told me. \u201cFind a sex therapist you trust, learn to allow yourself to let go.\u201d I wasn\u2019t sure what she meant, and didn\u2019t ask further questions. In the moments after she gave me her verdict, she mentioned a support group she held at Brigham and Women\u2019s Hospital. I nodded enthusiastically, knowing I\u2019d never attend.<\/p>\n<p><em>Karachi, July 2012<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Two years after my mother and I had our big phone conversation, I finally saw her again. After three years without seeing my parents, I\u2019d moved back to Karachi.<\/p>\n<p>Working in a newsroom in Boston, I realized that all I\u2019d ever really wanted to do was report and write long features. Unfortunately, my student visa made it impossible for me to find such a job. In Boston, I added GIFs to listicles, and came to think that the kind of writing and work I wanted to do didn\u2019t really exist for me in the United States. I knew that I could get back to the longform journalism I was eager to do if I moved back to Pakistan, where I could market myself to a U.S. audience. So when my work permit ran out, a year after I earned my master\u2019s degree, I moved back.<\/p>\n<p>Readjusting to life in Karachi was difficult. My family expected me to attend religious services, but I dragged my feet every time I had to enter our neighborhood mosque. I\u2019d scan all of the faces to see if I could recognize the woman who had cut me. I sat next to girls I\u2019d grown up with, many of whom had married, and wondered what their sex lives were like.<\/p>\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_7b2ab6ca47cd867bad6a5a5c7c4a6522\" class=\"ant_indicator ant_indicator_for_text ant_helper ant_no_reactions\">\n<div class=\"ant ant_indicator_container\">\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_body_7b2ab6ca47cd867bad6a5a5c7c4a6522\" class=\"ant ant_indicator_body \"><span class=\"ant_count\"><span class=\"ant_react_label\">What do you think?<\/span><\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>Still, I realized deep down that I wasn\u2019t truly alone, that seated beside me were at least another hundred girls who had suffered this same fate. The difference, I realized, was that I knew. Did these girls have any idea that they were entitled to a better, healthier sexual life? Did they want that? Or did they lay motionless while the deed was done. I\u2019d sit fidgeting, wondering if any of them had escaped the cutting.<\/p>\n<p>In Karachi, family took precedence over everything. My grandfather, my father\u2019s father, had passed away in the months before I moved home, and my grandmother sleepwalked through her grief. Muslim women must isolate themselves from any non-related men for the first four months after losing their husbands, and my grandmother, deeply devout, didn\u2019t exempt herself from this rule. She cloistered herself in her bedroom, in the house where I\u2019d been brought up. She wore only white, her skin yellow from months away from sunlight. Her eyes seemed permanently rimmed with red, and she seemed smaller and frailer than I remembered her. To avoid men, she had to stay in that bedroom, and every time I visited her during the last month of her mourning, I\u2019d be frustrated with the small space. Most often she\u2019d be found on the floor, clutching her Quran in her hands, a string of prayer beads beside her.<\/p>\n<p>I\u2019d always viewed my grandmother as tough as nails, the kind of woman who wouldn\u2019t disappear into the woodwork like so many of her friends. While in mourning, her vulnerability was masked by a kind of vitriol, one I\u2019d recognized in myself. She hated asking for help, hated asking questions. She had to wait for us to serve her meals, for us to tell her who had entered the compound. She became clingy, too, and being around her was difficult even at the best of times. After her mourning period ended she grew intolerable, lashing out at everyone to let them know how much they\u2019d disappointed her, just so she could have a conversation that she felt like she was in control of.<\/p>\n<p>My grandmother and I had never been particularly close, her religious dogma rubbing abrasively against my need to question everything. When I told her about my travels, or my experiences in the parts of Karachi that everyone else was too terrified to visit, she\u2019d ask how I\u2019d dressed, what prayers I\u2019d said beforehand. Most of the time, she\u2019d mention how I was failing her, failing God, with my refusal to marry.<\/p>\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_1f1a775ad2b11f7b5da5a0561d188d99\" class=\"ant_indicator ant_indicator_for_text ant_helper ant_no_reactions\">\n<div class=\"ant ant_indicator_container\">\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_body_1f1a775ad2b11f7b5da5a0561d188d99\" class=\"ant ant_indicator_body \"><span class=\"ant_count\"><span class=\"ant_react_label\">What do you think?<\/span><\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>I parceled out my visits to her house, calculating how many days it had been since I\u2019d seen her face. I\u2019d allot her twenty-minute increments, heading there right before an appointment, an escape clause built into our conversations. Most of those visits followed the same pattern: She\u2019d ask me what I was working on, and I\u2019d follow her eyes as they intently watched the TV set, not even bothering to listen to the words of my reply. She\u2019d ask me if I planned to get married, then offer me food, and I\u2019d nod yes just so that I could comfort myself by watching my grandmother stroll from one physical space to the next, no longer confined to her bedroom.<\/p>\n<p>During one of these visits, something happened. As I willed myself to not check the clock on my phone, my grandmother suddenly asked me what FGM was.<\/p>\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_54ba3a6587658adac07caf540c81ab54\" class=\"ant_indicator ant_indicator_for_text ant_helper ant_no_reactions\">\n<div class=\"ant ant_indicator_container\">\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_body_54ba3a6587658adac07caf540c81ab54\" class=\"ant ant_indicator_body \"><span class=\"ant_count\"><span class=\"ant_react_label\">What do you think?<\/span><\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>We were sitting in the living room, the TV on mute. I sat alert, and asked her what she was talking about. She handed me a carefully folded piece of the local English-language daily. In it was a review of a documentary, screened during a film festival in Karachi. The documentary, A Pinch of Skin, showed several obscured women talk about their genital mutilation. My grandmother had first heard about it in her women\u2019s group. Then she\u2019d read about it in the paper.<\/p>\n<p>I had only seven minutes before I\u2019d be late to my next appointment, one I couldn\u2019t miss. So I asked her carefully if she remembered what she\u2019d done to me when I was seven. I debated walking across the room, sitting beside her on the loveseat she occupied.<\/p>\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_7bab4848603b74e4fd1e1430f60c72dc\" class=\"ant_indicator ant_indicator_for_text ant_helper ant_no_reactions\">\n<div class=\"ant ant_indicator_container\">\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_body_7bab4848603b74e4fd1e1430f60c72dc\" class=\"ant ant_indicator_body \"><span class=\"ant_count\"><span class=\"ant_react_label\">What do you think?<\/span><\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>She nodded. \u201cWhat did you think that was?\u201d I asked her. She shrugged insolently, a gesture familiar from every other time she had insulted or angered me. Gujarati, the only language that my grandmother and I had in common, wasn\u2019t my strongest suit, and speaking about female anatomy in it made my words stumble up against each other. But I told her that women were supposed to enjoy sex, that we had an organ similar to a penis, except tiny, that was supposed to make it feel good for us. That\u2019s what they cut out. That\u2019s what FGM was.<\/p>\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_ae9c8e43696abc6bc6659fd4fee97b07\" class=\"ant_indicator ant_indicator_for_text ant_helper ant_no_reactions\">\n<div class=\"ant ant_indicator_container\">\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_body_ae9c8e43696abc6bc6659fd4fee97b07\" class=\"ant ant_indicator_body \"><span class=\"ant_count\"><span class=\"ant_react_label\">What do you think?<\/span><\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>\u201cDo you think that\u2019s right?\u201d she asked me.<\/p>\n<p>The moment was precious. She was asking me for my honest opinion, so I dove right in with as much restrained anger as I could. \u201cNo. It was wrong. Being able to enjoy sex is a basic human right and you took that away from me. You took that away from every girl they cut,\u201d I said, lumping her in with the rest of the members of the sect, all of whom I blamed for what had happened to me. \u201cWhy?\u201d I continued. \u201cSo that we were easily controlled? That you wouldn\u2019t have to deal with our independence?\u201d<\/p>\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_9511feb8bbd023c26b8cbb0e02c463f8\" class=\"ant_indicator ant_indicator_for_text ant_helper ant_no_reactions\">\n<div class=\"ant ant_indicator_container\">\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_body_9511feb8bbd023c26b8cbb0e02c463f8\" class=\"ant ant_indicator_body \"><span class=\"ant_count\"><span class=\"ant_react_label\">What do you think?<\/span><\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>I had to force myself to stop, realizing that I could damage the tiny bit of progress I had made with her. Instead, I told myself to watch her facial expressions, that later I\u2019d want to remember how every one of her muscles had responded to my words.<\/p>\n<p>I believed that someone had to be held responsible for what had happened to me. For years, I\u2019d held my mother accountable, but suddenly my blame had sprung free, latching onto my grandmother and the women she knew. That she wouldn\u2019t have the slightest idea about what this really meant astounded me. I realized: The decisions that had been made about my life came from a group of people who were woefully ill-informed.<\/p>\n<p>My grandmother had always been the matriarch; her insidious emotional blackmail was legendary in our extended family. With one sentence she could convince my father to do something he never wanted to do. She\u2019d easily make my mother\u2019s life miserable if my mother did something she didn\u2019t approve of. When I left to go to her house, my mother would carefully inspect my outfit, hoping it would meet my grandmother\u2019s expectations. We bided our time with her, measuring each conversation against intended or unintended consequences. And now, what I\u2019d said was the most honest and real opinion I\u2019d ever given her. I\u2019d meant every word, but now that they were out, in the vast space between the separate couches we sat on, I didn\u2019t know if I wanted them there.<\/p>\n<p>My grandmother gave one, slow nod. Then, in her gravelly voice, she told me that she didn\u2019t really know. \u201cThe religious elders,\u201d she explained, \u201cthey know what\u2019s best, I suppose.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>It was those last two words that gave her away. For my grandmother to imply even a little bit that her faith wasn\u2019t unwavering was gigantic. Days after our conversation, I found out that she\u2019d asked my uncle about this too, and addressed it with my cousin as well. I\u2019d been the third person she\u2019d talked to. Later, when I found the courage to ask her about it again, she\u2019d pretend she had no idea what I was referring to, using the veil of old age to shove it away.<\/p>\n<p>Yet before I left for my appointment, my grandmother held my hand and looked me in the eyes.<\/p>\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_303b8359f326d9eb820fcb949656bb63\" class=\"ant_indicator ant_indicator_for_text ant_helper ant_no_reactions\">\n<div class=\"ant ant_indicator_container\">\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_body_303b8359f326d9eb820fcb949656bb63\" class=\"ant ant_indicator_body \"><span class=\"ant_count\"><span class=\"ant_react_label\">What do you think?<\/span><\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>\u201cYour mother tried to stop it,\u201d she told me.<\/p>\n<p>***<\/p>\n<p>Even after she soothed me on the telephone in 2010, my hatred for my mother had continued to coexist with my love. I had hoped that the conversation would heal my relationship with her, that I would come to accept that my mother hadn\u2019t expected this operation to go so horribly wrong, but my anger was still present.<\/p>\n<p>In the two years since that conversation, I\u2019d done a lot of growing. I\u2019d moved from my boyfriend\u2019s tiny apartment in Washington D.C. to my student housing apartment in New York, and then moved again to Boston for my first real job.<\/p>\n<p>While moving to Boston, I\u2019d felt alone for the first time in my life. I\u2019d have to find my own apartment and parcel out my own income, no longer relying on loans. Each task seemed monumental, and disturbingly difficult. I kept thinking about how my mother did it, alone in the United States, navigating an American grocery store with two small children. She\u2019d never attended a college like I had, never had a football team\u2019s worth of American friends help her understand the difference between, say, Kleenex and Puffs.<\/p>\n<p>It was in Boston, too, as I grew more independent, that I stopped viewing my mother\u2019s decision as a decision, or even as a betrayal. And I began to realize how many choices I had in my life. I\u2019d gone to a private liberal arts college, had been allowed to continue my education without being pressured into marriage. I wondered, objectively, for the first time, about my mother\u2019s options. I tried to imagine what it was like to be her. How informed was my mother\u2019s decision, I\u2019d begun to wonder? She didn\u2019t have the Internet. She didn\u2019t grow up with Hollywood\u2019s liberated sexuality. How fully had she understood what it was she was subjecting me to?<\/p>\n<p>After our conversation on the phone, my mother initially demanded some distance, avoiding my calls. But eventually we reverted into our old relationship. We\u2019d joke about my father\u2019s fishing trips and complain about my brother\u2019s arrogance. We never talked about what had happened on the phone, and after a while it stopped lingering in the background. I told a friend that I was pretty sure I\u2019d come as close to forgiving my mother as was possible.<\/p>\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_e2908ce5f35301fd216191a9f14bc110\" class=\"ant_indicator ant_indicator_for_text ant_helper ant_no_reactions\">\n<div class=\"ant ant_indicator_container\">\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_body_e2908ce5f35301fd216191a9f14bc110\" class=\"ant ant_indicator_body \"><span class=\"ant_count\"><span class=\"ant_react_label\">What do you think?<\/span><\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>While in Boston, I had continued lying to my new friends about my sexual liberation. When a close friend mentioned how he hated when his partner stuck his tongue in his ear, I laughed in scorn. \u201cYou\u2019ve been dating for months,\u201d I told him. \u201cHow could you possibly not feel comfortable just telling him you don\u2019t enjoy that?\u201d But at the back of my mind, other questions wove forward: Do you have any authority to speak to this boy about sex? Would I be able to tell a man what I didn\u2019t like and did like? Or would I learn to grin and bear it, like I believed my mother had.<\/p>\n<p>After I visited the ob\/gyn, I stopped lying to my friends about sex, complaining loudly that I hadn\u2019t had it in years. Sometimes, tipsy on red wine or vodka, I\u2019d allude to the fact that I was broken, a confession that my friends would treat with awkward silences. No one was able to comfort me, and I didn\u2019t want them to. I simply wanted us to stop pretending we were the same.<\/p>\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_598b703db5ea6dde4db6708e0fbc2986\" class=\"ant_indicator ant_indicator_for_text ant_helper ant_no_reactions\">\n<div class=\"ant ant_indicator_container\">\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_body_598b703db5ea6dde4db6708e0fbc2986\" class=\"ant ant_indicator_body \"><span class=\"ant_count\"><span class=\"ant_react_label\">What do you think?<\/span><\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>After the doctor in Boston told me that 95 percent of women in my sect with FGM had successful orgasms, the hatred dissipated further. And it was after seeing the doctor that I began seriously entertaining the idea of dating. I\u2019d always give up in the past, realizing that I didn\u2019t want to put emotions and feelings on the line only to be rejected. No one seemed worth the time or the effort. I told myself over and over again as I fell asleep that it\u2019d work out, that I\u2019d be okay. I told myself I was releasing the anger, and sometimes I truly believed that I had, that I could.<\/p>\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_20182a64017298d155981554264e9f64\" class=\"ant_indicator ant_indicator_for_text ant_helper ant_no_reactions\">\n<div class=\"ant ant_indicator_container\">\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_body_20182a64017298d155981554264e9f64\" class=\"ant ant_indicator_body \"><span class=\"ant_count\"><span class=\"ant_react_label\">What do you think?<\/span><\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>Yet after I moved home to Pakistan in 2012, I realized that my anger would spring back into the conversation in moments that hardly warranted it. I noticed when it crept into my mind\u2014the idea that my mother had failed me as a parent, tainting a simple parental request\u2014the same as it had when I was younger. When she asked me to make my bed I\u2019d glare, remembering how she\u2019d failed me so greatly, and refuse outright. The unmade bed was a symbol of my refusal to be her daughter, I told myself, even while recognizing it was an absurd fight to pick.<\/p>\n<p>I thought about what I\u2019d told my friend, editing my statement backwards and forwards: If she wasn\u2019t entirely forgiven, I realized, she wasn\u2019t forgiven. There was no halfway, no partial forgiveness.<\/p>\n<p><em>Karachi, Pakistan, March, 2014<\/em><\/p>\n<p>I sat with my grandmother\u2019s words for three weeks before talking to my mother. Somewhere inside of me, my hatred had broken away. It moved about untethered to anything, cropping up in phone conversations with my best friend, twisting into my dreams. Dislodged, my anger was both worse and better than it had been before I accused my mother. I felt a global sense of unfairness that I didn\u2019t know if I would ever be able to escape.<\/p>\n<p>I finally told my mother about my conversation with my grandmother. She was folding her laundry on her bed. She continued folding. After a pause that seemed to stretch so thin that I felt a physical ache, I finally whispered what my grandmother had said. My mother looked back at me, her eyes filled with tears. \u201cWe tried so very, very hard,\u201d she whispered back. \u201cI told your father that he couldn\u2019t let this happen. Your grandmother just watched, never once interfering.\u201d<\/p>\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_214c1d21f7d77d70034b1d6776c6944f\" class=\"ant_indicator ant_indicator_for_text ant_helper ant_no_reactions\">\n<div class=\"ant ant_indicator_container\">\n<div id=\"ant_indicator_body_214c1d21f7d77d70034b1d6776c6944f\" class=\"ant ant_indicator_body \"><span class=\"ant_count\"><span class=\"ant_react_label\">What do you think?<\/span><\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>But the real villain, if there even was such a thing, was my grandfather. From what I pieced together from my mother\u2019s words, he\u2019d put his foot down firmly. The fights about it grew so out of control that he threatened to kick my mother out of the family. \u201cI\u2019ll keep the kids,\u201d he warned my mother, and she was smart enough to realize that this was true. Because of Pakistan\u2019s overwhelmingly Muslim customs and society, she might be able to be unbound from his family, but she\u2019d lose her children in the process.<\/p>\n<p>My mother blamed herself enough that she let me hate her for years without ever clarifying what had happened. She shouldered this blame silently, never once believing that she was worthy of my forgiveness.<\/p>\n<p>After she told me what really happened, I didn\u2019t ask her many questions. But I knew that our relationship had forever changed. Forgiveness was no longer something I had to learn to give my mother, or something she needed to earn. After I left her room that day, my anger and hatred towards her disintegrated, almost immediately.<\/p>\n<p>At twenty-six, I worry that I\u2019m going to die alone. That no one will want to go through the hassle of having sex with me and, eventually, they\u2019ll leave me for that simple reason. That\u2019s the secret-identity version of me, the one that doesn\u2019t allow herself to fall into love, or allow herself to be loved in return.<\/p>\n<p>What I no longer do, however, is think that my mother sentenced me to a life where epic love is never possible. My mother did make a decision when I was seven years old, but it wasn\u2019t the one that has made me incapable of a normal sexual relationship.<\/p>\n<p>Faced with an impossible dichotomy, my mother chose to raise me. She chose to give me every dream that was never possible for her. She gave me ambition and an identity that was separate from my family. She encouraged me to think critically and question authority. After I accused her in the bathroom of ruining my life, I lived with two diametrically opposed sides of my mother: the champion and the betrayer. She was only ever one of those things. My grandfather\u2019s threat was powerful: either way I\u2019d have ended up a victim of genital mutilation. This way, she was able to hold my hand after I was cut.<\/p>\n<p>My anger is still omnipresent, coloring every single day of my life with a tint of red. No longer attached to my mother, it is worse than ever. Some days, I believe from the very core of my heart that I\u2019ll have sex again, that someone will love me enough to be willing to try it with me. Other days, I have no faith in that at all. Those days are the reddest.<\/p>\n<p>A few weeks ago, I asked the wife of one of our religious leaders what she thought about FGM. She quietly moved out of the room, her eyes begging me to drop the question. Later that day, she mentioned to my grandmother that I needed to be married immediately. \u201cDon\u2019t you think that she\u2019s become too opinionated?\u201d the woman told my grandmother. My grandmother\u2019s reply: \u201cYou think marriage will stop that?\u201d She was almost laughing at this new wave of trouble I\u2019d caused.<\/p>\n<p>I told my grandmother that FGM had ruined my life, and I wanted these women to know it. I told her that I was too young to hate so many people for what had happened. She nodded quietly, a rare d\u00e9tente between the two of us. \u201cThey ruined my life too,\u201d she said, patting my hand.<\/p>\n<p>And with unadulterated optimism, I choose to interpret that gesture as encouragement.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><em>This piece was written by Mariya Karimjee, and originally published on <a href=\"http:\/\/www.thebigroundtable.com\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">The Big Roundtable<\/a>.<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>When I was younger, someone took a knife to my clitoris and cut out a small but significant part of&#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":294,"featured_media":6448,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[85,1,464],"tags":[391,354,80,68],"class_list":{"0":"post-6447","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-blog-roll","8":"category-categories","9":"category-lets-talk-sexuality","10":"tag-family","11":"tag-female-genital-mutilation","12":"tag-pakistan","13":"tag-sex"},"menu_order":0,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.tarshi.net\/inplainspeak\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/6447","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.tarshi.net\/inplainspeak\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.tarshi.net\/inplainspeak\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.tarshi.net\/inplainspeak\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/294"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.tarshi.net\/inplainspeak\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=6447"}],"version-history":[{"count":3,"href":"https:\/\/www.tarshi.net\/inplainspeak\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/6447\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":14662,"href":"https:\/\/www.tarshi.net\/inplainspeak\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/6447\/revisions\/14662"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.tarshi.net\/inplainspeak\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/6448"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.tarshi.net\/inplainspeak\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=6447"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.tarshi.net\/inplainspeak\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=6447"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.tarshi.net\/inplainspeak\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=6447"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}