How Being a Child Elvis Impersonator Helped Me Find My Non-Binary Self
Each performance provided a hit of adrenal love. I lived on it. I survived off of it. Until, that is, that moment in the bathroom when I was thirteen.
I was thirteen when I was forced into retirement from my career as an Elvis impersonator.
Full House,
Well since my baby left me. I found a new place to dwell.
It’s down at the end of lonely street at heartbreak hotel.
“Yeah Addie, I remember you telling this story back in graduate school,” Hez said, “And it really stuck with me. It actually made me feel kinda sad.”
“What?” I thought. “Sad?”
Over the next few months, Hez’s words coursed through melike shock waves. Theybroke into something that had felt so solid, shattering my well-crafted story into fragments. Hez, a non-binary trans person themselves, saw something missed by everyone else. They released me, in that moment, from the separation and distance I had created, between performer and audience.
Over the next few weeks, I began a process of re-remembering my childhood as an Elvis impersonator. A few months back, I had attended atraining on psychotherapeutic work with transgender people. “The most important thing that trans clients need” said the trainer, “is mirroring.” She went on to discuss the invisibility that trans people often feel as what they see in the mirror does not, always, mirror how they feel on the inside.
These wordstransported me to a time right before the emergence of my Elvis. I was seven and had just come home from the hair salon, sporting the short bowl cut that I had always wanted. It had seemed like a safe time to ask, since most of the girls in my class had already gotten the same exact haircut. I sat for a long time in front of the mirror, brushing my hair to the side to fit the style of the boys I knew. In that moment, I felt so good.
Then my mother walked by.
“Look mom!” I said spontaneously, “This is what I would look like if I was a boy!”
“Oh! yeah, I guess that’s right!” she said. But then she paused, looking at me in the mirror. And with a palpable edge of anxiety, she followed up with, “Okay, great! Now, put it back like a girls’.”
The early ’90s had not yet provided my mother with manuals and websites on raising gender expansive children. She did not know how to mirror me as I attempted to find myself in the mirror.
I think it must have been some time after that, that I started shutting the door behind me. In all the hilarity and rush of my Elvis streak, it’s easy to forget that I didn’t initially intend to become an eight-year-old drag King. That day, messing with my hair, I was just trying to become myself. Elvis was a detour.
Recently, I began low dose testosterone therapy, in hopes of physically affirming my non-binary gender identity. Since beginning this process, I have been enacting a weekly ritual of singing and video recording the same song each week, “Glory Bound”, by Martin Sexton. It tells the all-too-familiar story of a straight white man, a struggling artist, leaving home and taking on the vagabond lifestyle. He is on his own Odyssey, but indulging in one last rendezvous with his love before leaving her for the open road. He feels he needs to blaze his own path, make his own mistakes and, perhaps, recover a lost piece of his soul.
This song has accompanied me through some important points on my own queer Odyssey. As I sing,plucking the strings, I am reminded of the path that led me to put away the wig and pick up the guitar. Down in that same basement where I taught myself Elvis routines, I alsobegan to teach myself guitar chords. I worked at it, daily, until my fingers bled. The music that emerged was not like Elvis, but more like Joni Mitchell. And I appeared more visually congruous, with my high vocal range and long blond hair.
The weekly ritual of setting up at the altar,drinking a sip of wine, pressing record, and singing “Glory Bound” is something like a holy communion. In the slow, but persistent process to be myself, I have taken many forms. This ritual serves as a sacrament to my sacred journey.
It is also a song that takes me into the farthest notes of my range, ideal asI want to track the coming changes in my voice. And, perhaps I want to have something like a dirge, where I can sing my own requiem for any notes that I may lose in this process.
As a teen, shame and confusion prevented me from giving Elvis a proper funeral. Perhaps we didn’t have adequate mirrors, then, for such a ceremony.Because of this, the full essence of the character that I embodied was somewhat lost. I stuffed it away, along with the wig that sat dormant for years in my childhood closet.
Elvis was more than child’s play. He was a complex and brilliant coping strategy, born out of necessity and desperation. He was a socially acceptable way for me to be myself. Underneath the wig was a creative, self-obsessed, entertaining, desperate, peculiar, joyful, sad, lonely, tragic, and very queer child.
Sometimeswhen I watch myself sing, I catch a glimpse of my lip curling much in the same way it did during my Elvis routine. When I see this, I pause, smile and say into my iPhone, my modern day mirror,“Oh, there you are.” I’m speaking not only to the eight-year-old drag king inside, but also to the child who wanted to be a boy. Now, with my hair styled just the way I want it and my jaw sprouting a bit of peach fuzz, I am beginning to see myself in the mirror. As I do, I find myself falling in love with the child I was, the person I am and the person I am still becoming.
Addie Liechty is a Bay Area psychotherapist, singer-songwriter, and writer of poetry and essays. Their writing interests include the intersections of spirituality, religion, psychology, and social justice.