Autostraddle Calendar Girls 2014: Danielle is Miss June

Sometimes, SOMETIMES you can’t cover your face with smokin’ hot lesbians. When this happens why not cover your walls with them instead!? That’s where the 2014 Autostraddle calendar comes in!


Danielle is Miss June

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I had to fight for this body. Since the day I was diagnosed with bone cancer at age fifteen, I began to wage wars on multiple fronts. I fought to be normal – and when that failed, I fought to appear normal. I fought against my cancer as if my disease had a will of its own. The doctors’ weapons of choice were scalpels, poison, and pills. In the name of healing, my body was invaded on every level. So, I left. I checked out of dealing with a body so battered and chronically broken. I obeyed the rhythm of relapses which came every two years and which left with pieces of my lungs and ribs. On the surface, I built a shell of normalcy and ignored every emotion that threatened to weaken it.

Surrendering saved my life. I grew up in a very religious community. Even though my parents were liberal, everyone in our town went to churches and youth groups in warehouse. Countless sermons on porn and promiscuity made me ashamed of my body – a body I already struggled to find beautiful. People were quick to write their own narratives onto my experiences. I was told how to feel and given ready-made explanations.

I argued with God a lot, wondering what I was supposed to learn from having the same excruciating experiences over and over again. When I was twenty-three, I almost died twice in the hospital due to the medical treatments meant to save my life. I had enough. I had enough of fighting. I stopped chemotherapy and accepted that my body needed something more from me. I returned. I began I different kind of work – the work of listening. Through yoga and a vegan diet, I asked myself: “what is true?” I learned not to fight whatever came up. I learned to sit and be uncomfortable until I understood.

Through those silences, I realized I was gay. Not the revelation you’re looking for when you have been married for five years to your high school boyfriend and have spent your entire adolescence as the sick, disabled girl. I spent months crying on my yoga mat waiting for any other explanation to arrive. I didn’t want to date. I didn’t want to find out whether or not anyone else in this world found me attractive or, dare I hope, sexy. I wanted safety – not another battle – after all the fighting I had done.

Slowly, the painful realization came that I didn’t accept myself at all. For all my pretending, I still believed I was irreparable. On a core level, I didn’t believe that any of the liberal stuff I preached applied to me. Yet, listening to yourself gives you a kind of vulnerable strength. I learned to let go. I released all the ideas of what I should be like and honored who I am.

The first girl I dated asked me why I was so angry. The questioned surprised me because I am generally a positive person. Yet, there was resentment boiling. I betrayed myself too often. Despite all the work I had done on honesty and acceptance, I still didn’t know how to stand up for myself when men hit on me in aggressive ways. I still didn’t always talk freely about who I was actually dating. Although my brother is gay and accepted by our family (because “everyone knew since he was three”), I didn’t explain myself when family members insisted I was going through a phase or used other tired cliches they would be horrified to hear anyone say to my brother. I was back to the fight and flight routine – half checking out, half clawing.

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Until recently, I was obsessed with building a kind of awesome lesbian alliance with only the most interesting, stylish, talented women. I was desperate to belong and to make all the suffering I had gone through worth it. I subconsciously thought: if only my life looked like some version of The L Word (well, all the glamour and none of the crazy); if only I sat at the cool kids’ table (something I have never succeed at doing, despite being voted homecoming princess because our culture has a fascination with putting crowns on bald girls’ heads and turning cancer patients into princesses); if only my gay relationships appeared better than my straight ones, then I would I be able to prove to people that coming out was the right decision.

Women, it turned out, could be just as objectifying as men. I didn’t know how to talk about my body and didn’t know how to have a healthy relationship. I freaked out the first time a girl told me she was going to a strip club. I was afraid to ask for my needs to be met because I feared deep down that my looks made me less desirable. I was afraid that anyone with me would secretly always be wishing I was different – whole.

Finally, I woke up. Hiding who you are is exhausting. Apologizing for making other people uncomfortable is soul-crushing. I am what I am and my identity is no better or worse than anyone else’s. I no longer need to prove to anyone that I am beautiful. I no longer need to cover my perceived flaws to protect myself from imaginary blows. When I feel it rising up – the fear, the self-doubt, the desire to fight – I take a breath and surrender. I remind myself to be present in this world, in this body, in this identity. I remind myself of the power of simply saying, “I am here.” When I approach people from this grounded stance, the shift comes naturally.

I walked into this photo shoot terrified. I didn’t know anyone. I realized this fact at the last minute while I was standing on the doorstep. Suddenly, I found myself in the middle of all those talented, gorgeous women. Just when I would have loved to have put up a defense and pretend to be someone infinitely cooler, I was asked to strip down. Robin and Sara originally told me they had nothing for me to wear but they must have seen the color drain from my face. Physically and symbolically, removing all your protective layers can be freeing. You find you are not as soft and scarred as you thought – only raw, strong, and humming with untapped potential.
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I’ll see strangers staring with disgust when I kiss my girlfriend’s cheek in our favorite cafe. I hear guys yelling from their car windows. I notice when all of a sudden my mom needs to get off the phone because I am talking about my relationship. I pause and listen when people ask to touch my leg or to comment on the way I am walking. They want to know how I shower. They want to know how I have sex. They want to know why I like butch girls instead of femme or if I’ve slept with enough men (one) to really know I’m a lesbian. They want to know what I eat. They want to know what dying is like. I used to be offended. I used to go on the defense. I used to think fighting made us strong.

Now, I know: true strength comes from compassion and vulnerability. Now, I can stop, take a breath, and drop completely into the moment. I think: you may not be looking at me like a fellow human being but I see you and I know you are human – a person struggling and fractured in ways I may not be able to recognize right away. Then, with practice, I do the bravest thing of all. I tell my truth. And I prepare myself to receive yours.
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Artist’s Statement from Robin Roemer:

I want to start off by saying I wish I had a few weeks to photograph each of our 130 applicants, because they were all beautiful and inspiring! We are honored so many of you wanted to participate and we hope, at some point, we can work with each one of you. I mean that most sincerely.

This year we went through our applicants based on the survey first, the photos sent in to me had little to do with who our final picks were. We chose based on answers to a variety of questions. We wanted people who really had a sense of what the project was all about, were readers of Autostraddle, and were involved in their communities at home. We wanted women bursting with energy and love. Second, we wanted to represent our incredibly diverse our community: beauties of all different shapes and styles and backgrounds and gender expressions. Finally we found ourselves with 13 models — its 2013 now so twelve just wouldn’t do — who we feel represent some of the most brilliant our readership has to offer. I hope each of you, especially those of you who applied and were not chosen this year, enjoy this year’s calendar.

Crew:
Co-created by Robin Roemer and Sara Medd
Photographed by Robin Roemer
Wardrobe styling by Sara Medd
Hair by Taylor Stevenson
Make-up by Marla Verdugo
Line Production, Location Scouting and Catering: Sarah Croce
Design, Location Scouting, Production assistant: Alex Vega
Lighting Assistant: Kamila Baker
Production Assistant: Christina Bly
Puppy Wrangler: Mollie Thomas

Special Note: As of December 2010, we request that the comments on Calendar Girls posts, unlike every other post on this site, be exclusively positive and remain on-topic. These posts exist to celebrate women, so any  criticisms of the model, her appearance or the appearance of the Calendar Girls as a whole will be deleted. Furthermore, any direct questions/concerns about the project in general can be directed to robin at autostraddle dot com!

Before you go! Autostraddle runs on the reader support of our AF+ Members. If this article meant something to you today — if it informed you or made you smile or feel seen, will you consider joining AF and supporting the people who make this queer media site possible?

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Robin

Robin specializes in entertainment, lifestyle and portrait photography. She's also a Creative Producer, Director of Photography and co-owner of Scheme Machine Studios LLC, her production company based in Los Angeles. Robin loves shooting for TV and film and has worked with media companies like Legendary Pictures and Viacom. She shot and directed the Pride campaign for Google called #ThisIsFamily. Robin has had the pleasure of working on national campaigns for companies like Dove and Levis, and had the unique opportunity to shoot for non-profits and initiatives such as The Black List, Save the Children, Move to End Violence, Have a Hart Day, and The Clinton Global Initiative. She is most proud of the work she has done with organizations such as The Ad Council and RAINN working on national impact campaigns. Her celebrity roster includes Cyndi Lauper, Lady Gaga, Katy Perry, The B-52s, Keri Hilson, JB Smoove, Tegan and Sara, Margaret Cho, The B-52’s, Andreja Pejic, and many more. She was there for Autostraddle’s birth and proudly served as A-Camp co-director for many years.

Robin has written 82 articles for us.

61 Comments

  1. Beautiful. And your story and who you are is beautiful. I am stealing some of your words for my quotes folder.

    I love June!

  2. Your story brought a tear to my eye. Thank you for sharing your journey to whole-heartedness.

  3. Oh my fucking life, this was amazing. And you are the most beautiful model AS have ever used.

    Blown away.

    Standard.

  4. “Although my brother is gay and accepted by our family (because “everyone knew since he was three”), I didn’t explain myself when family members insisted I was going through a phase or used other tired cliches they would be horrified to hear anyone say to my brother.”

    So dang true. It is still relevant to my life how different my 11 month younger brother is treated in comparison to myself. Thanks for sharing your story and I appreciate your living in the moment. It is life’s ultimate challenge, isn’t it?

  5. Utterly gorgeous, in every way. Thank you so so much for taking part in this calendar and for being such an eloquent and beautiful person, Danielle.

  6. ” I was obsessed with building a kind of awesome lesbian alliance with only the most interesting, stylish, talented women.”

    You found it! You’re here!!

  7. So beautiful and inspiring Danielle. You’re wonderful and amazing.

    Gorgeous photos again Robin. I really want to go there.

  8. i love this photo shoot and i love this essay. gorgeous and inspiring and brilliant and strong and perfect.

    i also LOVE the flowers in danielle’s hair — seriously, that hair style is my ultimate hair dream.

  9. I honestly don’t think I’ve even been so in awe of an AS calendar girl before. Thank you for sharing your journey with us.

  10. You are beautiful! And your words jumped off my screen to nestle themselves in my heart and soul. What a powerful essay! Thank you so much for sharing your experience.

  11. You and your words are both stunning. I am completely inspired and I think I will remain in a state of awe for the rest of the day! I feel very privileged to have gotten the chance to meet you and be a part of this project with you!

  12. Oh my word, Danielle, you are so hawt. I’m literally slack jawed reading this in a restaurant in Maine. I’m so glad you decided to become a calendar girl!!

  13. This photoshoot is amazing, you look so present and engaged in these photos, and you have this strong grace as well.
    And your words also brought a tear (ok a few) to my eye. That last part, when you claim your power for yourself.

    Thank you to Danielle and AS for this.

  14. “Just when I would have loved to have put up a defense and pretend to be someone infinitely cooler, I was asked to strip down.” classic autostraddle/classic life. you and your life and your words are really beautiful. thank you so much for doing this!

  15. “Slowly, the painful realization came that I didn’t accept myself at all. For all my pretending, I still believed I was irreparable. On a core level, I didn’t believe that any of the liberal stuff I preached applied to me.”

    This is so relevant to my life.

  16. You are so beautiful, and each photo exudes immense confidence! Your story was wonderfully told and definitely inspiring because it was so spectacularly un-cliched and heartfelt.

  17. I’m in love with your poses. You are stunning and exude so much confidence, strength and tenderness in all your pics!

  18. Danielle, I am so sorry for the objectification you have experienced. I am by no means in the place you are, but I too have experienced objectification in my own ways and the act of disassociating with ones body that tends to ensue. Thank you so much for your words. I needed to hear them greatly today. You walk a path of beauty and I am grateful for your presence in the world. I agree with your statement on strength being found in letting go, in being vulnerable. It can be hard to perceive our weaknesses and flaws in such a compassionate light. Thank you for doing this for yourself, thank you for doing this for those you speak to. You are loved for your being.

  19. Danielle, I think you’re one of-if not the-most beautiful, unique and inspiring calendar girls AS has ever had. Also, this is so wise and genuine:

    “Now, I know: true strength comes from compassion and vulnerability. Now, I can stop, take a breath, and drop completely into the moment. I think: you may not be looking at me like a fellow human being but I see you and I know you are human – a person struggling and fractured in ways I may not be able to recognize right away. Then, with practice, I do the bravest thing of all. I tell my truth. And I prepare myself to receive yours.”

    ^ This is such a difficult thing to do. It’s an attitude and way of looking at life and people that I’ve been trying to cultivate and I really admire you for having mastered it.

  20. wow, danielle, you are an amazing and beautiful person. this was so inspirational, definitely bookmarking it.

  21. All around beautiful. You are gorgeous and your writing is amazing.

    If I could like this a million times, I would.

  22. I love this! This line really hit home “I think: you may not be looking at me like a fellow human being but I see you and I know you are human – a person struggling and fractured in ways I may not be able to recognize right away.”
    Don’t make me cry in work! Breathtaking photography and modelling as well. Just lovely!

  23. This is amazing. You are so beautiful on every level. I’m simultaneously awestruck by how gorgeous you are and deeply moved by your story. Thank you.

  24. As another physically different lesbian, you have managed to put into words so many things that I have thought and felt along the way, but could never quite explain verbally. Even though you would never wish a rough life on anyone, sometimes it’s nice to hear others’ experiences because you don’t feel quite so alone. Thank you for being brave enough to share.

  25. I don’t comment much but I have to here. I have to because I cried reading this. I want to be just one more voice letting you know what an inspiration you are, Danielle, for a whole slew of reasons. Thank you for this, to all involved. Made my week.

  26. THIS. This in so many ways.

    I don’t comment often, but after reading this post…it just wouldn’t feel right if I didn’t. The beauty and grace of your prose, the way your words flowed…and that inner strength that seems to be radiating off you in waves in each photograph. Just wow.

    I’m inspired.

  27. Dear Danielle,

    You are an amazing lady. I think we all can agree that you have brought words to emotions many women has similarly felt about our true selves. I know that I felt that i’ve had (and still do) continuously explain myself to other people and convince them of who I am. Thank you for putting many of my mixed feelings about myself into eloquent paragraphs and ‘stripping’ down for us. That is such braveness I can only dream to one day have.

    I wish you all the very best <3

    p.s. THANK YOU AS!

  28. Danielle, I seriously needed to read your words today. I just had another of my own pitched battles with my inner demons of self-denigration, which continue to dog me even after decades of working on self-acceptance. Blessings on your journey and thank you for sharing your words and image so vulnerably. You are truly beautiful inside and out.

  29. Dear Danielle, You are an amazing woman. God bless You. I cried when I read your story. Please go and live your life to the fullest. Your story made me think and feel. Thank you.

  30. Sometimes a picture is worth a thousand words, but sometimes…sometimes the story has to be told in words as well.

    Thank you for telling us your story, with both pictures and words, and for connecting a solid punch to the heart (in the best way possible, mind you) in the process.

    You’re beautiful. :D

  31. Danielle, I am struggling to accept my body (and myself) the way it is. It’s been difficult but I have to keep going. I added your words, “I’m here” to my daily mantra. Thank you for opening up to us.

    Your face has the essence of Eve in it. In terms of Maid, Mother, and Crone, I see so much Mother. Fabulous

    And the flowers in your hair are beautiful.

  32. wow. Danielle, your awesomeness kinda took me by surprise – i clicked expecting a queer page 3 and got this. made my day, seriously. Re story – illegitimi non carborundum and all that, you’re awesome and beautiful.

  33. What a beautiful person you are Danielle, inside and out. I felt a strong identification with your narrative; my struggle was with gender identity and I had chronic pneumonia throughout my childhood from a congenital heart issue (had open heart surgery in my early twenties). I’m a yoga instructor and the yoga discipline literally saved my life when I’ve been at my lowest of lows in transition. Thank you for being you and for speaking with authenticity. May you continue to embrace being in the moment – om shanti namaste. :)

  34. “I was desperate to belong and to make all the suffering I had gone through worth it. I subconsciously thought: if only my life looked like some version of The L Word …; if only I sat at the cool kids’ table…; if only my gay relationships appeared better than my straight ones, then I would I be able to prove to people that coming out was the right decision.”

    I know I’m late to the party, but this is what resonated with me. Beautiful in every way. Thank you.

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