I love reminding myself that I still know how to make a fire. Setting the logs just right, starting the initial flame, and then tending it as it grows is such a reassuring activity for me. In one sense, I get the same pleasure out of it as from playing SimCity: watching a thing you set in motion take on a life of its own. I'm warmed by the logs that were caught by the sticks that were caught by the twigs which were caught by the wood shavings which I lit with my lighter over an hour ago. All related, all building upon each other. In another sense, it's a connection to a youth that feels separate from my adulthood. I am a woman who had a boyhood, much to her own disappointment. That boy's memories are my own memories, even when they feel alien and strange. Making a fire, camping in the wilderness, all of these things help build bridges to that kid inside of me, help him come out and meet me on my own terms, as a fully grown woman, as a dyke. My parents, and by that I mean, my father, made me participate in Boy Scouts as a kid. Before I could quit the organization, which I desperately wanted to do, I had to at least achieve the rank of Star Scout. This was set as the standard because it would be as far or further than any man in my family had achieved, surpassing both my dad and my uncle. Dutifully, I followed those orders, even though I could count on one hand the number of kids I could stand in my troop. Most of them were assholes in the way pubescent teenage boys were always assholes: overly self assured, ready to police any perceived weakness, just plain mean. But the way gender played out on campouts astounds me, as a woman of boy experience. I remember one time, late at night, after everyone had gone to sleep, seeing a tent lit up with silhouettes of another camper doing what looked like summersaults? When I asked about it, I was told that the silhouette was a kid who was fully nude, leaping around, trying to suck his own dick, while being watched by several other campers. This kid would later call me a faggot for my effiminacy. What else could I do besides shrug off the insults while simultaneously questioning how, exactly, that particular bit of logic worked? Now, as an adult, I have the opportunity to remake the outdoors on my own terms. Instead of being surrounded by boys, I can make a fire for a lover, or sit in a hot spring reading a book recommended by a girlfriend. Instead of having to prove some tenuous idea of manliness I can do the opposite, reenforcing my womanhood by connecting to the outdoors in the way I always wished I could back then. A fire is self-sufficiency, it's agency, it's being on a campout on my own terms. It feels good to be out away from the city every once and a while. It means the skills I developed when other people were forcing me to be a boy can be repurposed to suit my own womanhood, the womanhood of a trans dyke who can build a fire to keep herself warm.