Divorce is complicated and painful even without a big family secret to conceal. Adolescence is anguishing in even its easiest incarnation. And there is simply no best time for a parent and spouse coming out as a cross-dresser.
Dress Codes gets us through all three of these potentially shattering crises with more humour than pathos, in this highly readable, fully autobiographical family saga. Covering ten years of the author’s life, with flashbacks to her parents’ youth and adolescence, the book takes us from Noelle’s pubertal angst at fourteen to the other side of a breakdown at twenty-four. On opening this devastating decade, she learns about her father’s secret obsession with women’s clothing. Her mother breaks the news after a clothes-buying trip at the local mall. Noelle’s initial reaction is one of relief, along the lines of, “Well, then, his unhappiness isn’t my fault after all.” She is thrilled that her mother will get a divorce, removing that cold, withdrawn, irritable, and often drunk man from the family home.
If only life were that simple. Dad is going, yes. In the mid-1980’s of suburban Ohio, divorce is not much of a surprise. “Normal,” however, is the highest possible praise the community can bestow. Any deviation from that standard is apt to be ruthlessly punished. In a situation where most families busily air their dirty linen in front of anyone who will sit still for it, Noelle’s family must preserve a stricter-than-strict silence about the true cause of the family split. To do otherwise would affect not only Noelle’s seemingly normal high school career, but the lucrative careers of both parents as well. Poverty and ostracism lurk behind every unwary word. We feel the weight of the secret building.
Keeping up appearances, a lifestyle long ingrained in her parents’ behavior, is now Noelle’s mission. At a stage in life when a child’s task is to discover and develop her real self, Noelle busily constructs false fronts with little regard for her true wants or needs. Ironically, her father and mother are flinging themselves into the typical post-divorce phase of finding themselves, a phase that strongly resembles adolescence. Her father has pouting fits, tentatively attends cross-dressers’ socials, and goes for gender counseling. Her mother rediscovers sex and learns to golf while rebuilding her neglected career. As their psychological health waxes, their daughter’s wanes. Beneath a cover of normal teenage behavior, she loses touch with her real self more with each passing year. She maintains the pretence of a relationship with a more ‘normal’ neighbour boy and calculates her way through high school’s perilous popularity polls. College, she confidently expects, will be more of the same, and makes it so, developing a sexual relationship so bizarre as to make her parents’ choices seem mainstream. After college, with no other goal but to maintain her relationship, she follows her hand-picked boyfriend to his new job in another state.
There, away from the routines of college, far removed from anyone who knows or cares whether she is keeping up appearances, Noelle’s false front falls apart. In one single year – and barely a chapter of this endlessly fascinating book – she goes from being the object of admiring attention to a mere cog in a clerical machine. Her boyfriend rejects her and puts her down, reconstructing – if she only knew it then – the same kinds of verbal abuse that her father in his unhappiness had used on her mother for too many years. Having spent her adolescence in hiding and conforming, she lacks the sense of self to support her life as an adult. The minor sins of her father, her mother, and her assorted grandparents have all combined with her own life choices to lead her inexorably into a deep, clinical depression.
There is a happy ending, however, one based firmly in real life. The combined efforts of both parents, a supportive counselor, and some intense pharmaceutical therapy bring Noelle home to Ohio and to herself. Noelle’s dad, now a lovely woman named Christine, is at peace with herself and with her own mother, for the first time in nearly fifty years. Noelle’s mother, now remarried, is stronger and happier than ever. Noelle, her overlooked adolescent issues beginning to be resolved, moves on with her life.
Evidence of her recovery is the compilation of this book, involving hundreds of hours of interviews with both of her parents and her surviving grandparents. With breathtaking clarity and determination, she exposes one variety of strange family situation that can lurk behind the most ‘normal’ of front doors. She recounts, with a complete absence of self-pity, the startling discovery that changed her life and threw her off course for a decade. She examines the success story of a woman fighting her way out of the man’s body she was born into, and touches in passing on the many unsavoury ways that struggle might have failed. She peers into her mother’s deepest corners, discovering the young woman who had deliberately condemned herself to a nearly-sexless and almost always unsatisfying marriage out of her own need to be needed.
Intelligent, fluidly written, and ever entrancing, this unusual family saga will keep you turning pages long into the night.