On Resourcing (2024’s Theme)
2024 will be a hard year in a string of hard years. How do we resource ourselves in the midst of such a challenge? And why is resourcing so important?
Preparing for the Storm
It’s no secret that run up to the 2024 election is going to be difficult for trans people. So how do we strategically plan when we know we are going to be faced with immense challenge?
Healing Alone vs. Healing in Community
In this moment where it feels like we are all being traumatized and re-traumatized, healing can feel like a fruitless pursuit. But healing allows us to be in relationship with ourselves, with our earth, and with one another. It is not a zero-sum game where we must only think about ourselves or others. Rather, it is a dance, a process, a spiral.
TDOV: The Complicated Paradox of Visibility
As a doula, I know that TDOV and other trans-centered days/weeks in the year often hit folks in a variety of complicated ways. So I want to be clear that visibility is not a one-size-fits-all thing. There are the impacts of visibility on individuals, on the community as a whole, and then visibility as a political strategy.
Dreaming is a Revolutionary Act
When we do not engage our own imaginations, our own dreaming, we are constrained by capitalism, white supremacy, cisgenderism. I will not be constrained by the dreams of those who see my life as worthless. I will not be constrained by a society that uses my beautiful community as a political football to inflame and manipulate their base.
The Medicine of Discomfort
Often, periods of growth mean, by necessity, periods of discomfort. It is not comfortable for our bones to grow in adolescence, so we have a word for this particular sensation—growing pains. It is not comfortable for hermit crabs to expose their softer parts as they exchange shells, it is not comfortable for invertebrates to molt their exoskeletons, it is not comfortable for snakes to move through the shed process.
Born in the Wrong Body?
Saying that all trans people are in the “wrong bodies” flattens our experiences, bypassing the richness, beauty, and complexity of trans bodies, identities, and lives.
What if I Regret Gender Transition?
We tend to have the most fear around the things we don’t understand. There’s the fear of regretting transition, the reality of regretting transition/parts of transition, and of course, the cultural narrative of regret. Each of these is its own large, nuanced topic. But I find that when you understand the reality of regret and what it entails, the fear of regret diminishes.
“Trans Regret” Isn’t Real
Raise your hand if, when you have told another person (friend, parent, doctor, therapist, etc) that you wanted to get a gender affirming medical intervention, they told you that you might regret it. Bonus points if they brought up some other “person they know” who got a gender affirming medical procedure and then had to get it reversed at great expense, and/or deeply regretted it, etc.
Am I Trans?
This question is just three words, but the moment it arises in your body and mind for the first time, it can really pack a wallop. For many folks, asking this question represents a much longer journey. This often starts when something inspires us to start questioning things about ourselves, the way we show up in the world, how we feel, and what it all means.
Gender Rituals
Regardless of how you identify or what you think about gender, there is no doubt that it is a powerful force for many people, and often effects a great deal of how folks live their lives. Similarly, regardless of whether or not you believe in rituals, they appear to have a strong effect on those who use them. Perhaps, instead of approaching names and pronouns as a zero-sum game, we can instead honor our experiences and all that we carry with us through the medium of rituals.
What if no one is “Trans Enough”?
If there’s not a set-in-stone criteria for transness, some folks can feel a sense of loss, or wonder how various resources can be allocated without any sort of rules for who is and isn’t considered “trans.” But given where “trans enough” came from and how it’s been used, its pretty clear that the current criteria are, well…harmful. So how can we move forward?
How Trans People Use “Trans Enough”
Unfortunately, we’re not immune to the context in which we were raised. Trans people have used “trans enough” ideology to gatekeep our own community spaces, and have harmed ourselves in the process. Ultimately, we must learn to make space for all the many different ways that one can come to interact with, claim, and even release trans identities.