‘My Transgender History’

‘My Transgender History’

A2N0Y6A posted a photo:

'My Transgender History'

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Last night before i finally fell asleep i realized i’ve not explained my personal history in some ways on the few Transgender related posts i have here. Today as i slowly wake up, still tired from sleep medication i had to take to cure insomnia i decided i would finally do this.

I knew from a very young age something didn’t quite fit with me, it wasn’t until age 10 in 1985 i saw Transgender people on a Television talk show that i finally understood what i felt and why. Before that day it was confusing, difficult and stressful. Even though that Television show was anything but kind to folks like me, i’ll never forget how happy i was i finally realized i wasn’t alone.

Where i grew up was very intolerant to LGBT people, it also was during a chapter in American history where acceptance and understanding was lacking on a whole but where i am from it was especially ignorant and hateful. I spent my entire teenage life living in fear people would realize this about me and i finally left and moved to Seattle in 1994 at age 19 where i knew i would have freedom to experience a life i wanted.

Age 20, i came out as ‘Bisexual’. I lost friends, i lost my housing and it was traumatic. I still wasn’t ready to be open about my gender and like many i tried to find a balance in living in a cisgendered world and having a private life where i could express this aspect of who i am. It worked for the most part although i wasn’t truly happy or free to be myself.

During my 20’s i focused on my career path and chose to silently struggle unable to be open and honest about my feelings in this way. Had i not chosen that path, i absolutely would have been denied opportunities i enjoyed during those years in employment in both the private sector and working for various Government agencies. I was torn between loving what i did for work and knowing i couldn’t be free to be myself and maintain that life.

In 2004 while working for the State of Washington, i had another serious lung collapse. I have Marfan Syndrome and i was born with tiny blood blisters in the linings of both my lungs due to this. When they ‘pop’ this causes my lung(s) to collapse and i’ve had emergency procedures involving a tube struck between my ribs for days at a time to lessen the pressure in my chest from escaping air. None of it was fun and it was absolutely scary and painful. When this happens, if you don’t have this procedure done soon, your chest fills with air and makes it difficult to breathe and can also affect your heart’s ability to pump blood. It’s a very serious situation and i’m lucky to have survived it.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marfan_syndrome

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pneumothorax

This collapse however i had in 2004 was worse than previous ones. The chest tube procedure didn’t fix it, being admitted to the hospital and having them manually remove air from my chest which was one of the most painful things i’ve endured in life didn’t fix it. I was then scheduled for emergency surgery to save my life.

I had the entire top of my right lung removed, they then manually damaged the outside of my lung and used powder to force my lung to adhere to my inner chest wall during healing. I spent 5 days with an epidural needle in my spine, blacking out from excruciating pain several times every hour with drainage tubes sewn into my side. It took me years to recover from it and now i still occasionally tear scar tissue when sneezing in certain positions or when trying to lift something heavy in certain ways. But, i am fortunate to be alive and thankful it worked.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pleurodesis

The night before that emergency surgery i sat in the hospital bed waiting for this operation. I was forced to think about my life, 29 years of so many things i had experienced, survived… overcoming drug addiction in my early adult life after it nearly caused my death, loss of my Mother as a teenager and many other painful chapters i endured. I thought to myself “Do i have any regrets? Is there anything i would change if i lived through the surgery the next day? Have i lived a life that was meaningful or did i not fully realize my purpose?”

The one thing that hurt me that night before surgery, the one thing i realized i couldn’t live with if i did survive was knowing i had never been free to be myself. I was scared to be open about my gender identity, i was scared i would lose friends as i had when coming out as Bisexual a decade prior, i was scared my family would disown me or not understand and i was scared it would impact my employment.

6 months after that surgery i was finally healed enough to be ready to speak openly, to tell my family i wanted to pursue this, i intended on changing my name and also i finally felt ready to confront friends and my employer with this reality.

I lost friends again, some family members became distant with me as expected and even though Washington State was working on including LGBT people in Civil Rights Law which had not yet passed, my life became a nightmare of hate towards me. My career was destroyed and in the end it altered the course of my life in many difficult ways.

lawfilesext.leg.wa.gov/biennium/2005-06/Pdf/Bills/Session…

The reality is, i’m proud to be what i am but it has come at great expense. I would never change any of this but i will admit it was a tough journey to get to where i am now finally on hormones after many years of struggling with it all during homelessness.

My photography exists ONLY because of these events… None of you would have ever met me here, seen photographs from me if this had not happened. I likely would be working for another Government agency and would be unwilling to be such a public person given that. I likely would have continued with music which i loved in my free time but i had no desire to be known, i just did it because music was my great artistic passion then.

anyaadora.bandcamp.com

This tattoo on my neck, photographed before my Mohawk returned, i have chosen because who i am and how my life has changed through these events defines me now in so many ways. I may not be the average transgender person in many ways but we are all different, our stories all vary and generally speaking.. It’s not easy for us. I want people to understand this and how much we give up, how much bravery, strength and determination it takes to be one of us.

Those who hate us lack the courage to be one of us is my view. It’s easy to show hate but it’s far less easy to endure it.

tdor.info

It’s easy to be a bigot & a bully, it’s far more difficult to be an educated person and respect others for their differences at times but many manage to do it who aren’t LGBT every day.

linktr.ee/transgender

Perhaps this info today helps those who’ve become friends here and those who visit me attempting to understand me or people like me better. It’s different for everyone but, this is my story and how i arrived here being the person before you all today.

www.flickr.com/photos/a2n0y6a/49129982647/

Meet TV’s black, gay superhero: Hooded Justice

Meet TV’s black, gay superhero: Hooded Justice

Captain Metropolis & Hooded Justice

History–or in this case, alternate history–marches on, at least on HBO. The network’s acclaimed series Watchmen just had a watershed moment through the introduction of Hooded Justice/Will Reeves, an openly gay African American superhero.

For the uninformed, Watchmen follows the moral quandaries of an alternate timeline, one in which superheroes emerged in real life in the 1930s and 40s. Rather than having a positive effect on society, however, their existence wreaked havoc on the world, especially after the creation of the God-like being Dr. Manhattan. By 2019, the Tulsa, Oklahoma police department consists entirely of costumed officers, including Sister Night (played by Regina King) who stumbles onto another sinister plot involving Dr. Manhattan, a conspiracy of silence, and an alt-right militia group.

Related: WATCH: HBO drops the first ‘Watchmen’ trailer, and teases a new kind of queer superhero

Sunday’s episode, titled “This Extraordinary Being,” (spoiler alert!) explores the history of Sister Night’s grandfather, revealed to be the first African-American police officer in Tulsa, Will Reeves (played by Jovan Adepo). Persecuted by his fellow officers and the Tulsa community, he dons the costumed identity Hooded Justice, avenging crime around the city. Hooded Justice also attracts the interest of another costumed hero, Captain Metropolis (Jake McDorman). When the two meet, they begin a torrid affair…and the show makes its first major misstep.

We should mention here that the identity and backstory of Hooded Justice deviate from that of the source novel, written by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons. In the original text, the Hooded Justice-Captain Metropolis relationship is one of the bright spots in a gritty, lonely story. Theirs is a pure love affair, and the subsequent murder of Hooded Justice sends Captain Metropolis into a downward spiral. He begins to abuse alcohol, has a nervous breakdown, and ends up institutionalized.

The alteration of the Hooded Justice identity into that of Will Reeves fits well with the TV series Watchmen‘s meditations on racism in the United States, and the show also deserves applause for having the chutzpah to explore a same-sex superhero relationship. That said, making what was a loving relationship in the source material into a fetishized, coercive one is not the best way to introduce a groundbreaking, African-American gay superhero. The TV series portrays Captain Metropolis as someone who isn’t devoted to fighting crime so much as a gay man into costumed roleplay. Furthermore, his treatment of Hooded Justice doesn’t just devalue their relationship, it makes it downright abusive.

Watchmen deserves credit for addressing issues of racism, and for integrating a terrific character like Will Reeves into its story. But the show also falls back on the trope of hypersexualized, sociopathic queer characters–the kind that functioned as villains for decades in film and television. Call it provocative, call it timely, call it powerful…but don’t call it progress.

www.queerty.com/meet-tvs-black-gay-superhero-hooded-justice-20191126?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+queerty2+%28Queerty%29

Check Out These Top 4 Most-Improved Cities Working with HRC to Make LGBTQ Equality a Priority

Check Out These Top 4 Most-Improved Cities Working with HRC to Make LGBTQ Equality a Priority

HRC Foundation’s Municipal Equality Index scorecard provides a roadmap for cities looking to make their community more inclusive of the LGBTQ people who live and work there. City leaders work with HRC to improve their policies and services by enacting non-discrimination protections, including ensuring city employees have trans-inclusive health care and requiring anti-bullying policies for youth-facing city services.

Every year, cities find ways to stand out among the 506 cities rated in the MEI by working hard to ensure their communities are welcoming and inclusive of all people. The four most improved cities — those that made the biggest MEI score gains between 2018 and 2019 — are:

  1. Overland Park, Kansas: 54 point increase
    Since the MEI’s debut in 2012, the number of cities earning the highest score has increased by more than eightfold, and today at least 25 million people live in cities that have more comprehensive, transgender-inclusive non-discrimination laws than their state. One of those cities is Overland Park, which over the past year enacted LGBTQ-inclusive non-discrimination protections covering private employment, housing and public accommodations.

 

  1. Norman, Oklahoma: 51 point increase
    Norman also enacted an LGBTQ-inclusive non-discrimination ordinance covering private employment, housing and public accommodations over the past year.

 

  1. Racine, Wisconsin: 45 point increase 
    Wendy Strout, HRC Wisconsin State Director, worked with advocates and leaders in Racine to build its MEI score, which resulted in the largest improvement in the state, vaulting the city to the top five most improved in the country. “I am very proud of the work Racine put in to achieve such a significant jump on its MEI score,” Strout said. “Since pro-equality Mayor Cory Mason was elected, he, his team, the LGBT Center of SE Wisconsin and strong allies in the community worked hard to make the city’s MEI score more reflective of its inclusivity.” 

Racine, Wisconsin, MEI

 

  1. Gaithersburg, Maryland: 36 point increase 
    Gaithersburg added LGBTQ liaisons this year, which displayed a commitment to inclusiveness and helped increase their score significantly.

HRC congratulates all of the cities that continue to make LGBTQ equality a priority. A special mention goes out to the following cities for their progress and enduring commitment to equality: Phoenix; Grand Rapids, Michigan; Henderson, Nevada; State College, Pennsylvania; Racine, Wisconsin; Toledo, Ohio; Austin, Texas; Kansas City, Kansas; Seattle; Tampa, Florida; Atlanta; Chapel Hill, North Carolina; Oakland, California; Richmond, Virginia; and Los Angeles.

Check out how your city rates on LGBTQ equality. The full report, including detailed scorecards for every city, as well as a searchable database, is available online at www.hrc.org/MEI.

www.hrc.org/blog/check-out-these-top-4-most-improved-cities-working-with-hrc-to-make?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed