Prev

Next

Trans Symposium Forwards Mission of Educating Medical FieldTrans Symposium Forwards Mission of Educating Medical... Fort Lauderdale Trans Symposium Forwards Mission of Educating Medical Fieldby Christiana Lilly, SFGayNews It’s pouring rain outside, but those inside the conference rooms at the Embassy Suites in Fort Lauderdale are too engrossed in their seminars to care. During the second day of the third annual Transgender Symposium,...

Read more

Trans Kids Jazz and Coy Honored at GLAAD AwardsTrans Kids Jazz and Coy Honored at GLAAD Awards GLAAD President Herndon Graddick focuses on Trans issues at the GLADD Awards At the 24th Annual GLAAD Media Awards in New York this past weekend, GLAAD President Herndon Graddick spoke about the evolving mission of the organization, and the importance of the transgender community in his vision for the future of equality....

Read more

TLDEF Files Complaint to Protect Transgender Child From School DiscriminationTLDEF Files Complaint to Protect Transgender Child... Complaint Alleges Six-Year-Old Transgender Girl Denied Access to Girls' Bathrooms at School TLDEF today announced that it has filed a complaint with the Colorado Civil Rights Division on behalf of a 6-year-old girl who has been barred from using the girls' bathrooms at her elementary school. For the past year, Coy Mathis,...

Read more

Transgender Tween Jazz Talks Dating With Barbara WaltersTransgender Tween Jazz Talks Dating With Barbara Walters A Special Edition of “20/20 Saturday” Airing Saturday, January 19 at 8pm on ABC. Jazz is a typical 11-year-old girl except for one thing — she was born as a boy. From the moment she could speak, Jazz sensed that she was trapped in the wrong body and decided to dress and live as a little girl. Her parents made...

Read more

Generation LGBTQIAGeneration LGBTQIA By Michael Schulman STEPHEN IRA, a junior at Sarah Lawrence College, uploaded a video last March on We Happy Trans, a site that shares “positive perspectives” on being transgender In the breakneck six-and-a-half-minute monologue — hair tousled, sitting in a wood-paneled dorm room — Stephen exuberantly declared...

Read more

twitter

Trans Symposium Forwards Mission of Educating Medical Field

Category : Latest News

FTL Transgender Medical SymposiumFort Lauderdale Trans Symposium Forwards Mission of Educating Medical Field

by Christiana Lilly, SFGayNews

It’s pouring rain outside, but those inside the conference rooms at the Embassy Suites in Fort Lauderdale are too engrossed in their seminars to care.

During the second day of the third annual Transgender Symposium, the conference has drawn doctors, medical students, and the transgender community to help educate the medical community about the special needs of transgender patients.

In one room, guests learned about the process of the gender reassignment surgery as well as the physical and emotional healing process that follows. Next door, a doctor led a seminar about HIV/AIDS in the transgender community. In another conference room, a lecture on transgender youth turned into a discussion amongst parents, medical professionals and three youths who came to talk about their experiences.

T

ori Gabriel, the mother of a transgender teen, told the story of how her family struggled to find the cause of her son’s anguish five years ago. Then identifying as an 11-year-old girl, Tori’s son became isolated, wore black, didn’t make eye contact, and stopped being affectionate with family. Gabriel found a picture he had drawn of him with a girl, and initially thought he was gay. For the next year, the family brought their son to the hospital four times for cutting and suicidal ideations. Finally, with support from an online transgender teen group, he came out to his family that he didn’t belong in the female body he was born in.

“It was the worst year of our lives. It was really scary,” Gabriel remembered. “When I look at now, how happy he is now… It’s like I have my kid back.”

Today, her son identifies as a male and has blossomed. He smiles, shows off his face happily and continues to communicate with his online support group. However, another struggle for the Gabriels was finding medical help for their son. Many doctors were not familiar with dealing with transgender people, and it took multiple referrals before they found a doctor who could help their son with hormone therapy.

Gabriel says it was like “finding a needle in a haystack.”

This is not an uncommon story for transgender patients, and that’s something Jodie Reichman is trying to change. Now in the third year of the medical symposium, it has grown rapidly from a 90-person standing room only meeting to a two-day affair at a hotel. This year, registration had to be reopened so more people could attend. It included doctors of all disciplines,

case managers, and students from medical and nursing schools.

“It’s finally got to the point of where I had envisioned this when we first started it,” Reichman said.

Working in HIV/AIDS for 27 years, for the last four years she has been the transgender program director for the Broward County Health Department. In her experience, the transgender community tends to be overlooked in LGBT causes.

“I still get calls from a lot of people in the community who can’t find providers that they’re comfortable with, who are not educated,” she said.

Reichman and the Health Department are working to compile a directory of doctors who are considered transgender friendly by the community.  She also tries to find out why a certain doctor doesn’t treat transgender patients, and she gets three responses: A lack of education, it goes against their religion, and because they don’t want to.

Unfortunately, Reichman said, the majority of responses are the latter two.

“That’s when I come back and hit them with the Hippocratic Oath. When you graduate, you get that license in your hand and you medically treat somebody, you treat a human being, and I don’t care what that human being is or who that human being is. They come to you for care because they need care,” Reichman said.


[Source: SouthFloridaGayNews]

Trans Kids Jazz and Coy Honored at GLAAD Awards

Category : Latest News, Trans Youth

Jazz Honored at the GLADD AWARDSGLAAD President Herndon Graddick focuses on Trans issues at the GLADD Awards

At the 24th Annual GLAAD Media Awards in New York this past weekend, GLAAD President Herndon Graddick spoke about the evolving mission of the organization, and the importance of the transgender community in his vision for the future of equality. During his opening speech, Graddick was joined onstage by transgender model and advocate Lauren Foster, as well as film director and GLAAD Ally Award recipient Brett Rattner

“If I could get five things done as the head of GLAAD, one of those would be make life better for transgender people across the country,” said Graddick.
“And I don’t think we’ve done enough. And so, that’s why I’m getting up here to say that, the new GLAAD is making transgender equality a priority, and a priority in a way that it’s never been before.”

Later in his speech, Graddick invited two transgender young people, Jazz and Coy, to join him on the stage with their families. “Jazz fought tirelessly to be treated like any other girl,” Graddick said. “And 12-year-old Jazz, by owning her own power, is winning.”

Speaking about the story of 6-year-old Coy Mathis, who was denied access to the girl’s bathroom at her school, Graddick added, “Thanks to GLAAD, Coy’s story has been seen on the Katie Couric Show and CNN, and tens of thousands have already signed a Change.org petition, demanding her school take her out of harm’s way and do the right thing.” He then urged those attending the show to sign the petition and support Coy.

For additional photos and to read the full article visit Gladd.org

For more information on Jazz visit TransKidsPurpleRainbow.org


TLDEF Files Complaint to Protect Transgender Child From School Discrimination

Category : Latest News, Trans Youth

Mathis FamilyComplaint Alleges Six-Year-Old Transgender Girl Denied Access to Girls’ Bathrooms at School

TLDEF today announced that it has filed a complaint with the Colorado Civil Rights Division on behalf of a 6-year-old girl who has been barred from using the girls’ bathrooms at her elementary school. For the past year, Coy Mathis, a first-grader at Eagleside Elementary School in Fountain, CO, has used the girls’ bathrooms. In mid-December 2012, the Fountain-Fort Carson School District 8 informed her parents that Coy would be prevented from using the girls’ bathrooms after winter break. The District ordered Coy to use the boys’ bathroom, a staff bathroom, or the nurse’s bathroom.

C

oy was labeled male at birth, but has always known that she is a girl, and has expressed this since she was 18 months old. Since kindergarten, Coy has worn girls’ clothing to school. Her classmates and teachers have used female pronouns to refer to her and she has used the girls’ bathrooms, just like any other girl in her school.

The Colorado Anti-Discrimination Act prohibits discrimination against transgender students in public schools. Despite efforts to get the District to reconsider its decision, it has refused to do so. Coy’s parents have removed her from school and are home schooling her until this Complaint is resolved.

“We want Coy to have the same educational opportunities as every other Colorado student,” said Kathryn Mathis, Coy’s mother. “Her school should not be singling her out for mistreatment just because she is transgender.”

“By forcing Coy to use a different bathroom than all the other girls, Coy’s school is targeting her for stigma, bullying and harassment,” said Michael Silverman, TLDEF’s executive director, and one of Coy’s lawyers. “Through the Colorado Anti-Discrimination Act, Coloradans have made it clear that they want all Colorado children to have a fair and equal chance in school,” he added. “Coy’s school has the opportunity to turn this around and teach Coy’s classmates a valuable lesson about friendship, respect and basic fairness.”

“We have five children and we love them all very much,” said Mrs. Mathis. “We want Coy to return to school to be with her teachers, her friends, and her siblings, but we are afraid to send her back until we know that the school is going to treat her fairly. She is still just six years old, and we do not want one of our daughter’s earliest experiences to be our community telling her she’s not good enough.”

Read the full article at TransgenderLegal.org


Transgender Tween “Jazz” Talks Dating With Barbara Walters

Category : Latest News, Trans Youth

A Special Edition of “20/20 Saturday” Airing Saturday, January 19 at 8pm on ABC.

Jazz is a typical 11-year-old girl except for one thing — she was born as a boy. From the moment she could speak, Jazz sensed that she was trapped in the wrong body and decided to dress and live as a little girl. Her parents made the controversial decision to support her choice. ABC News started covering her story when she was five. Now, a tween, Jazz stands at a new crossroads in her brave decision to define life on her terms: boys and dating, medicine and the ultimate surgery to become fully female. Jazz and her family speak candidly to Barbara Walters on a Special Edition of “20/20 SATURDAY” airing on JANUARY 19 (8:00-9:00 p.m., ET) on ABC.

For more information on Jazz visit TransKidsPurpleRainbow.org


Generation LGBTQIA

Category : Feel good About Yourself, Latest News, Trans Youth

Generation LGBTQIA

By Michael Schulman

STEPHEN IRA, a junior at Sarah Lawrence College, uploaded a video last March on We Happy Trans, a site that shares “positive perspectives” on being transgender

In the breakneck six-and-a-half-minute monologue — hair tousled, sitting in a wood-paneled dorm room — Stephen exuberantly declared himself “a queer, a nerd fighter, a writer, an artist and a guy who needs a haircut,” and held forth on everything from his style icons (Truman Capote and “any male-identified person who wears thigh-highs or garters”) to his toy zebra.

Because Stephen, who was born Kathlyn, is the 21-year-old child of Warren Beatty and Annette Bening, the video went viral, garnering nearly half a million views. But that was not the only reason for its appeal. With its adrenalized, freewheeling eloquence, the video seemed like a battle cry for a new generation of post-gay gender activists, for whom Stephen represents a rare public face.

Armed with the millennial generation’s defining traits — Web savvy, boundless confidence and social networks that extend online and off — Stephen and his peers are forging a political identity all their own, often at odds with mainstream gay culture. 

If the gay-rights movement today seems to revolve around same-sex marriage, this generation is seeking something more radical: an upending of gender roles beyond the binary of male/female. The core question isn’t whom they love, but who they are — that is, identity as distinct from sexual orientation.

But what to call this movement? Whereas “gay and lesbian” was once used to lump together various sexual minorities — and more recently “L.G.B.T.” to include bisexual and transgender — the new vanguard wants a broader, more inclusive abbreviation. “Youth today do not define themselves on the spectrum of L.G.B.T.,” said Shane Windmeyer, a founder of Campus Pride, a national student advocacy group based in Charlotte, N.C.

Part of the solution has been to add more letters, and in recent years the post-post-post-gay-rights banner has gotten significantly longer, some might say unwieldy. The emerging rubric is “L.G.B.T.Q.I.A.,” which stands for different things, depending on whom you ask.

 “Q” can mean “questioning” or “queer,” an umbrella term itself, formerly derogatory before it was appropriated by gay activists in the 1990s. “I” is for “intersex,” someone whose anatomy is not exclusively male or female. And “A” stands for “ally” (a friend of the cause) or “asexual,” characterized by the absence of sexual attraction.

It may be a mouthful, but it’s catching on, especially on liberal-arts campuses.

Read the full article at the NYTimes.com


The East Aurora IL School Board Debacle Comes to a Disgraceful Close

Category : Latest News, Trans Youth

The East Aurora IL School Board Debacle Comes to a Disgraceful CloseIn East Aurora, Illinois around providing protections for trans* students has finally come to its bitter end. I say finally, because in the past three months I’ve covered this story five times (today is number six) in the What You Need To Know segment for this blog, twice devoting my WYNTK opening essay to the situation.

In case you’ve missed this story, allow me to fill in the details:

  • On Monday October 15th, the East Aurora School Board adopted a new policy intended to enumerate and protect the rights of trans* and gender-non-conforming students within their district.
  • Facing a firm backlash led by the Illinois Family Institute, an organization recognized by the Southern Poverty Law Center as a designated hate-group, on October 18th the school board rescinded the policy.
  • Shortly after, the board publicly debated firing the person who suggested the policy, which had been overwhelmingly supported by the board in the October 15th vote.
  • On October 27th the board announced that they would form an ad hoc committee to investigate the issue further and make a policy recommendation. When it was announced that the committee meeting would be open to the public, I expressed about my fears that the result would be a circus of anti-trans* sentiment.
  • November 30th’s meeting proved my fears correct. Over one hundred and twenty protestors, coordinated by the Illinois Family Institute, which publicly calls trans* women “cross dressing men,” and encourages teachers and parents to mis-gender trans* kids in order to “correct” them, showed up at the meeting carrying protest signs and booing or shouting down speakers who advocated for the rights of trans* students.
  • Finally, on December 17th, the East Aurora School Board, showing an utter lack of understanding of the concept irony, disbanded the committee, saying that it had served the purpose of bringing the community together

As a compromise, the school district agreed to bring their own anti-bullying policy up to the standards of the State of Illinois, which does classify gender identity and expression as a protected group in that context.

Mark my words, this will not be the last time we see this story play out, although I believe it’s unlikely that we will see it develop with quite the same shocking level of ineptitude shown by East Aurora’s school board.

Read the full article at The Bilerico Project


Transsexual College Basketball Player Keeps Her Head Held High

Category : Latest News, News Around The Nation

Gabrielle LudwigSANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP) — The women’s basketball team at Mission College expected the bleachers to be full and the hecklers ready when its newest player made her home court debut.

In the days leading up to the game, people had plenty to say about 6-foot-6-inch, 220-pound Gabrielle Ludwig, who joined the Lady Saints as a mid-season walk-on and became, according to advocates, the first transsexual to play college hoops as both a man and a woman.

Coach Corey Cafferata worried the outside noise was getting to his players, particularly the 50-year-old Ludwig.

A

pair of ESPN radio hosts had laughed at her looks, referring to her as “it.” And online threats and anonymous calls prompted the two-year college to assign the Navy veteran of Operation Desert Storm a safer parking space next to the gym and two police guards.

Last week, Ludwig gathered her 10 teammates at practice and offered to quit. This was their time to shine, she told the group of 18-, 19- and 20-year-olds. She didn’t want to be a distraction for the team. The other women said if Ludwig, whom they nicknamed “Big Sexy” and “Princess,” didn’t play, they wouldn’t either.

Didn’t she know she was the glue holding the team together?

“Then let’s just play basketball,” she replied solemnly, looking each teammate in the eye.

A lifelong basketball lover, Ludwig has been helping coach and working out with the Saints since the beginning of the school year, but she only received conference clearance to compete on the last day of November. She took the court as No. 42 the next day, scoring three points on four free throws in about seven minutes of play. Last weekend, during her first home game, she scored eight points in 11 minutes, Facebook friend requests from the opposing team — and not a single heckle.

“I got exactly what I always wanted, just to fit in and be normal like everyone else,” Ludwig said.

The story of how she ended up in a basketball uniform again would inspire comparisons to “The Natural” or other tales of middle-aged redemption were it not for gender. Introduced to the sport as an impressively tall 7th grade boy, she played on her high school team as Robert John Ludwig, then one season at a community college on Long Island in New York. After she dropped out, her court appearances were limited to pickup games.

The basketball bug returned 12 years ago, when her daughter from her second marriage, then 7, started playing youth basketball and Ludwig signed on as her coach. Ludwig kept coaching other people’s children when her daughter moved on to high school and still works with hundreds of middle school girls every year.

Her transition from a male coach to a female coach five years ago raised questions, but parents generally accepted her decision warmly, she said. So did the women she played with in a couple of intramural leagues.

What the naysayers do not know, she said, is that Ludwig is not the same player she was as a 24-year-old male. She has less muscle and height, because of female hormones she takes. And at her age, she has to work to keep up.

While coaching a youth game on the Mission court last year she met Cafferata. They kept in touch, and when Ludwig half-jokingly asked if he had a spot for her, he said he might.

“The only thing I had to do is talk to my potential teammates and say, ‘Hey, do you have room for me? This is where I am, this is where I’ve been, and I really love this game. Can I play with y’all?’ And it was a resounding, ‘Hell yeah!’”

Cafferata is tactful when asked whether Ludwig’s size and former gender give the Saints an unfair advantage. A self-described champion of underdogs — his roster includes a player who is deaf and others with learning disabilities — the coach is rooting for Ludwig all the way. But to become a starter, she will need to work on endurance and speed.

“Gabrielle has earned a spot on this team,” he said. “She practices hard. She runs hard. She is no different from anyone on the team — she is a great, coachable player.”

As someone living as a woman and taking female hormones since 2007, Ludwig was eligible to play in the NCAA. Transgender student athletes who have taken medication to suppress testosterone for a year may compete on women’s teams under a policy adopted last year.

The California Community College Athletic Association had another hoop for Ludwig. Because its rules base gender on a student’s birth certificate, she would need a new one. Ludwig, who had sex reassignment surgery over the summer, petitioned a judge and obtained her papers on Nov. 30.

Ludwig, who turns 51 this month, acknowledged that part of her motivation for playing women’s basketball was to be a role-model for transgender youth. She finds hope, if not gratification in the temporary suspensions ESPN radio hosts Steve Czaban and Andy Pollin received this week because of the remarks they made about her. But she wants her court accomplishments — not her gender change — to draw comments.

“If men think that women’s basketball is easy, let them spend a day out here and get their butt kicked,” she said.

Mission College Athletic Director Mike Perez was all for Ludwig playing. He admires her for working a fulltime professional job — as a systems engineer for a pharmaceutical company — while carrying a full course load in computer administration. He also has seen the way her young teammates look up to Ludwig “and not just because she’s tall.”

“I could tell that one, she was a person of substance and two, somebody who was really sincere about what they were trying to do,” Perez said. “Many people have different views, but the most important view is she … has a right to be on this basketball team.”

Teammate Amy Woo, 19, said Ludwig has brought a maternal influence, helping the team keep problems in perspective.

“We all love her,” Woo said. “If someone is going to talk against her, they are talking against all of us because it’s like she is part of a family.”

Source: SouthFloridaGayNews.com


December is “Transgender Youth Awareness Month” in Oregon

Category : Latest News, Trans Youth

December is Transgender Youth Awareness Month in Oregon

For the first time in the United States, a state has officially recognized the status, rights and pediatric medical needs of transgender children and youth The State of Oregon, by proclamation of Governor John A. Kitzhaber, M.D., has named December 2012 to be “Transgender Youth Awareness Month” in Oregon. This proclamation was issued in response to a request by TransActive Education & Advocacy, a Portland-based non-profit serving families of transgender and gender nonconforming children and youth worldwide. ”This is a landmark step forward, not only for the families of these children, but for the well-being of all children”, said Jenn Burleton, TransActive’s Founder and Executive Director.

“While certain far-right political and religious elements continue to engage in culture-war (which they are destined to lose) over sexual orientation issues, all children and youth continue to be victimized, bullied and harassed for not conforming to arbitrary and oppressive gender stereotypes. And while you need not be transgender or genderqueer to experience this abuse, transgender kids feel the brunt of this more deeply and destructively than almost any other group.”

As a leader in advocacy for trans children, youth and their families, TransActive has been successful previously in getting similar proclamations from both the City of Portland and Multnomah County, in which Portland resides.

The proclamation, which can be viewed and downloaded at TransActiveOnline.org, states: Whereas: Transgender and gender nonconforming children and youth are among the least understood, most marginalized and underserved populations of Oregonians despite constituting at least one percent of all children and youth; and Whereas: Transgender children who receive the love and support of their families, friends, neighbors, communities, schools and culture have every opportunity to thrive and be successful; and Whereas: Transgender adolescents deserve access to pediatric medical care and healthcare coverage that affords them the opportunity to experience physical puberty in a way that is congruent with their gender identity. Now, Therefore: I, John A. Kitzhaber, M.D., Governor of the State of Oregon, hereby proclaim December 2012 to be Transgender Youth Awareness Month in Oregon and encourage all Oregonians to join in this observance.


Jazz Speaks At Transgender Day Of Remembrance

Category : Latest News, News Around The Nation, Trans Youth

12 year old Transkid Jazz was a guest speaker at a Transgender Day of Remembrance ceremony on November 20, 2012.

Earlier on this year, Jazz was awarded the Colin Higgins Youth Courage Award at the Trevor Gala Project in NYC. She gave a heartfelt acceptance speech to a room full of 1,000 adults including celebrities like, Susan Sarandon, Debra Messing, Eric McCormick, Stanley Tucci, Anthony Rapp plus many others. 

Jazz is the youngest recipient of the Colin Higgins Youth Courage Award.

12345

Read more about Jazz at TransKidsPurpleRainbowFoundation.org


Transgender Woman First to Win Office in Cuba

Category : Latest News, News Around The World

Adela HernandezHAVANA — Adela Hernandez, a biologically male Cuban who has lived as a female since childhood, served two years in prison in the 1980s for “dangerousness” after her own family denounced her sexuality.

This month she made history by becoming the first known transgender person to hold public office in Cuba, winning election as a delegate to the municipal government of Caibarien in the central province of Villa Clara.

I

n a country where gays were persecuted for decades and sent to grueling work camps in the countryside, Hernandez, 48, hailed her election as yet another milestone in a gradual shift away from macho attitudes in the years since Fidel Castro himself expressed regret over the treatment of people perceived to be different.

“As time evolves, homophobic people — although they will always exist — are the minority,” Hernandez said by phone from her hometown.

Becoming a delegate “is a great triumph,” she added.

Because she has not undergone sex-change surgery, Hernandez is legally still a man in the eyes of the Cuban state: Jose Agustin Hernandez, according to the civil registry. Hernandez, who switched back and forth between feminine and masculine pronouns when referring to herself during an interview, said she hasn’t made a decision to seek an operation but doesn’t rule it out either.

Hernandez won office in early November by taking a runoff vote 280-170. Her position is the equivalent of a city councilor, and her election makes her eligible to be selected as a representative to Parliament in early 2013.

For years after the 1959 Cuban Revolution, authorities hounded people of differing sexual orientation and others considered threatening, such as priests, long-haired youths and rock ’n’ roll enthusiasts. But there have been notable changes in attitudes toward sexuality.

“I would like to think that discrimination against homosexuals is a problem that is being overcome,” Fidel Castro told an interviewer some years ago.

Since 2007 the island has been covering sex-change surgery under its free health care system. Last year a gay man and a transsexual woman whose operation was paid for by the state garnered headlines for their first-of-its kind wedding.

The country’s most prominent gay rights activist is Mariela Castro, Fidel’s niece and current President Raul Castro’s daughter.

As director of Cuba’s National Center for Sex Education, Mariela Castro has instituted awareness campaigns, trained police on relations with the lesbian-gay-bisexual-transgender community and lobbied parliament to legalize same-sex unions.

Born in a sugar town in central Cuba, Hernandez was disowned by her family and said it was her own father who reported her to authorities, leading to her imprisonment. She had to change towns and defend herself physically from attacks.

Over the decades she found work as a hospital janitor, then as a nurse and most recently as an electrocardiogram technician. She also established herself in the community and as a longtime member of her neighborhood watch committee, which helped her win acceptance and laid the groundwork for her election.

“My neighbors know me as Adela, the nurse,” Hernandez said. “Sexual preference does not determine whether you are a revolutionary or not. That comes from within.”

As an elected official she promised to advocate for her constituents’ interests, but said she also wants to be a voice for gay rights.

“I represent a community but I will always keep in mind the defense of gays,” Hernandez said.