"Bringing mirth, merriment, (maybe just a smidge of mayhem) & unconditional enlightenment to the masses through verse, imagery, and any random way I can."
Legalize Trans - Affirm, Include, Appreciate trans and gender-non-conforming people and issues

Friday, June 17, 2011

Old Hollywood

I love old Hollywood! It was such a fabulous time. Even today, it hits me just so when I'm leaving work and see all the neon signs atop the buildings and think of all the history at places like Musso & Frank's etc. I've also become a huge fan of the show Hollywood Tresures, where Joe Maddalena and his team scour the country for pieces of old & rare Hollywood memorabilia. It's really fascinating stuff.

Anyway, I saw an episode this week where they were doing inventory on Debbie Reynolds' ENORMOUS collection of Hollywood goodies and tomorrow in Beverly Hills, almost her whole collection is being auctioned off. This stuff is worth like tens of millions of dollars and you can check out the catalog at the link below MM's pic.

Speaking of millions, anyone got a couple of mill they can float me to buy Marilyn's subway dress?



Profiles in History - The nation's leading dealer in guaranteed-authentic original Hollywood memorabilia, historical autographs, letters, documents, vintage signed photographs and manuscripts. - PROFILES IN HISTORY

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Does TSA stands for "Trans Stay Away"?

Here is another prime example of society's narrow-minded unenlightenment. I know things are changing for the better everyday, but damn, we are still SO far away from a peaceful existence. Story's like these that make me weep for the uneducated, but I'm glad to say that this story has a happy ending.

Saturday, June 11, 2011

Transgenderism's Rich History (A GREAT ARTICLE!)

This is a really wonderful & uplifting piece that my sista, Nikki turned me on to. On this weekend of L.A.'s Pride festivities, this really does make me proud. With a lil more positive "press" and good ol' fashioned enlightenment, we are truly "emerging from the margins".

Transgenderism's rich history

Posted by Juliet Jacques - 26 May 2011 15:59

A culture’s latest milestone.


Trans icon Candy Darling (left) and Andy Warhol, photo by Anton Perich

"The transgender experience is one of the few human conditions almost completely without cultural, literary or artistic landmarks ... Transgenderism remains so foreign a concept to those who have not experienced it that its explanation falls totally to those who have."

These are two of the more eye-catching statements in Mary McNamara's LA Times review of American TV documentary Becoming Chaz, on Chaz Bono's transition from female to male. The assertions may sound accurate, but they belie a more complex reality than some cisgender (crudely, non-transgender) critics realise.

McNamara suggests that "the idea that a person could be born into a body at odds with his or her sense of gender has only recently entered the public conversation" via films such as Boys Don't Cry (starring Hilary Swank as murdered trans man Brandon Teena) and The Oprah Winfrey Show.
Historically, trans individuals have been denied control of their stories within the mainstream, having them framed by cisgender journalists, filmmakers and editors in ways that are frequently sensationalist or deliberately transphobic, or that cast people as passive victims. From both necessity and choice, trans people's creative reflections have often been produced out of the spotlight, and their relationship with the media has been fractious -- hence the casual observer's perception that we have scant heritage.

For those willing to look, there exists a century of cultural landmarks, often intertwined with, and sometimes overshadowed by gay and lesbian history. This begins with the gay German sexologist Magnus Hirschfeld. Aware that what later became understood as transgender behaviour had existed across a variety of cultures for centuries, he published the first specific investigation into the subject in 1910 -- The Transvestites: The Erotic Drive to Cross-Dress. Hirschfeld coined the first trans-related term, "transvestite". It held a broader meaning than today, as other words have since evolved to represent differing positions on the gender-variant spectrum.

Hirschfeld also devised the term "transsexualismus" (but did not popularise "transsexual") before overseeing the first sex reassignment surgery in 1930, on Danish painter Lili Elbe. Elbe died a year later, but her collated memoirs were published as Man Into Woman in 1933. This was the first transsexual autobiographical text, initiating what became the dominant means for people to explain their transitions.

Hirschfeld and Elbe attracted little attention beyond Germany. Roberta Cowell and Michael Dillon, the UK's first male-to-female (MtF) and female-to-male (FtM) transsexual people hit the British headlines. But the first internationally famous transsexual woman was Christine Jorgensen, who appeared on the New York Times' front page in December 1952. Like Cowell, Jorgensen wrote an autobiography, and a biopic was later produced. Subsequently, transsexual issues found their main expression in queer American counter-culture -- particularly underground film.

During the Sixties, avant-garde US directors including Jack Smith and Ron Rice cast drag queens and trans women in provocative movies such as Flaming Creatures, which presented a loose set of highly sensual scenes in which participants did not need to define their gender. Works produced around Warhol's Factory, particularly Women in Revolt, created trans icons in Candy Darling, Holly Woodlawn and Jackie Curtis. Darling and Curtis later became documentary subjects, as did the trans women who fought police oppression at Compton's in San Francisco in 1966, three years before Sylvia Rivera and others struggled alongside gay and lesbian people at New York's Stonewall Inn.

By the mid-Seventies, there existed a trend for Hollywood films to show trans people as psychotic, seen in in Psycho, Dog Day Afternoon, Dressed to Kill and others. Cultural portrayals focused almost exclusively on male-to-female identities. So too did the "radical" lesbian feminist Janice Raymond's assault, The Transsexual Empire (1979), which accused Gender Identity Clinics and their patients of propagating misogynistic models of femininity.

Raymond's tract galvanised transsexual women and men into reasserting and reassessing their personal histories and cultural traditions. Sandy Stone's response, The Empire Strikes Back: A Post-Transsexual Manifesto, questioned the portrayal of the effects of gender reassignment in several autographies. She suggested that people go beyond "passing" in their acquired genders to form a strong, specifically transsexual identity that could withstand transphobic stereotyping.

Stone inspired a generation of writers who thought past traditional gender conventions, trying to unify disparate people under the transgender banner to fight shared oppression. Trans man Leslie Feinberg argued for "transgender liberation" and collected a history of gender variance "from Joan of Arc to Dennis Rodman". Kate Bornstein and Riki Ann Wilchins, meanwhile, pushed for greater recognition of the grey areas within the recognised binary.

In Britain, Press For Change, founded in 1992, strove for legal reforms for trans people, their greatest triumph being the Gender Recognition Act (2004) which won official acknowledgement for transsexual people. Throughout the Nineties, screen portrayals of trans people increased, for example in the European arthouse films of Pedro Almodóvar and Rosa von Praunheim. In more mainstream productions, trans actors rarely played trans parts, but docu-soap and reality TV formats allowed certain trans individuals greater self-expression -- and showed producers that the public was prepared to listen.

Building on the sense of identity formulated by activists and academics, and aware that the mass media is becoming more ready to let them represent themselves, trans people -- and particularly trans men -- are finally being allowed to document their own experiences in more visible contexts, in greater depth and with less editorial intervention. With heightened consciousness of the effects of negative print and screen portrayals, a plurality of voices that express the diversity of transgenderism is slowly emerging from the margins. It could not have happened without this rich cultural history; one from which transgender people of all shades continue to draw confidence.

Here is Christine Brown's "Just Plain Sense" podcast interview with the author of this piece, done by in Dec, 2010...








Friday, June 10, 2011

Massachusetts Lawmaker Asks If Transgender People Change Genders ‘On A Day-To-Day Basis’ | ThinkProgress

I can also turn into a genie, a monkey, and a lawn mower, if I try really hard.

Massachusetts Lawmaker Asks If Transgender People Change Genders ‘On A Day-To-Day Basis’.

TheSpec - Trans people trying to be just ordinary

This is a really good article!

Trans people trying to be just ordinary

When I was in my early teens, I read an article that changed me. It was a Street Beat column by Paul Wilson. Paul was writing an obituary for Christine Mackie, a transsexual woman who ran a used bike shop. The article was about her life and business. The woman was just … normal. That was Paul’s point. Though I am not trans myself, I took the idea to heart.

Trans women, to be clear, are people born biologically male who identify as female. Trans men are born biologically female and identify as male. “Transsexuals” undergo hormone therapy, surgery, and counselling to change their physical sex features and to adjust to life as their real gender, female or male. “Transgender” — a more common word — refers to all people with unconventional gender behaviour, particularly including transsexuals. But the words “trans,” “transgender” and “transsexual” are often used interchangeably — like “black” and “African-American” in the United States.

Interestingly, very few trans people are gay. That is, only a minority are born male, transition, and live as lesbians, or are born female, transition, and live as gay men.

Science has recognized for years that being trans is no way a medical or mental problem. This is why doctors prescribe sex change. Rather, transgenderism is only a problem in that it is hard to be trans in our society, and the process of sex change is literally painful. The “problem” is with people who treat trans men and trans women as freaks.

On Tuesday, June 14, an event will take place at the Downtown YWCA that will attempt to address that injustice: The YWCA will be hosting a transgender-only swim, from 7 to 8 p.m. The swim is put on by The Well, the Hamilton area’s “LGBTQ” Community Wellness Centre. (The Hamilton area’s “unofficial” LGBT Pride Week runs June 9 to 19.) The swim is a good idea because trans people face violence and harassment in public places all the time.

Community pools and change rooms are a troublesome area. Many non-trans people are uncomfortable with the idea of a person of the “wrong” sex changing near them. Violence often ensues. It is a pattern that keeps many trans people from swimming.

In many ways, a segregated swim is not ideal. We can hope for a time when private, individual changing areas are available at pools for anyone who wants them. Certainly, trans women need to keep in mind that most women have a justified fear of being nude with strangers (also nude!) who seem to be men. This is one reason why individual changing spaces are good. At the same time, non-transsexuals have to know that the vast majority of trans people are not threats in any way. Moreover, they have an equal right to swim.

The legal question of transgender rights is a thorny one in Canada right now. It splits the Conservative Party. This year, Parliament voted on whether to add the terms “gender identity” and “gender expression” to the Human Rights Code. Unfortunately, Parliament dissolved before the debate was completed. But the debate that did take place was interesting.

Most Conservative MPs, including Hamilton area MP David Sweet, voted against the addition. Some said it was unnecessary because trans people are already protected in law. But this is only partly true. (And even if it was true, what’s the harm in making a symbolic statement of equality?) Others suggested that the words would lead to a trans invasion of public bathrooms.

Lisa Raitt, Conservative MP for Halton, had a different view. She voted to add the terms. Explaining why, Raitt spoke about how a transsexual cousin who she loves had led her to see trans people as equal. In her thinking, trans people are just more evidence of human diversity. Needless to say, trans people and their supporters hope that Raitt’s argument, and not Sweet’s, wins out.

Meantime, the YWCA will host the swim. Some perfectly ordinary women and men will splash. We will be a very small bit closer to the day when we will judge people by the content of their character, and not by whether they are trans.

The spirit of this was summed up by Dolly Parton. She wrote Travelling Through, a hymn in the voice of a transsexual. The speaker is compared to a journeying pilgrim from the Bible: “Questions I have many, answers but a few/But we’re here to learn, the spirit burns, to know the greater truth …/As I’m stumbling, tumbling, wondering, as I’m travelling through.”

The trans person’s search for “home” is like everyone’s.

Aidan Johnson is a Hamilton community activist working in constitutional law and poverty law.

TheSpec - Trans people trying to be just ordinary

Interesting flyer on a newspaper box in front of my apartment.

I'm totally not paranoid, but I find this oddly intriguing that in Koreatown, and only in front of MY apartment building, have I seen this. Weird & cool all at the same time.

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Hearing held on transgender rights bill - The Boston Globe

God knows, the only reason I'm Trans is so I can skulk around bathrooms. I mean, duh!!

Hearing held on transgender rights bill

By Brian MacQuarrie Globe Staff / June 9, 2011

Depending on the arguments heard yesterday at the State House, a bill to ban transgender discrimination is either the next leap for civil rights in Massachusetts or a way for predators to gain access to bathrooms and locker rooms used by the opposite sex.

“We know that our Commonwealth is stronger when every person can live and work free of harassment and threats,’’ Attorney General Martha Coakley testified before the joint Judiciary Committee. “The unfairness is clear, but the remedy has not been clear.’’

Under bills filed in the House and Senate, Massachusetts would join 15 other states, including every other New England state except New Hampshire, in outlawing transgender discrimination in employment, housing, education, credit, and access to public accommodations. The bills also would add offenses involving gender identity and expression to the state’s list of hate crimes.

In emotional testimony before hundreds of spectators in Gardner Auditorium, Representative Carl Sciortino of Medford, a Democrat and cosponsor of the House bill, read the names of several transgender individuals who had been murdered in Massachusetts since the late 1970s.

The list included Rita Hester, who died in Boston of multiple stab wounds in 1998, and Lisa Daniels, who died in Dorchester in 2005 when she was shot 17 times below the waist.

“What we are asking here today is so very, very simple,’’ Senator Susan Fargo, Democrat of Lincoln, told the committee, which will vote on whether to recommend the bill for approval. “It extends civil rights protection to a group that has been forgotten.’’

Opponents, however, lambasted the bill as vaguely worded and an invitation for predators who could use legal protections for gender identity and expression to enter bathrooms and other private areas that otherwise would be off-limits.

“I think that this bill would compromise the basic standards of safety and privacy that women and children deserve and expect in society,’’ Representative Marc Lombardo, a freshman Republican legislator from Billerica, said after his testimony. “As a father, I do not want to see men in the ladies room with my daughter.’’

The bill, he said, “may be well-intentioned, but it would change so many elementary items of the way we live our day-to-day life.’’

Lombardo was joined by Representative James Lyons, a Republican from Andover, who characterized the proposal as an assault on the working class.

“Is there not some moment when we say to ourselves in the Legislature of the Commonwealth, what are we doing?’’ Lyons asked the committee. “Now, the working families of our Commonwealth must worry about the moral environment.’’

Robert Joyce, a Newton lawyer, predicted the bill would force business owners and others to “determine the impossible’’ when dealing with transgender people and expose them to unnecessary litigation. The bill, he said, “is nothing but a legal ambiguity.’’

Joyce said that additional protections are not needed for transgender individuals in the state. “What I’m saying here is that it ain’t broke in Massachusetts,’’ Joyce told the committee. “The law protects people with gender-identity concerns.’’

To Coakley, critics of the bill have stoked “unreasonable fears’’ and “grossly mischaracterize what this bill does.’’

Transgender witnesses yesterday spoke of a harrowing, lengthy process to reorient themselves to a new identity and to the obstacles they encounter.

“Most of us work really hard to be invisible in society,’’ said Gunner Scott, director of the Massachusetts Transgender Political Coalition, who now has a male identity. “Unfortunately, most of us have no choice but to come out of the closet.’’

Brian MacQuarrie can be reached at macquarrie@globe.com.

Hearing held on transgender rights bill - The Boston Globe

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

VIVA Beverly

I just ran across this on TV. I haven't watched AITF in ages, and the one I see has to feature the one and only...VIVA Beverly LaSalle!!!

Windy City Times - Chicago to run transgender TV show - 111

This is something that should happen in every large city in the country!

Windy City Times - Chicago to run transgender TV show - 111

Catholic School Bans Rainbows at Anti-Homophobia Event




I'd say I'm shocked, but I survived 12 years of catholic school, so it's just par for the hypocritical, ridiculous, catholic course!

Catholic School Bans Rainbows at Anti-Homophobia Event

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

TG trailblazer Janet Mock shares her story!

This is a definite must hear! Janet Mock is the people.com editor who courageously came out recently as being transgender, tells her story of family & transition.




She is such a role model for ALL of us, Trans or not!!! Compassion and enlightenment knows no gender! Here is her "It Gets Better" video...

Friday, June 3, 2011

WONDERFUL article about Trans-life!

This is such a great piece written by Eva Hayward of the Independent Weekly out of Durham, North Carolina. I'm so taken with it cause it really echoes exactly how I feel about our Trans-world! It's wonderfully written and a total MUST READ!!


Transgenderism and transsexualism are expressions of life-loving invention
by Eva Hayward

A love affair broke out between a transsexual woman—male to female—and a transgender man—female to male.

I have lived as a woman for years, and he had recently transitioned from female to male. I define as transsexual—someone who feels an essential need to modify her body—and he is transgender—not necessarily wanting sex reassignment. I always desired men, and he always women. While sex and gender identity do not define one's sexuality, we moved across cultural categories of gay and lesbian, man and woman. Neither of us was looking for a transgender lover, but we found each other and became a different kind of heterosexual couple.

Although relationships can be complicated, love is often quite simple. In many ways, our relationship is no more or less convoluted than any other: Do you desire me as much as I desire you? Has this relationship changed me, or not? And in other ways the coupling feels novel.

Transgenderism and transsexualism are expressions of life-loving invention. Simply, transgender people, like all people, are part of life's exuberance, the planet's investment in change and potential. Even a casual reading of Charles Darwin reminds that organisms flourish because of their ability to transform or adjust, not because of their capacities for strength or intelligence. And a more careful reading of Darwin invites us to see how nonreproductive members of a species are not detriments but advantages. So, might it be true that variation in sex, sexuality and gender is indeed "natural"?

What makes this male-to-female and female-to-male couple fresh is that bodies shift across seemingly inherent cultural codes. Rather than suggesting the apocalypse of society (although I confess that on some Monday mornings I long for nothing else), this couple expresses elasticity in identities that most Americans assume are true and enduring. Bodies are potentials rather than absolutes. The interest in Chaz Bono, Thomas Beattie ("the pregnant man"), America's Next Top Model candidate and transwoman Isis King and author Jennifer Finney Boylan demonstrates this as a cultural truth. If you need more proof, watch the Oprah Winfrey Network for a few hours.

Transpeople define themselves in numerous ways. There is probably no single term that adequately conveys this diversity. Self-identifying language in the transcommunity is rapidly changing. What worked a couple of years ago—for example, "tranny"—is suddenly wrong or misrepresenting. "Tranny" is now viewed as offensive, a slur. These changing definitions are not arbitrary, but indicate a people finding their voice in a larger context.

It's common to read about why people transition genders—it seems some researcher is always searching for some biological code or psychological event that triggered it—but the question is often irrelevant. How do any of us know how we became gendered? Or why we desire a particular gender or sex? Perhaps too much misguided time and money is spent on defining a genetic code or a traumatic experience that will account for all the ways transgender people become transgendered.

The real question is why we pose these questions. Are they meant to secure better health care or to foster social justice for a politically disenfranchised population? Or are their purposes less altruistic? Behaviorist psychologist John Money studied why transsexuals feel an innate need to change their sex and concluded that such feelings are indicators of mental illness. Consequently, the American Psychiatric Association listed "Gender Identity Disorder" in the 1994 revision of the diagnostic manual, which has since impacted the lives of transsexual and transgender people.

Usually transgender people are written about. Their stories are interpreted by sometimes sympathetic writers, but more often than not by insensitive journalists, interviewers, academics or health care providers. This isn't to dismiss our political allies; they are crucial for solidarity projects and cultural change. But even allies should give voice back to a community that has for too long been named, defined and pathologized.

Even the inclusion of "T" in LGBTQ (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer) pays only lip service, and lesbian and gay organizations ignore issues that are unique to transpeople. The Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA) introduced in Congress would prohibit discrimination against employees on the basis of their sexual orientation. In 2007, The Human Rights Campaign Fund, one of the largest lobbyists for the lesbian and gay community, refused to extend ENDA's protections to include gender identity: transgender and transsexual.

A lot of education is needed even in local news reporting. Sam Peterson, a local artist and activist who organized ChestFest at The ArtsCenter in Carrboro, described an encounter with a local person who "looked like a man." The interviewer told Sam that he didn't look like a man to him. The irony of course is that all men try to look like men, but without the assumption that they are not actually men.

In general, news stories constantly refer to transpeople using the wrong pronouns—"A man dressed in women's clothing was found murdered," read a Baltimore news article, or "She tricked this other woman into thinking she was a man," a British publication reported. But it is not just disrespectful misrecognition that is the problem, but the way transpeople are either criminalized or represented as deserving victims of violence.

Far from resembling the character Buffalo Bill in The Silence of the Lambs or Norman Bates in Psycho, transgender women as a group risk being assaulted and killed at a much higher rate because of who they are. The Transgender Law Center conservatively estimates that one in every 900 homicides in the U.S. is an anti-transgender hate-based crime.

As for claims of deceit, there is nothing about having sex with someone that requires disclosure about one's trans status. Don't we all risk some self-discovery when we are intimate with another person? Is the anxiety of non-transgender people that they will be tricked actually a fear that sleeping with a transgender person could affect their own identity?

By living their lives, transpeople invite everyone to question his or her assumptions. The invitation is a reminder to us all that change is what we are. We don't sustain ourselves because we are intact or perfect, but because we embody the reach and possibility of our experiences. Our sense of self is created out of ingenuity and necessity. We should not only want to live and love according to variation, but we must.

Eva Hayward is a new columnist for the Independent Weekly. Her columns will be published the first Wednesdays of the month.


http://www.indyweek.com/indyweek/transgenderism-and-transsexualism-are-expressions-of-life-loving-invention/Content?oid=2498070

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Livin' The Dream!!

I had a wild revelation as left work in Hollywood tonight, and I just had to share it. I thought back to 2007 when I walked these exact same streets with a dear old friend of mine. Now, 2007 obviously isn't all that long ago, but it might as well be a different century for me.

I was on a road trip with one of my best friends ever! We have been friends since we were little kids. We played baseball together, we grew up together, and our moms even became best friends because of us. He was the first person I ever came out to, and someone who has done nothing but support and love me since the moment I told him.

Anyway, in 2007, I still wasn't out to him yet and it was killing me. All I could dream of as we toured Hollywood Blvd was living my life the way it was meant to be lived. I could see myself living as Gina, living and working in L.A. and finally being 1,000% happy with who I was. My terms and only my terms.

Fast forward to my revelation of this evening. Here I was leaving work, looking at all the fabulous old architecture, all the history of Hollywood and it hit me. I really am livin' the dream. I DID IT! MY rules, MY way, MY dream!! I still can't get the smile off of my face and I just had to jot down a few thoughts before the elation subsided.

I guess the moral of my lil story is that dreams really DO come true. It may sound cliche, but if you keep believing, keep moving forward and NEVER, EVER lose sight of what you REALLY, TRULY want, it can totally happen!

I mean, geez...if I could do it, I suppose just about anyone can!