Jenna Talackova isn't the only transwoman competing to wear a pageant crown this month. So is Britain's Jackie Green.
If her name sounds familiar to you, it's because two years ago Jackie was in the news as the youngest person ever in Britain to undergo sex reassignment surgery. While it is covered under Britain's National Health Service, the minimum age is 18.
Jackie flew to Thailand because at the time minors were allowed to have SRS until the Medical Council of Thailand enacted changes in 2009 that pushed the minimum age to 18, required HRT and living in the desired gender for a year.
Jackie underwent SRS on her 16th birthday and happily started living her life.
The now 18 year old Jackie was spotted by talent scouts at Britain's Next Top Model in London that encouraged her to enter the Miss England pageant and were unaware of her trans history.
She wowed the judges and got enough public support to make the semifinals of the Miss England pageant that will take place on May 30. If she wins it, she would represent England at the 63rd Miss World pageant in China and be poised to make some trans history in the process.
However, at this point and time the Miss World pageant officials have yet to announce whether they would follow the example of the Miss Universe system and allow transwomen to compete.
But good luck to Jackie and hope she does end up with the crown.
Showing posts with label transkids/transteens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label transkids/transteens. Show all posts
Wednesday, May 16, 2012
Sunday, May 06, 2012
What Would You Do?-Transteen Trying To Come Out
The ABC Show What Would You Do? isn't shy about tackling trans issues, and another one they took on recently was a trans teen trying to explain at a restaurant to his disapproving mother that he needed to be a girl.
The mother and transteen were actors in this case and the hidden cameras ganged the reactions of eh people who witnessed the situation.
The mother and transteen were actors in this case and the hidden cameras ganged the reactions of eh people who witnessed the situation.
Labels:
media,
television,
transgender issues,
transkids/transteens
Monday, April 16, 2012
Gloria Allen-Passing The Knowledge
The last time I'd written about Gloria Allen was when a story broke about her facing off a transphobic attacker at her seniors apartment complex in Chicago and I pointed out we need to start thinking about trans senior issues as well.
Gloria is back in the news, and not only does it tell some of her fascinating story, 'Mama Gloria' as she's called is teaching a charm school for trans youth at the Center on Halsted.
She one of our pioneering African-American transwomen whose story I wish I'd gotten to know when I was a trans teen much less had that kind of guidance when I finally did transition.
Here's the Chicago Tribune story by Dawn Turner Trice
***
About a year ago, a retired Gloria Allen thought having lunch at the Center on Halsted with other lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender senior citizens was simply one of the highlights of her week.
But while at the center, which offers an array of youth services for the LGBT community, Allen, 66, noticed that some of the young people arrived dressed inappropriately. Young men wore scandalously short shorts; young women sported baggy pants that sagged way below their waists.
Some of the teens also didn't comport themselves very well.
So Allen, a transgender woman, got permission from the center to start a charm school. Allen, who's called "Mama Gloria," teaches youth etiquette along with how to dress and carry themselves — things they might have ordinarily learned at home if their parents understood how to guide their LGBT teens and were supportive enough to do so.
"I may be sounding old-fashioned, but I would see these young people wearing negligee-type clothes on the street and I would say, 'How could they leave the house looking like that?'" Allen said.
She said she felt strongly about helping because she understands how difficult it can be when a person has been socialized to be one gender but feels as though he or she is another. Also, she said she believes they have to set a good example.
"When you're a part of a minority community, what you do reflects the whole," she said. "It may not be fair, but that's reality. There are children out on the street. I don't want kids to say, 'Look Mom, look at that.' I don't want people to look at us like that."
Allen knows that her coming-of-age might be considered atypical for LGBT kids even now, but it was definitely not the norm for someone growing up on the South Side in the 1940s and 1950s.
She had the good fortune of being born into a family in which her parents recognized their son was "different" from a very young age and accepted him as a "her." Allen was the oldest of 14 children, and her parents told their kids as well as other family members to call Allen "sister."
When she turned 24 years old, she decided to live full time as a woman.
"My mother said, 'You sure?' and I discussed it with my father and grandparents and they accepted it," Allen said. "My mother smiled and said, 'You have to buy your own dresses. You can't wear mine.'"
Allen said her mother, grandmother and great-aunt helped guide her by showing her which styles of dresses were more complementary to her frame. Allen said she's 5 feet 9 inches tall and wears a size 10, making her a replica of her mother, a 1958 Jet magazine centerfold model.
"Before I left the house, I had to model my outfit for these women," Allen said. "If I didn't look right, they'd stop me. They'd say, 'Sister, you can't wear that.'"
"My great-aunt, God rest her soul — she lived to be 101 — she would say, 'Ladies wear a slip. Ladies carry a purse.' And she said you always had to have at least $5 in it, in case your date tries to get too familiar and then won't bring you home because you wouldn't let him do what he wanted to do."
Allen said the women also taught her how to apply makeup, starting the process with greasepaint, a heavier foundation used in show business for better coverage. And she learned other tips from older transgender women.
Allen, a former nurse, said that even with this type of direction, she wasn't sure she could pass as a woman. She did, however, and she knows passing is at the heart of what some young transgender men and women are trying to do but haven't yet mastered.
In her charm school, which meets Thursday evenings at the center, she teaches her pupils how to apply makeup and take care of their skin and how to dress respectfully. She talks about why exercising and maintaining a healthy diet are important. There also are lessons in dining etiquette and the art of holding a conversation.
"You have to be well-read and you don't have to use profanity, either," Allen told the class at a recent meeting.
Several young transgender women sat around a table, listening and learning from Allen and one another.
"Some of you transgender girls sit down like men," Allen said as she walked around the class.
"Don't sit like that," she gently told one who crossed her legs. To another, she said it wasn't proper for her to brush her hair in public. Allen asked another to button her jacket to cover her exposed midriff.
The class talked about how other cultures handle transgender people and why it's important to take the proper amount of hormones in preparation for sexual reassignment surgery.
When a 19-year-old said she'd been doubling up on pills, Allen pleaded with her to stop.
"You're putting your body, your liver and kidneys, at risk," said Allen, who had reassignment surgery when she was 37. "You've been a boy for 19 years. You can't turn into a girl overnight. Be patient. I don't want you to hurt yourself."
Allen said she knows that charm school instructors might not typically talk about safe sex practices or the perils of abusing alcohol and drugs or even domestic abuse.
"But transgender people are abused by their partners at high rates, and no one talks about it," she said. "They may abuse drugs and alcohol to cope. They're ashamed, but the real shame is not doing something about it."
She said transgender people have dual identities that they're trying to learn and unlearn.
"It's not an easy journey, but I've been on it for a long time," she said. "The women in my family were fabulous teachers. I never had children, but I feel like I have them now."
Gloria is back in the news, and not only does it tell some of her fascinating story, 'Mama Gloria' as she's called is teaching a charm school for trans youth at the Center on Halsted.
She one of our pioneering African-American transwomen whose story I wish I'd gotten to know when I was a trans teen much less had that kind of guidance when I finally did transition.
Here's the Chicago Tribune story by Dawn Turner Trice
***
Handing down lessons learned on her journey
Transgender senior teaches tricks of the trade to a new generation at LGBT charm school
About a year ago, a retired Gloria Allen thought having lunch at the Center on Halsted with other lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender senior citizens was simply one of the highlights of her week.
But while at the center, which offers an array of youth services for the LGBT community, Allen, 66, noticed that some of the young people arrived dressed inappropriately. Young men wore scandalously short shorts; young women sported baggy pants that sagged way below their waists.
So Allen, a transgender woman, got permission from the center to start a charm school. Allen, who's called "Mama Gloria," teaches youth etiquette along with how to dress and carry themselves — things they might have ordinarily learned at home if their parents understood how to guide their LGBT teens and were supportive enough to do so.
"I may be sounding old-fashioned, but I would see these young people wearing negligee-type clothes on the street and I would say, 'How could they leave the house looking like that?'" Allen said.
She said she felt strongly about helping because she understands how difficult it can be when a person has been socialized to be one gender but feels as though he or she is another. Also, she said she believes they have to set a good example.
"When you're a part of a minority community, what you do reflects the whole," she said. "It may not be fair, but that's reality. There are children out on the street. I don't want kids to say, 'Look Mom, look at that.' I don't want people to look at us like that."
Allen knows that her coming-of-age might be considered atypical for LGBT kids even now, but it was definitely not the norm for someone growing up on the South Side in the 1940s and 1950s.
She had the good fortune of being born into a family in which her parents recognized their son was "different" from a very young age and accepted him as a "her." Allen was the oldest of 14 children, and her parents told their kids as well as other family members to call Allen "sister."
When she turned 24 years old, she decided to live full time as a woman.
"My mother said, 'You sure?' and I discussed it with my father and grandparents and they accepted it," Allen said. "My mother smiled and said, 'You have to buy your own dresses. You can't wear mine.'"
Allen said her mother, grandmother and great-aunt helped guide her by showing her which styles of dresses were more complementary to her frame. Allen said she's 5 feet 9 inches tall and wears a size 10, making her a replica of her mother, a 1958 Jet magazine centerfold model.
"Before I left the house, I had to model my outfit for these women," Allen said. "If I didn't look right, they'd stop me. They'd say, 'Sister, you can't wear that.'"
"My great-aunt, God rest her soul — she lived to be 101 — she would say, 'Ladies wear a slip. Ladies carry a purse.' And she said you always had to have at least $5 in it, in case your date tries to get too familiar and then won't bring you home because you wouldn't let him do what he wanted to do."
Allen said the women also taught her how to apply makeup, starting the process with greasepaint, a heavier foundation used in show business for better coverage. And she learned other tips from older transgender women.
Allen, a former nurse, said that even with this type of direction, she wasn't sure she could pass as a woman. She did, however, and she knows passing is at the heart of what some young transgender men and women are trying to do but haven't yet mastered.
In her charm school, which meets Thursday evenings at the center, she teaches her pupils how to apply makeup and take care of their skin and how to dress respectfully. She talks about why exercising and maintaining a healthy diet are important. There also are lessons in dining etiquette and the art of holding a conversation.
"You have to be well-read and you don't have to use profanity, either," Allen told the class at a recent meeting.
Several young transgender women sat around a table, listening and learning from Allen and one another.
"Some of you transgender girls sit down like men," Allen said as she walked around the class.
"Don't sit like that," she gently told one who crossed her legs. To another, she said it wasn't proper for her to brush her hair in public. Allen asked another to button her jacket to cover her exposed midriff.
The class talked about how other cultures handle transgender people and why it's important to take the proper amount of hormones in preparation for sexual reassignment surgery.
When a 19-year-old said she'd been doubling up on pills, Allen pleaded with her to stop.
"You're putting your body, your liver and kidneys, at risk," said Allen, who had reassignment surgery when she was 37. "You've been a boy for 19 years. You can't turn into a girl overnight. Be patient. I don't want you to hurt yourself."
Allen said she knows that charm school instructors might not typically talk about safe sex practices or the perils of abusing alcohol and drugs or even domestic abuse.
"But transgender people are abused by their partners at high rates, and no one talks about it," she said. "They may abuse drugs and alcohol to cope. They're ashamed, but the real shame is not doing something about it."
She said transgender people have dual identities that they're trying to learn and unlearn.
"It's not an easy journey, but I've been on it for a long time," she said. "The women in my family were fabulous teachers. I never had children, but I feel like I have them now."
Labels:
POC transpeople,
trans elders,
transkids/transteens
Thursday, January 19, 2012
'Anderson' Show on Trans Children
Take notes Don Lemon. This is a show your CNN coworker did on trans children just before the 2011 TDOR. Pay close attention to how Anderson handled the subject.
Friday, December 23, 2011
Trans Teen Interview-Angie
Danielle Levitt is doing interviews of American teenagers. This one is a 2010 interview with 17 year old New York City trans teen Angie.
Wednesday, November 23, 2011
Camp Aranu'tiq Adds A Western Campus!
I've talked about Camp Aranu'tiq in a few TransGriot posts. In case you're wondering what it is, it's a summer camp for trans and gender variant kids aged 8-15 founded by Nick Teich. Since 2010 the New England based campground and tax exempt 501c3 non profit charity has provided a summer camp experience for our kids to rave reviews, growing buzz about the program and increasing popularity.
For the 2011 session even though Camp Aranu'tiq shifted to a tuition based model and I was concerned about that, attendance increased from the inaugural 2010 season. There were 60 campers, 30 staff members and camp counselors who gave the campers a memorable week long experience from August 21-27.
As to why a summer camp exclusively for trans and gender variant kids is needed?
And yes, they can always use people power and volunteers as well.
From the Aranu'tiq blog:
Camp Aranu'tiq will have in addition to the original undisclosed New England based location one opening in California in July. Now gender variant kids living on the West Coast and in the Rocky Mountain states have easier access to and can take advantage of what the week long program has to offer.
Camp Aranu'tiq West will have its inaugural session from July 1-7 while the original New England location will kick off its third annual session in August
Registration began November 1 for returning campers and will start December 1 for new campers.
If you are a parent or relative of a trans or gender variant kid or know of one, if you think Camp Aranu'tiq would be something they would be interested in and benefit from, you can get in contact with Nick Teich for further information about Camp Aranu'tiq and its programs..
Nick's e-mail address is nick@camparanutiq.org if you need the enrollment form and further details about Camp Aranu'tiq.
May Camp Aranu'tiq continue to grow and prosper and have a ginormous 2012 camping season I'm also looking forward to the day when Camp Aranu'tiq sites open in the Midwest, the Deep South and yes, even my home state of Texas.
For the 2011 session even though Camp Aranu'tiq shifted to a tuition based model and I was concerned about that, attendance increased from the inaugural 2010 season. There were 60 campers, 30 staff members and camp counselors who gave the campers a memorable week long experience from August 21-27.
As to why a summer camp exclusively for trans and gender variant kids is needed?
What Campers are Saying About Camp Aranu'tiq:.What are some things you learned at Aranu'tiq?"The most important thing that other campers have taught me is that I'm not alone and there are always people I can turn to.""I learned to be more confident.""Other campers taught me to be more ok with myself.""I learned that I have confidence in myself.""I'm ME and no one can change that.""There are actually people that I can be myself around without feeling self-conscious that I am trans."
If you wish to support the camp, in addition to donations, they have a Cafe Press site in which 15% of the purchase price on any of the Camp Aranu'tiq items goes to the organization.What Parents are Saying About Camp Aranu'tiq:"[My child] had such an amazing experience, words can't describe! I am so thankful to you for this camp! What a difference this has made for him.""Camp has been truly transformative for [my child], for his sense of self, of community, of belonging, of confidence, and also- really fun and funny memories of summer camp that should be part of every child's experience.""Thanks for giving everyone such a wonderful week...not only is [my child] talking about going back next year, but he's thinking ahead to becoming a counselor, if possible, when old enough...""[My child] can't stop talking about camp. He had such a wonderful week; perhaps one of the best of his life. It feels like I picked up a different kid!""[My child] had a wonderful time!! He has been sad because he misses it so much. How soon can I sign him up for next year? He will be there for sure! Thanks again for this wonderful camp!!!!!!!!!!""Thanks again for an awesome week for [my child], he is still talking about it and talking about going next year.""I have to tell you, [my child] has been so wonderful since we picked her up from camp. She seems so much more at peace with herself and she has a great attitude...You and your camp are absolutely wonderful- we truly appreciate all the work and effort that you have put into this to help so many kids."
And yes, they can always use people power and volunteers as well.
From the Aranu'tiq blog:
Our
second season was August 21-27 and nearly 60 campers and 30 staff had
the time of their lives. It was wonderful to see the returning campers
ease into the week as though they had never left and at the same time
welcome our first-timers. From canoeing to arts and crafts to an
all-camp scavenger hunt and an incredible talent show, to say the week
was a "success" would be a big understatement.
One
thing we know about transgender and gender-variant kids is that many
of them worry what their future will hold and if they will be able to
lead a "normal" life.
This is just one story of many that highlights
the strength of the Aranu'tiq experience: A
young female-to-male camper told his cabin counselor that he was
feeling down. She sat with him and told him how lucky he was to have a
place like Aranu'tiq where he could be himself because such a place
didn't exist when she was a kid. He turned and said to her, "you're
transgender?" When she nodded, he looked puzzled and said, "but you are
married and have two kids!" She said "you bet!" Without any hesitation
he promptly told her that he felt better and wanted to return to
playing with his new friends.
Well, there's exciting news about the upcoming 2012 camping season.
Well, there's exciting news about the upcoming 2012 camping season.
Camp Aranu'tiq will have in addition to the original undisclosed New England based location one opening in California in July. Now gender variant kids living on the West Coast and in the Rocky Mountain states have easier access to and can take advantage of what the week long program has to offer.
Camp Aranu'tiq West will have its inaugural session from July 1-7 while the original New England location will kick off its third annual session in August
Registration began November 1 for returning campers and will start December 1 for new campers.
If you are a parent or relative of a trans or gender variant kid or know of one, if you think Camp Aranu'tiq would be something they would be interested in and benefit from, you can get in contact with Nick Teich for further information about Camp Aranu'tiq and its programs..
Nick's e-mail address is nick@camparanutiq.org if you need the enrollment form and further details about Camp Aranu'tiq.
May Camp Aranu'tiq continue to grow and prosper and have a ginormous 2012 camping season I'm also looking forward to the day when Camp Aranu'tiq sites open in the Midwest, the Deep South and yes, even my home state of Texas.
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