Thursday, May 31, 2007

Cris Beam on transgender kids in LA

"Over the last ten years in Los Angeles, there's been a noticeable increase in the number of transsexual teenagers, kids who were born as boys but live as girls, and vice versa. Cris Beam has spent the last two years getting to know these kids, and tells the story of two of them, Foxxjazell and Ariel."

Click on the title above and then "Full Episode."

This is an audio program, from the "This American Life" public radio international series, based on the book "Transparent: Love, Family, And Living The T With Transgender Teenagers" (2007) by Cris Beam.

A highly recommended book.

A Pride Trans-formation

D.C.'s trans community organizes its first dedicated Capital Pride event


With new protections for transgender people going into effect in October 2006, Washington has the distinction of leading the country in protecting the transgender community from discrimination, according to the D.C. Trans Coalition.

Among the protections offered by the city, transgender people cannot be prevented from using gender-specific facilities, such as restrooms; employers must treat transgender medical needs as they would any other legitimate medical need; and neither businesses nor city agencies can require a person to disclose information about gender transition.

But on June 3, D.C.'s trans community will achieve another milestone, this time outside of the legal realm. On that Sunday, the community will celebrate the first Trans Pride.

''It's very, very, very important,'' says SaVanna Wanzer, chair of Capital Pride's transgender committee, a board member at the Whitman-Walker Clinic, and a self-identified trans woman. ''It's been a terrible fight just getting this event together, with budget issues. The transgender community needs its own event, rather than just using us as entertainment. That's all we've been allowed to do.''

The Sunday event, the first specifically transgender pride offering in Capital Pride's 32-year history, will run from 1 p.m. to 1 a.m. at Westminster Presbyterian Church at 400 I St. SW. Admission is free till 6 p.m., with the first five hours dedicated to forums with topics such as social justice and religion, and a health fair. . . .

Spain local election sees first transsexual woman as councillor

By m.p
May 30, 2007 - 10:01 PM


Manuela Trasobares holds the political balance of power in her Castellón village

El Mundo reported on Wednesday that Sunday’s local election has left the government of the village of Geldo, in Castellón, in the hands of the first transsexual woman in Spain to be voted in as a councillor.

The paper quotes a report from the ‘Diario Digital Transexual’ that the Partido Popular and PSOE both achieved three seats in the poll.

The remaining seat went to ARDE – Acción Republicana Democrática Española - the party led by Manuela Trasobares. A pact between the two main parties is seen as highly unlikely.

El Mundo says the 45 year old changed her sex at the age of 15 and was married last year in a ceremony attended by almost all the 900 residents of the village.

She says it was her own neighbours who asked her to enter the world of politics, in a village which was governed in the last legislation by an unexpected alliance between the conservative Partido Popular and the left-wing Izquierda Unida coalition, with the Socialists in opposition.

IU lost their one seat to ARDE in this year’s election.

San Francisco Chronicle: Shaking up transgender assumptions

Sunday, January 7, 2007

Transparent

Love, Family and Living the T with Transgender Teenagers

By Cris Beam

HARCOURT; 323 Pages; $25


Real women can have penises. And "the brain and the heart are the only organs with a gender, and ... all genital modification or lack thereof is simply a personal aesthetic choice." These are some of the titillating ideas explored in "Transparent," Cris Beam's first book.

But Beam's engaging narrative does more than just provoke or amuse. It helps readers adjust their assumptions, as Beam admits hers were adjusted, about a world many may be unfamiliar with.

Beam teaches creative writing at the New School and Columbia University and has written for Teen People, Parenting, Out, Mademoiselle and the radio program "This American Life." But in 1998, she was a freelance magazine writer with spare time. She began volunteering at a high school in Los Angeles for gay and transgender teens.

After 2 1/2 years Beam burned out and quit. But she loved her students, even with "their attitudes, and the occasional danger and regular tragedies," and she maintained contact with several of the kids.

"Transparent" is the result of those meetings, which occurred from 1998 through the summer of 2005. Beam found her way into this nuanced world through the lives of four transgender girls, Christina, Domineque, Foxxjazell and Ariel, genetic males living as females. She intersperses their stories with edifying facts, figures and definitions, clearing away the distortions and misconceptions embedded in today's gender-rigid society. . . .

Transgender American Veterans Association

The Transgender American Veterans Association (TAVA) was formed to address the growing concerns of fair and equal treatment of transgender veterans and active duty service members. As the population of gender-different people increases, then so does the population of veterans and active duty service members who identify as such. TAVA serves as an educational organization that will help the Veterans Administration and the Department of Defense to better understand the individuals they encounter who identify as being gender-different. As veterans, we have also served proudly, and will continue to do so. TAVA is here to help where we can.

It's a trans world

The author of a new book about transgender teenagers in Los Angeles talks straight about hormone smuggling, life on the street, and the rise of America's first trans-rapper.

Jan. 5, 2007 | "Transgender": Does even the word confuse you? If you were asked to define it, could you?

If not, you're hardly alone. For years, the transgender community has existed in the shadow of the gay, lesbian and bisexual rights movement -- though most trans-people agree that redefining their gender has little to do with their sexual orientation. The word is applied to everyone from drag queens and sex reassignment surgery patients to femme gay men and butch straight girls. And these days, when discussions of transgender do happen, it's usually in the context of the sex industry or debates about unisex bathrooms and gender-blind hallways in college dormitories. With such boundless, cloudy meanings, is it any surprise that even the most sex-savvy, gay-friendly, politically correct among us still have a hard time explaining the term?

Cris Beam, the author of "Transparent: Love, Family, and Living the T with Transgender Teenagers," hopes her new book will help take on some of the mysteries and misconceptions that still haunt the transgender community. Beam, now 34, moved to Los Angeles in 1997, while her girlfriend attended graduate school. Lonely in her new city, she became intrigued by Eagles, a local high school specifically for gay and transgender kids; with the time left over in her freelance writing schedule, she began to work there as a volunteer. During the two and a half years Beam taught at Eagles, she discovered a complex but marginalized tribe of transgender teens who had nowhere to go but the streets. "Transparent" chronicles those stories, and describes how, within a few years, Beam found herself deeply involved in the kids' lives, entangled in their dreams, disappointments and their search for the truth about themselves and their gender. . . .

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

The TRANSSEXUAL PHENOMENON by Harry Benjamin, M.D.

Click on the title above to access an online copy of Harry Benjamin's history making book.

Looking Back: Friday, Dec. 02, 1966 - A Body to Match the Mind

When ex-G.I. George Jorgensen went to Denmark and returned, after a series of operations, as "Christine," the U.S. public and medical profession alike were appalled at what seemed to be "mutilative surgery." Attitudes have changed so much since 1952 that last year a Baltimore court ordered Johns Hopkins surgeons to perform an identical operation on a 17-year-old boy. And last week the university announced that it has opened a center for the diagnosis and treatment of transsexuals. Hopkins surgeons have already operated on five men and five women.

Emotional Crossover. The longtime champion of these unhappy people is Berlin-born Dr. Harry Benjamin, 81, who swings his practice between Manhattan and San Francisco. It was he who coined the word transsexual, and his new book, The Transsexual Phenomenon (Julian Press; $8.50), is already the standard reference on the problem. It is of prime importance, says Dr. Benjamin, to define what a transsexual is not. He is not a hermaphrodite, to whom a cruel quirk of nature has given some of the organs of both sexes. He is not a pseudohermaphrodite, with the organs of his own sex so unusually formed that they are mistaken for those of the other. He is not a homosexual in the accepted sense. He usually has a normal male physique, but feels emotionally like a woman. The converse criteria apply to the masculine-oriented woman. Both types of transsexuals are likely to be transvestites, preferring the clothing of the "opposite" sex.

There is no explanation in heredity or hormones. A possible cause in some cases is that a boy was born when his mother wanted a girl, and she treated him as a girl. By adulthood, says Dr. Benjamin, the crossover of emotion and thought may be so deeply ingrained that "true transsexuals feel that they belong to the other sex, they want to be and function as members of the opposite sex, not only to appear as such." Psychiatric treatment, including long-continued analysis, has proved virtually worthless to patients who do not want to be changed emotionally, leading Dr. Benjamin to conclude: "Since the mind of the transsexual cannot be adjusted to the body, it is logical and justifiable to attempt the opposite, to adjust the body to the mind."

Radical Procedures. Adjusting the body means, for the male transsexual, castration and the creation of an artificial vagina. For the female, it means enclosing the urethra in a pseudo penis (which is not capable of intromission) and reducing the breasts. These procedures are so radical that most U.S. surgeons have been reluctant to try them. Among Dr. Benjamin's 152 transsexual patients, only 51 have had surgery, and nearly all have had that surgery outside the U.S.

Last week's announcement from Johns Hopkins marked the first time that a prestigious medical center has risked its reputation to give organized help to transsexuals, who are estimated to number 2,000 or more in the U.S. They are probably about evenly divided between men and women, according to Hopkins Psychiatrist Norman J. Knorr, but more men than women ask for, and get, sex-changing surgery.

Dr. Benjamin and the Hopkins group, of which Surgeon John E. Hoopes is chairman, emphasize that they are not interested in simply transforming a male so that he can more nearly simulate a female sex partner. They are concerned with the entire health and personality of the crossover deviate, whom they maintain on hormone treatments for the rest of his, or her, life. Dr. Benjamin evaluates the results in his 51 patients as: good, 17; satisfactory, 27; doubtful, 5; unsatisfactory, 1; and unknown, 1. As evidence of good results, he cites twelve formerly male patients who have married successfully as women; some have achieved motherhood by adoption.

Dr. Benjamin admits that many patients remain disturbed after the operation, but he insists that they are better off than before. He contends that if a miserable male transsexual can be happier as a woman, society benefits as well as the individual. Hopkins Surgeon Milton T. Edgerton Jr. says: "We're not sure yet that we are on solid footing. We're still looking for the best ways to bring these patients full relief."

Pakistani couple gets prison for lying to judge about sex-change operation

By Asif Shahzad THE ASSOCIATED PRESS




LAHORE, Pakistan—
A couple who sought legal protection from harassment were separated and sentenced to three years in prison yesterday for lying to a Pakistani judge that surgery had turned one partner into a man.

The case of Shumail Raj, who was born female but had breast- and uterus-removal operations 16 years ago, and Shahzina Tariq has raised issues of homosexuality and transsexualism largely taboo in this conservative Muslim society.

The couple, who married last year, had approached the Lahore High Court for protection against harassment by Tariq’s relatives. They said they wed to protect Tariq from being sold into marriage to pay off her uncle’s gambling debts.

Court-appointed doctors who examined Raj ruled the earlier operations were not complete and that Raj was still a woman. The couple admitted they had lied about 31-year-old Raj’s gender because they were in love and wanted to live together. Raj, who has a close-cropped beard, has expressed a desire to go abroad for surgery to become male. . . .

Church to hold transgender forum

Male-to-female minister will preach at service

CHAPEL HILL -- John Thompson has never met a transgender person, that he knows of.

"I've met someone I think might be, but that person has not said they are," Thompson said Tuesday.

"But I'm going to," he added.

That's because Thompson, an elder at The Church of Reconciliation, is helping to bring a transgender minister to town next month for a free weekend workshop on transgender issues.

The Rev. Erin Swenson, a Presbyterian minister, is the first known mainstream Protestant minister to transition from male to female while remaining in ordained office, according to conference organizers. . . .

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Israel's Dana International singing Diva in winning Eurovision song contest.

Nick offers some observations from about 12 years on testosterone.

Christine Daniels blog

Christine Christine Daniels is a veteran sportswriter who has worked at the Los Angeles Times for 23 years -- as Mike Penner. Christine shocked many readers on April 27, 2007, when she announced her decision to change gender. She will be blogging about her transition over the days to come.

Click on the post title above to access her LA Times blog.

Transgender status unlikely to derail Stanton

The Sarasota manager job will go to the most qualified candidate, leaders say. Their top pick and a runnerup will be announced Wednesday.

By LORRI HELFAND
Published May 29, 2007


SARASOTA - Here are three factors that probably will help determine whether Susan Stanton becomes Sarasota's next city manager:

Communication skills, budget know-how and experience as a city manager in Florida.

And here's one that people who know Sarasota well expect to play a lesser role - if any - in the decision:

Stanton's transgender status.

"If Susan is not selected, it is because there's another candidate that is more qualified, " said former Sarasota City Commissioner Mary Anne Servian, who met Stanton two years ago and encouraged her to apply for the job.

It would not be, she said, "because they lack the courage to select Susan if she's the best." . . .

India: Transgenders in Tamil Nadu get more than government help

While the state has banned discrimination against transsexuals, two agencies are offering free courses

Abhinav Ramnarayan

Chennai: Seven years ago, 27-year-old Gopal Gopinath walked out of the jewellery store where he worked, unable to bear the lampooning and the mistrust directed at him by his employer.
“I had pierced my ears, and I had grown my hair long, like a woman—and the way I walked and spoke was feminine,” Gopal explained.
No employer he ever worked for quite let Gopal be—whether it was in the jewellery store where he first took up a job, or in a shoe factory, where he endured misery for seven years.
Finally, tired of the posturing, Gopal renamed himself—or rather, herself—Gomathi, and joined the Thamilnadu Aravanigal Association (Thaa), a body run by transgenders that aims to uplift their community in the state.
The association spells its name thus because the acronym Thaa means ‘give’ in Tamil.
“My dream is to have a nine-to-five job in any field, in any capacity,” she says.
What she also means is a job with dignity.
Two agencies, the Stenographers’ Guild and the government-run Women’s Development Corporation, have stepped in to offer free vocational courses in basic computing and hand embroidery for the transgender community—hoping to do just that.
Gomathi took up the course in basic computing, which includes training in spoken English and other interpersonal skills, with the aim to make it possible for transgenders to take up secretarial positions, says Stenographers’ Guild president S.V. Ramasamy.
Ramasamy himself is a product of the guild, after which he joined Indian Bank where he eventually became a senior manager. After retiring two years ago, he has devoted himself to the association that first gave him a leg-up.
The vocational course for transgenders is his brainchild, and the first batch of 10 students, including Gomathi, has just completed the course. The second batch is about to begin. . . .

United Methodist pastor speaks of transgender experience

May. 25, 2007

A UMNS Report By Linda Bloom*

A transgender United Methodist pastor has shared his story with other members of the denomination's Baltimore-Washington Conference in the hopes of promoting a broader discussion about gender identity.

The Rev. Drew Phoenix - formerly the Rev. Ann Gordon - spoke at both a closed clergy session and a general plenary session on May 24 during the annual conference meeting at the Wardman Park Hotel in Washington. He is pastor of St. John's United Methodist Church in Baltimore.

"I was very grateful for the opportunity to be able to share my story and who I am," Phoenix told United Methodist News Service in a phone interview following those sessions. "I was very pleased at the number of people who were very honest in their reflections and questions."

He said he has been undergoing medical procedures for the transition from female to male during the past year, with "a great team of medical people who helped me think it out."

In his statement to the plenary session, the 48-year-old pastor explained that "last fall, after a lifelong spiritual journey, and years of prayer and discernment, I decided to change my name from Ann Gordon to Drew Phoenix in order to reflect my true gender identity and to honor my spiritual transformation and relationship with God."

By sharing the story of his spiritual journey and relationship with God, Phoenix said he hoped the conference participants "will commit ourselves to becoming educated about the complexity of gender and gender identity and open ourselves to those in our congregations who identify as transgender."

Phoenix, who was ordained in 1989 and previously served in the Bethesda area, said he joined the ministry because of "a calling to be in service to folk who are oppressed, who are poor, who are excluded, who are marginalized."

Although he was named Ann and declared a girl, Phoenix said he always felt he was male and had trouble understanding "the disconnect I was experiencing between my physical, external self and my internal, spiritual self."

"Fortunately, today, God's gift of medical science is enabling me to bring my physical body into alignment with my true gender," he told the plenary session. . . .

Sunday, May 27, 2007

Biomotion: What are some differences in walk for men vs women?

Move the sliders left and right, back and forth:

A) male vs female

B) heavy vs light

C) nervous vs relaxed

D) happy vs sad

From Tim to Kim: Germany's youngest transsexual

Von Tim zu Kim


© stern TV
Das ist Kim. Sie ist heute 14 Jahre alt.


1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10

20th Century Transgender History And Experience

Kay Brown


Today’s highly visible transgender movement is the continuation of a century of experience and activism. From the beginning it has been an international effort to gain self-determination and medical and legal recognition, with heroes, villains, triumphs and defeats in every decade. The experiences of transsexuals, transgenderists, cross-dressers and intersexuals have interwoven as definitions of sex, gender, perversion and disorder evolved from Victorian to Post-Modern. This class will explore the people and the issues they faced as the transgender community formed and helped create today’s celebration of diversity. The medical, scientific, cultural and legal changes brought about by determined transgender people will be covered. We will also collectively analyze strategies and tactics that might be used in the future. This class is for transgender people and others who wish to understand where we have been and where we might be going.

TransHistory FAQ

Who was the first transsexual to have surgery?

It is hard to say who was the “first”. It depends very much on definition. In the ancient world castration and penectomy were common among transsexuals in Europe, the Middle East, South & South-East Asia, and China. The practice was suppressed in the Christian world (not counting castration of male singers as boys to maintain voice quality) but throughout Asia it continued right to the present, notably in South Asia; India and surrounding countries. The modern form of Male to Female surgery in which a vagina is also formed is believed to date from 1930 in Germany. Mastectomy and Radical Hysterectomy for Female to Male is known to have occurred as early as 1917 in the United States... and an unconfirmed reference suggests 1912 in Europe. Phalloplasty is more recent but still dates to the middle of the 20th Century. . . .

Violence For Transgender Women Up In NorCal

(BCN) SAN FRANCISCO While discrimination and hate crimes against gays, lesbians and transgender individuals plummeted in 2006, severe violence has spiked around Northern California, according to a report released Tuesday morning.

Transgender women of color are particularly at risk, according to Community United Against Violence, the San Francisco-based organization that released the Report of Anti-Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer Violence.

The overall murder rate for gays, lesbians and transgender people in Northern California doubled from 2005 to 2006, from two to four cases. Half of those victims were transgender women of color, according to the report. . . .

Friday, May 25, 2007

Vermont: Transgender bill gets governor's signature



By Lauren Ober
Free Press Staff Writer

May 25, 2007
After years of lobbying, the state's transgender population has won the battle for protection against discrimination

Tuesday, Gov. Jim Douglas signed a bill into law that prohibits discrimination based on a person's gender identity or gender-related characteristics.

At this time last year, the governor vetoed a similar bill that had widespread support in both legislative chambers, a fact that did not go unnoticed by the crowd gathered outside of R.U.1.2? Queer Community Center on Thursday to celebrate.

The bill, which passed through the Legislature on May 3, protects transgender Vermonters from discrimination in banking, employment, education, health care, housing and public accommodations, and provides them some legal recourse if they are discriminated against.

R.U.1.2? Executive Director Kara DeLeonardis said the law goes a long way toward providing equal rights for transgendered people.

"This is going to make such a big difference in people's lives," DeLeonardis said. "It's just a great feeling to finally have these important legal protections for transgender people that everyone else takes for granted."

Kelly Brigham considered herself transgender based on her gender expression. While Brigham says she has no plans to transition to a man, she doesn't dress traditionally like a woman and because of that she's been discriminated against. She said the law will help protect her gender expression.

"It also makes gender more fluid," Brigham said.

Up to this point, DeLeonardis said, the transgender community has been left behind regarding legal protections in Vermont. Although the gay community was afforded civil unions and the rights and protections associated with them, the transgender community had little in the way of protection from discrimination.

Not only does the law protect transgendered or gender-variant people from discrimination, it also helps educate the general population, said Jes Kraus, a transgender activist with Vermont TransAction. . . .

New initiatives seek jobs for trans people

Sparked by crackdown on trans prostitutes, activists seek ways to find legal employment

By DYANA BAGBY
May. 25, 2007

Transgender prostitutes working the streets of Midtown have drawn the ire of numerous residents tired of seeing them in their neighborhoods.

Two proposed initiatives — one by queer and trans activists and another by the Atlanta Police Department — hope to quell that resentment by helping the sex workers find legitimate jobs.

The Queer Progressive Agenda and transgender activists and allies are starting a Transgender People of Color Workers Project. The project seeks to join forces with gay business organizations to find employers willing to hire transgender employees as well as offer job training, tips on writing a resume and help with interview strategies. The project is also compiling a database of available jobs.

And the Atlanta Police Department is slated to hold a job fair later this year specifically for transgender people and bring in employers who won’t discriminate against a person based on gender identity.

Both initiatives were sparked by a crackdown by the APD approximately a year ago. Working with the Midtown Neighborhood Association, officers worked to reduce sex workers in the area, including many trans women.

APD Officer Darlene Harris, the gay liaison for the department, said she became frustrated seeing members of the community — including gay people — stigmatize transgender sex workers, but she also understood residents wanting to keep their neighborhoods safe.

The sex workers “weren’t going anywhere because of discrimination they faced trying to find jobs, so we thought it would be great to get employers together and help them so they don’t feel the need to be on the street,” Harris said.

As far as any recent police stings on transgender sex workers, Harris said this week she has not heard of any reports for some time.

“It’s been pretty quiet on that front,” she said. . . .

Thursday, May 24, 2007

Transgender minister reappointed in Maryland

WASHINGTON — A transgender United Methodist minister will be reappointed to lead his congregation in Baltimore, church officials announced Thursday at a regional convocation.

The Rev. Drew Phoenix told the church's Baltimore-Washington conference that he had gone through "spiritual transformation" in the past year, since changing his name from Ann Gordon and receiving medical treatment to become a man.

The denomination bans sexually active gay clergy but does not have any rules about transgender pastors.

"It is my intention and hope that by sharing my story that we commit ourselves as Christians and as United Methodists to become educated about the complexity of gender," Phoenix said. "Each of us is a beloved child of God — no exceptions."

Phoenix, 48, has led St. John's United Methodist Church for nearly five years. His term expires in July, and one of the purposes of the regional meeting is to reassign ministers for periodic terms with churches.

Bishop John Schol said that the church's 50-member congregation was fully supportive, and that no objections were raised during a closed-door meeting of the clergy. St. John's, a church that describes itself as diverse and inclusive, has more than tripled its membership since Phoenix arrived. . . .

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

All My Children: Transgender Support Group



. . . as depicted in the television program "All My Children," and, moreover, includes actual Ts, FTM and MTF.

Susan Stanton in Washington D.C.

Transgender teen free to be herself

12:00 AM CDT on Sunday, May 20, 2007
By DEBRA DENNIS / The Dallas Morning News
debdennis@dallasnews.com

FORT WORTH – When Rochelle Evans chooses what she's going to wear to Eastern Hills High School each day, her choices aren't solely fashion statements. To Rochelle, her flats, makeup and women's jeans represent a hard-fought right to express herself.

BEN SKLAR/DMN
BEN SKLAR/DMN
Allowed to dress like a girl at school, Rochelle Evans, a 15-year-old transgender sophomore, and her mom, Lenora Felipe, had something to smile about as they cooked dinner.

And a subtle declaration about transgender teens everywhere.

The 15-year-old transgender sophomore, who started high school as Rodney Evans, recently fought a public battle against school administrators over wearing women's clothes and her reaction when confronted by school officials. As part of the deal, Rochelle is addressed as a female and gets to use the nurse's bathroom to avoid any awkward scenes in the boys' or girls' restroom.

BEN SKLAR/DMN
BEN SKLAR/DMN
Rochelle touches up her makeup before a family dinner at her Fort Worth home. 'With the help of makeup, you can create your own kind of life,' she says.

"I just felt more comfortable being a girl," she said. "I'm not asking for any special treatment."

For a while, she attended classes wearing both male and female attire but said that felt like a compromise.

She got herself suspended when asked not to wear her wig, fake breasts and short skirt to school.

Her attorneys met with school officials this month and hammered out an agreement that got her back in school. And Rochelle must attend summer classes to make up for missed classes.

"There was never a day when I was Rochelle for the whole day," Rochelle said. "I love makeup. I started wearing makeup because it helped to complete me more. It made me feel more like a girl. With the help of makeup, you can create your own kind of life." . . .

Stanton stars at a fundraiser

Equality Florida benefits from the former Largo official's presence.

By LORRI HELFAND
Published May 23, 2007


ST. PETERSBURG -- They backed her when she was a man, but they loved her as a woman.

Making her first public appearance in the bay area as a woman, Susan Ashley Stanton was greeted with applause and whoops of praise Tuesday night by Pinellas County's leading gay and transgender group, which came to her defense earlier this year when she was fighting to keep her job as Largo city manager.

At the Second Annual Pinellas Equality Florida fundraiser, Stanton mingled with about 300 guests for nearly an hour before addressing the crowd from the porch of the historic Rutland Estate on Little Bayou.

"When I first began my journey in Florida, I thought it was a lone journey," but it's not been, Stanton said as she thanked the group for its support with unprepared remarks. . . .

photo
[Times photo: Edmund D. Fountain]
Susan Stanton (center) talks with St. Petersburg city councilman Herb Polson on Tuesday evening at the Rutland Estate in St. Petersburg.


Mistaken identity

On Monday, psychiatrist Russell Reid was censured for improperly authorising five sex changes. Claudia, whom Reid approved for gender reassignment 20 years ago, tells Julie Bindel how she was rushed into the operation - and quickly came to regret it.

Wednesday May 23, 2007
The Guardian


There was a moment when Claudia, as a young gay man living with the person she describes as the love of her life, was "blissfully happy." . . .

First sex-swap mayor to be sworn in - and the mayoress used to be a man too!

A man who had a sex swap is set to become the UK's first transgender mayor - and his mayoress has had a sex change too.

Liberal Democrat Jenny Bailey, 45, who underwent a sex change operation when she was in her 30s, is likely to be sworn in as the civic leader of Cambridge City Council at a ceremony tomorrow.

Her partner, Jennifer Liddle, 49, who also underwent a sex swap and is a former councillor, will be mayoress.

They are believed to be the world's first transgender Mayor and Mayoress.

Ms Bailey, who was once married and fathered two children, now aged 20 and 18, has served on Cambridge City Council with her partner.

The world's first sex change mayor and mayoress: Jenny Bailey (right) with partner Jennifer Liddle . . .

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Transgeneration - Dad's reactions to his transsexual child

Here's a touching video where Lucas, a young FTM, comes out to his dad. (I think they even look alike!)
In addition, Raci (MTF) briefly talks about coming out to her acting partner.

Monday, May 21, 2007

Rage Against the Machine

Transsexual Men Discover Differences Are More Than Skin Deep
2007-01-03

_______

By Jacob Anderson-Minshall

Dhillon Khosla wants to have things both ways. His personal publicist ( Levine Communications ) bills his new book, Both Sides Now, as “a rare glimpse in to what it is like to live as both a woman and ( currently ) as a man—and offers extraordinary insight and perspective into the sexes.” Yet in the concluding chapters of the memoir he writes, “If there ever was a time when I thought I had some special insight into the minds of women, that time was now past.”

Khosla declined to be interviewed for this article. In a recent appearance on The View—explaining his discomfort at the term transgender—Khosla says that after 15 surgeries, he feels “to use any other label but man feels like a betrayal to those efforts.” Elsewhere, he’s noted that he feels more accepted in blue-collar bars than the LGBT community. Neither sentiment however, precludes an interest in queer money, and Levine Communications is actively courting the LGBT press and marketing Both Sides Now directly to LGBT readers.

The East Indian-German first-generation American ( who recently left his post as a staff attorney to California and federal judges to join the lecture circuit ) insists that “warmth and openness” is his natural state, but nearly every chapter in Both Sides Now references his “murderous, overwhelming rage,” which he describes as “simply a reaction to my circumstances.”

That fury is directed at doctors; his mother; fellow spiritual students ( one of whom says “I hate the kind of masculinity you have come to embrace” ) ; people on the street who mistakenly call him ma’am in the early stages of his transition; and lesbians. Angry that a woman he’s interested in won’t date him because he’s now a man, Khosla—who once identified as a lesbian—fumes in Both Sides Now: “Fuck lesbians. Fuck all of you. When I was in a different body, you all wanted me—drooled over me. And now it’s different? Well, you’re all hypocrites because I’m the same person.”. . .

Sunday, May 20, 2007

Heavy handed but tender-hearted, transgender hip-hopper Katastrophe is a rebel with a cause

Rona Marech, Chronicle Staff Writer

Friday, February 25, 2005
Transgender hip-hopper Katastrophe, at home in San Franci... Katastrophe cuts tracks in his bedroom recording studio. ...

Rocco Kayiatos, the hip-hop artist known as Katastrophe, compulsively discloses his past. He talks about it with strangers on the street, with waitresses, and always, always with his audiences.

"I'm the token joke in this world," he sings in "Something Different." "If you didn't understand, try to, woman or a man, not true. There's something different."

For fans who don't see what the lyrics are getting at, he comes out and says it: The swaggering, rhyme-throwing, emoting, girl-crazy, 25-year-old hip- hopper with the scramble of brown hair and the dark eyes that have sent more than a few Catholic schoolgirls into happy paroxysms is transgender. He used to be a girl. . . .

Kate Bornstein interviewed on her new book, "Hello Cruel World."

...a Google video.

Pakistani police arrest couple for lying about sex of husband, who underwent sex change

The Associated Press


LAHORE, Pakistan: Police arrested a wife and her husband — who was born a woman and underwent sex reassignment surgery 16 years ago — and accused them Sunday of lying about the husband's gender to a court in eastern Pakistan.

The case pits the bride's father, who wants to annul his daughter's wedding on the grounds that it is against Islam for two women to marry, against the couple, who said they married to protect the bride from being sold into marriage to pay off her uncle's gambling debts.

The husband, Shumail Raj, 31, first brought the case to court, appealing for protection from harassment by their relatives. But earlier this month the Lahore High Court ordered the arrest of Raj and his wife, Shahzina Tariq, 26, for lying to the court.

Raj told the court he is male, but a court-appointed panel ruled that Raj is a woman, whose breasts and uterus were removed in sex-change surgery.

Raj told the court-appointed doctors that he underwent gender reassignment surgery when he was 15 after he noticed changes in his voice and began to grow facial hair. The court-appointed panel found he had no penis, and the entrance to his vagina was surgically closed. . . .

Saturday, May 19, 2007

Activist's bumpy road takes her to city government

Theresa Sparks took on the discrimination she felt as a transgendered woman by becoming a regular at San Francisco's City Hall. Now she leads the police commission.

By Cecilia M. Vega, San Francisco Chronicle

Last update: May 19, 2007 – 4:37 PM
If ever there was a real-life, rags-to-riches fairy tale, Theresa Sparks' story is it.

Except Cinderella used to be a man and went from riches (traveling in a corporate jet) to rags (driving a taxi and sleeping on friends' couches) to prominence again by becoming a pioneering transgender activist and the chief executive officer of a multimillion-dollar sex-toy company.

It's not the way Sparks, 58, ever thought her life would turn out.

But Sparks is starting what could be one of the most important chapters in her life -- this month she was voted president of the San Francisco Police Commission. Her election shook up City Hall -- she beat out Mayor Gavin Newsom's pick for the job and prompted a prominent member of the board to resign abruptly.

After her election as president of one of the city's most powerful commissions, which oversees department operating rules and sets crucial policies, Newsom's administration is promising to work well with her, the transgender community is hailing her ascent as groundbreaking, and Sparks is enjoying the ride.

It's a far cry from the life she led a decade ago when, shortly after she transitioned from being a man to a woman, Sparks suffered countless rejections of job applications and was a near-homeless cabdriver.

"I went on 30 interviews, sent out 150 résumés," she said. "I couldn't find a job."

Once an 'alpha dad'

They were barriers Sparks never had to encounter as a man.

She spent decades running several waste management and recycling firms in Kansas, California and overseas. She patented two recycling techniques she developed and shuttled back and forth between jobs on a corporate jet.

A Vietnam veteran who was divorced twice and has three grown children, Sparks called herself "an alpha dad."

Born and raised in Kansas City, Sparks enjoyed dressing up in women's clothes from a very early age, but fought those urges as a young man and underwent intense therapy, including electric shock treatment, hoping to suppress his desire to live as a woman.

Eventually, Sparks realized it was the only way for him to be happy. By 1997 Sparks was living full time as a woman, and three years later she traveled to Thailand for sexual reassignment surgery.

"It's an unusual condition, but it's not unnatural," she said. "You discover that the only way to live with it is to transition physically so your physical appearance matches how you feel about yourself."

Tested by life

She moved to San Francisco to blend in easier and formed a support network and a close circle of friends in the transgender community.

"Really, we get tested by life experiences constantly throughout our transition," said Cecilia Chung, deputy director of the Transgender Law Center in San Francisco and one of Sparks' best friends. "We're discriminated against, judged by everyone, and we have to overcome just being ourselves."

But the welcome Sparks found in San Francisco was the opposite of the reception she received from some of her own children.

While she remains very close to her daughter, who lives in Kansas City, her two sons don't speak to her. One son has done three tours of duty in Iraq and while overseas e-mailed Sparks occasionally, but the communication is limited.

"It's not an unusual story for transgendered people," she said. "They feel betrayed, probably. They feel embarrassed. They don't understand, even though I've sent them books."

Taking the heat

In her search for a job, Sparks took temporary work at the sex-toy retailer Good Vibrations, packing vibrators in the shipping department over the Christmas holiday in 2001.

A few weeks later, she applied for a job as the company's chief financial officer and got it. Two years ago, she became the chief executive officer.

But it was the rampant discrimination she experienced when she became a woman that pushed Sparks into her activism. She became a regular face at City Hall meetings and the Police Department.

Former Mayor Willie Brown appointed Sparks to the San Francisco Human Rights Commission in 2001. The Board of Supervisors appointed her to the Police Commission in 2004.

"There are a lot of things we have to change," she said of society's views on transgender people. "Somebody has to do it. I'm old. There's not a lot people can do to me, so it's kind of like I figure I'll stand up and take the heat."

S Korean transsexual singer Harisu married


South Korean transsexual entertainer Harisu (L) kisses rapper Micky Chung during their marriage ceremony at a wedding hall in Seoul May 19, 2007.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo)

Friday, May 18, 2007

Susan Stanton makes D.C. debut

©Washington Blade  -  Susan Stanton made her Washington debut this week after garnering national media attention two months ago when Largo, Fla., officials fired her for coming out as transgender. (Blade photo by Henry Linser)
Susan Stanton made her Washington debut this week after garnering national media attention two months ago when Largo, Fla., officials fired her for coming out as transgender. (Blade photo by Henry Linser)

Transgender / Transsexual Men on the Maury Show / Lando FTM

Here's a video with Lando Thomas et al educating the masses on Maury's talk show.

Boy, 12, Given Questionable Sex-Change Therapy after “Diagnosed” as Transsexual

Leading US psychiatric researcher strongly criticizes such procedures
By Gudrun Schultz

VIENNA, Austria, January 29, 2007 (LifeSiteNews.com) - A boy of 12 began receiving radical hormone treatment to stop the natural development of male puberty and prepare his body for a sex-change operation, after doctors and psychiatrists diagnosed him as transsexual.

The boy, now 14--called Kim instead of his original name of Tim--convinced his parents and medical professionals that he was “in the wrong body” and needed to receive treatment to prevent him from developing into an adult male, the UK Telegraph reported earlier today. His parents said they initially assumed their son’s desire to be a girl was a temporary phase, but after psychiatrists supported the child’s request for therapy, they accepted the decision to pursue physical treatment for a desire they said had been expressed by their son since he was a toddler. . . .

Boston Children’s Hospital Opens “Transgender” Children’s Clinic

Will reportedly offer the treatments to children as young as seven years old
By Gudrun Schultz

BOSTON, Massachusetts, May 19, 2007 (LifeSiteNews.com) - A new clinic at Children’s Hospital Boston is offering hormone treatment to young children identified as “transgender” to facilitate eventual surgery for a gender switch, according to a report by MassResistance May 17.

Led by endocrinologist Dr. Norman Spack, the Gender Management Service Clinic is the first U.S. clinic to initiate medical intervention for healthy children on the basis of a “transgender” identification. A 12-year-old German boy who began receiving puberty-blocking hormone treatments last winter in preparation for sex-change “transition” surgery was believed to be the youngest child to receive the treatment at the time.

The Boston clinic will reportedly offer the treatments to children as young as seven years old, according to researcher Ari Taube for MassResistance.

Hormone treatment of pre-pubescent children is intended to prevent normal development of gender characterization in order to ease eventual surgical procedures to complete a change of gender, which can take place once the child is about 16.

On a MassResistance radio report, Taube emphasized that transgender procedures can only achieve the outward appearance of the opposite gender. . . .

Thursday, May 17, 2007

Helen and Betty Interview part 2

Helen and Betty Interview part 1

Author Helen Boyd and Betty Crow discuss their lives together. Betty is Helen's transgender husband.

I recommend Helen Boyd's books.

Transsexual Wins Battle Over Surgery Payment


by 365Gay.com Newscenter Staff

Posted: May 17, 2007 - 7:00 pm ET

(Allentown, Pennsylvania) A 15-month battle with the administrator of a company insurance plan over the cost of sex reassignment surgery has ended in victory for an Ohio transsexual woman.

Electronics engineer Jan Stacy was told by company that its self insured plan covered the surgery, and in 2006 she entered hospital.

But when she later submitted her bills to the plan's administrator, Highmark Blue Shield, it refused to pay.

Stacy went back to the company human resources officer and again was told the company plan included sex reassignment. Nevertheless, Highmark stood firm, refusing to pay.

She then took her case to Equality Advocates, a Pennsylvania organization that provides legal services to the LGBT community.

Even after the initial intervention of Equality Advocates, Highmark continued to insist that it owed no reimbursement to Stacy and extended the policy exclusions to a routine office visit.

The organization and Highmark agreed to an arbitration process to avoid going to court. But even after Highmark finally conceded that Stacy’s surgery was covered by her employer’s current plan, they continued to refuse to pay most of the claim, on the grounds the surgery was performed "out of network", and that the surgeon did not charge the "reasonable and necessary" amount for the procedure.

Equality Advocates persisted and Stacy’s employer intervened forcing Highmark to reverse its position.

Stacy was ultimately awarded $14,097, the bulk of the surgery costs.

"It is appalling how badly Highmark Blue Shield mishandled Ms. Stacy’s claim," said Katie Eyer, Employment Rights Project Attorney at Equality Advocates.

"Their repeated refusal to pay this claim was clearly the result of bias against the transgender community, and demonstrated a willful ignorance of the medical necessity of procedures such as SRS."

Eyer said that transgenders across the country have "systemic" problems dealing with insurance claims. Stacy was fortunate, said Eyer, that her company has a written policy on equality and that it had its own insurance plan which specifically covered transsexuals.

Few other self administered plans or HMOs have such provisions.

Crowning moment . . .

MTD MCC JOHNNY VERA q
Mark Crosse / The Fresno Bee
Johnny Vera, at 6-foot-4 in heels, towers over enthusiastic supporters as he sports the tiara representing his selection as queen for Roosevelt High's prom Saturday.
More photos


Roosevelt prom queen a transgender pioneer.
By Diana Marcum / The Fresno Bee
05/13/07 06:05:54

The silver tiara matched his silver stilettos when Johnny Vera was named prom queen Saturday night at Roosevelt High School.

He's the first transgender prom queen in Fresno -- and possibly anywhere.

Vera's win probably didn't surprise anyone who had seen the prom queen candidates' speeches Friday in the quad during lunch. Vera, effeminate and towering in heels, had wrapped his manicured nails around the microphone.

"For me, it's about more than a crown. It's about saying to people, 'Come out and be who you want to be,' " Vera said. A crowded, urban high school scene paused to listen. "You have to say, 'I am who I am, and I'm proud of who I am. My spirit will never be down on the floor.' "

The students cheered and whistled. The girls on Vera's cheerleading squad got teary-eyed. A boy wearing a pin supporting another queen candidate started the chant: "Johnny! Johnny! Johnny!"

On Saturday night when his name was announced, Vera wept like a newly crowned Miss America to thunderous applause in a downtown Radisson Hotel ballroom. The same chant started: "Johnny! Johnny! Johnny!"

Vera's crowning comes less than a month after Cinthia Covarrubias made national news by running for prom king at Fresno High School. . . .

The crying game . . .


news





Amanda Milan was a jet-setting, transgender escort. Why did she wind up with a knife in her throat at New York's Port Authority bus terminal?

- - - - - - - - - - - -
By Nina Siegal

June 20, 2001 | NEW YORK -- The sky was unusually bright that night, the air humid and sultry, embracing the light. Amanda Milan had pulled a trick for an escort agency, then stopped by Times Square to join an early-morning coffee klatch with a group of transsexuals who sometimes gathered at McDonald's on Eighth Avenue and 43rd Street to trade laments over Styrofoam cups.

Amanda was a tall black transsexual, with a long hair fall that masked the broad cut of her chin and a welcoming smile dabbed with glossy red lipstick. She had ample breasts (with the help of D-cup implants), and much of the time she could "pass" as a woman. But around the Port Authority, people recognized "the girls" who hung out by the Duane Reade drugstore, and Amanda was something of a celebrity in that circle.

Amanda kissed her friends goodbye at about 4 a.m. and then crossed Eighth Avenue, hoping to catch a cab in front of the bus terminal. Her friends watched her go, and continued to watch as a man approached her. . . .

It's a trans world . . .

The author of a new book about transgender teenagers in Los Angeles talks straight about hormone smuggling, life on the street, and the rise of America's first trans-rapper.

By Nona Willis-Aronowitz


story image

Jan. 5, 2007 | "Transgender": Does even the word confuse you? If you were asked to define it, could you?

If not, you're hardly alone. For years, the transgender community has existed in the shadow of the gay, lesbian and bisexual rights movement -- though most trans-people agree that redefining their gender has little to do with their sexual orientation. The word is applied to everyone from drag queens and sex reassignment surgery patients to femme gay men and butch straight girls. And these days, when discussions of transgender do happen, it's usually in the context of the sex industry or debates about unisex bathrooms and gender-blind hallways in college dormitories. With such boundless, cloudy meanings, is it any surprise that even the most sex-savvy, gay-friendly, politically correct among us still have a hard time explaining the term?

Cris Beam, the author of "Transparent: Love, Family, and Living the T with Transgender Teenagers," hopes her new book will help take on some of the mysteries and misconceptions that still haunt the transgender community. Beam, now 34, moved to Los Angeles in 1997, while her girlfriend attended graduate school. Lonely in her new city, she became intrigued by Eagles, a local high school specifically for gay and transgender kids; with the time left over in her freelance writing schedule, she began to work there as a volunteer. During the two and a half years Beam taught at Eagles, she discovered a complex but marginalized tribe of transgender teens who had nowhere to go but the streets. "Transparent" chronicles those stories, and describes how, within a few years, Beam found herself deeply involved in the kids' lives, entangled in their dreams, disappointments and their search for the truth about themselves and their gender. . . .

A plague undetected . . .

(This story's over 6 years old, but as relevant now as then.)

Did shady backroom hormone treatments and dirty needles cause a killer outbreak of HIV in the transgender community?

- - - - - - - - - - - -
By Nina Siegal

March 28, 2001 | NEW YORK -- Fourteen years ago, when Barbara Cassis was a 24-year-old man, she asked a family physician to give her hormones so she could become a woman. He prescribed a visit to a psychiatrist instead.

Undeterred, Cassis, now a towering blond with swimming-pool-blue eyes and a C-cup chest, entered an underground economy of fake doctors and self-appointed medical gurus who were willing to help her make the transformation she desired. She didn't know at the time that she was putting herself at risk for AIDS.

At transgender clubs in Hell's Kitchen, she asked the convincing-looking girls where to start. One gave her a business card for a hormone home delivery service. Another, she recalls, told her about a doctor who administered treatments in the bathroom of Sally's, a popular Hell's Kitchen bar catering primarily to transgender patrons.

According to Cassis and outreach workers who are familiar with the transgender scene in New York, this so-called doctor would set up shop in a bathroom stall for hours, injecting possibly hundreds with a single needle, without sterilizing it between shots. . . .

Tinky Winky says bye-bye to Jerry Falwell

The former TV star recalls the trauma of being called gay by the conservative preacher.

By King Kaufman

News

BBC/Ragdoll

Tinky Winky, with his handbag, left, has long denied rumors of an affair with former costar Po, right.

May 16, 2007 | Eight years ago the Rev. Jerry Falwell warned parents that BBC children's television star Tinky Winky was a hidden symbol of homosexuality. Falwell died Tuesday at 73, and the world wanted to talk to Tinky Winky.

"They're calling again, again, again," he said by phone from his home in Islington, in London. A spokesman said the former "Teletubbies" costar got more than 100 calls from reporters in the hour following news of Falwell's death.

"Oh dear, it's easy to say the wrong thing here," he said. "Tinky Winky sad whenever someone dies, but ..." He left it hanging there.

In a 1999 article in his National Liberty Journal headlined "Tinky Winky Comes Out of the Closet," Falwell pointed out that Winky could be taken as representing gays. . . .

. . . or worse yet TGs!

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Professional Golfer Mianne Bagger . . . her thoughts on life


Mianne Bagger



My Thoughts

These are some of my own thoughts and opinions which might give a bit of an insight into the kind of person I am and what I'm about. It's just me writing what's on my mind really and I might change it from time to time...I continue to be amazed at the things that happen in ones life and the direction it can take. Sometimes (well, usually) quite unexpectedly. It just goes to show that you never really know how things are going to turn out. . . .

Ian Harvie: Comedian

Bio & Resume

“Ian Harvie is on a mission. Sure, the Transgender stand-up comic wants to make audiences laugh, but only if s/he can humanize Trans people at the same time. Harvie, who plays to mainstream comedy establishments around the country, including the Boston Comedy Connection, and the Funny Bone clubs, contends that s/he’s the only Trans comic on the circuit.”
– San Francisco Bay Times, July 2006

Ian grew up on Beaver Pond (for real) in rural mountain town, Bridgton, Maine until the age of twelve. Ian’s first comedy performance was in a family variety show on New Years Day 1975. “I was standing in front of a fitted sheet that was hanging on a clothesline in the spare bedroom of my Aunt and Uncle's house in Rochester, New Hampshire. It was a period in my life when I was obsessed with the Carol Burnett Show and her whole cast,” Ian recalls. Channeling the energies of Tim Conway and Rich Little, Ian executed an impression of Richard Little doing an impression of Richard Nixon – a complicated and technical feat. “As I recall, my impression killed. So what if the audience of all 7 or 8 people were family members.” s/he laughs. For years after that, Ian received regular requests for that impression and obliged every time. Still to this day, if a family member were to ask, Ian would do it in a heartbeat. . . .

Check out his/her video clip.

Trans Singer Makes History

By Jacob Anderson-Minshall
Published: November 30, 2006


“The world probably isn’t ready for a guy like me,” says trans singer Joshua Klipp, who made musical history on his self released EP Patience by singing in both his pre- and post-transition voices on the R&B track “Little Girl.” Klipp says he was terrified that his transition would destroy his voice and he searched for medial studies about the effects of testosterone on female-to-male vocal chords. Finding none, he enlisted the help of Dr. Edward Damrose, a throat specialist at Stanford University, who monitored Klipp’s physiological changes and its effects on his voice. Dr. Damrose plans to publish his findings.

“It’s funny because now everyone says, ‘You’ve got a great voice.’” Klipp says. “[But] I [used to have] this perfect pitch. I had a pitch in my head and it would just happen… and all of a sudden that muscle memory was just shot... I’m still working with how that actually feels… and I’m still getting used to it.”

Klipp is a bit of a Renaissance man. In addition to his musical endeavors, the trans man holds a degree in law, teaches dance, directs the San Francisco Bay Area hip hop dance company Freeplay, provides promotional photography for local artists, sits on the board of directors for Youth Speaks and he founded San Francisco Bay Area Artist Development and Support (www.myspace. com/cutelittlewhiteguy) to help artists develop business infrastructure.

The San Francisco singer, who is in his early thirties, says the latter project is something he devoted a great deal of time to during the initial part of his transition. “I didn’t know if I would be able to be the artist. So I made a commitment to myself that if I can’t be it…I’m going to take all that energy and put it towards getting other people out there and…supporting their art in whatever way I can.”

Klipp originally recorded “Little Girl” about five years ago, but recently enlisted songwriter Kristopher Cloud in pairing those female vocals with Klipp’s masculine verses, so that the song becomes a soothing lullaby from his male self to the girl he was.

“The whole process of letting go of that voice that I used to have was such a hugely emotional experience for me, that singing along with it with my current voice kind of felt like a resolution.” . . .

Japan's Saitama Medical University stops sex-change operations

05/14/2007

BY KANAKO IDA, THE ASAHI SHIMBUN

Japan's leading hospital in sex-change operations has stopped offering its services, leaving a cloud of uncertainty hanging over the treatment of patients suffering from gender identity disorder.

Saitama Medical University called a halt to the operations after professor Takao Harashina, a surgeon specializing in plastic surgery, retired at the end of April.

University President Toshio Yamauchi said it had become impossible to assemble a team of experienced doctors to perform sex-change operations.

Gender identity disorder, the condition in which people do not identify with the sex they were born with, is slowly beginning to win social recognition in Japan.

The suspension of operations at Saitama Medical University could jeopardize the hopes for the treatment of the nation's estimated 10,000 patients, experts say.

The university's plastic surgery department has canceled the nearly 60 sex-change operations it was scheduled to perform between May and October.

Yamauchi said the university hopes to resume sex-change operations as early as possible, emphasizing that its policy to offer the medical treatment remains unchanged.

Three years ago, it became possible for people diagnosed with the condition to change their sex on family registers by applying to family courts.

Applicants must undergo sex-change operations and fulfill other conditions before applying for the changes to registers.

Several other universities, including Okayama University and Kansai Medical University, perform sex-change operations, but the number of operations carried out by those institutions is limited.

The change from woman to man is particularly difficult. The procedure requires advanced technology and experience, experts noted.

Saitama Medical University carried out the nation's first legal sex-change operation in 1998.

The treatment of people suffering from gender identity disorder was formally introduced after the Japanese Society of Psychiatry and Neurology compiled guidelines in 1997.

The guidelines call for patients to first receive psychotherapeutic and hormone treatment and, when necessary, to undergo sex-change operations.

So far, 357 patients suffering from gender identity disorder have undergone sex-change operations at Saitama Medical University, according to Harashina.

About 60 percent have undergone relatively simple operations to remove their breasts.

But 21 people have had male sex organs attached.

Toshiyuki Oshima, director of the Japanese Society of Gender Identity Disorder, said Japan should have its own treatment center for patients.

Oshima, a professor at Kyushu International University, said doctors who can perform sex-change operations are limited. He also noted that such operations are not covered by medical insurance.

Operations done overseas can involve considerable difficulties due to language problems as well as issues during post-operation medical care, he added.(IHT/Asahi: May 14,2007)

Trans Surgeon Keeps Small Town On Map

By Jacob Anderson-Minshall
Published: November 23, 2006

Dr. Marci Bowers is not a hero in her small-town Colorado.

At first glance, the small Colorado town of Trinidad seems an unlikely travel destination, yet over the last four decades, thousands of trans women have flocked to the quiet burg. Their pilgrimage continues today despite the resistance of local religious leaders.

Behind its quaint architecture and coal mining history, Trinidad conceals its reputation as “sex-change capital of the world.” The town first became a trans destination in the late 1960s when Dr. Stanley Biber began performing vaginoplasty for male to female transsexuals. When Biber retired in 2003 after 5,800 surgeries, his protégé Dr. Marci Bowers took over the practice.

A trans woman and former Biber patient who lives in Trinidad with her female partner, Bowers brings a rare insider perspective to her practice, but it’s not appreciated by some of the town’s 9,000 mostly conservative residents. For the past year, Trinidad Ministerial Association has circulated petitions and pressured Mount San Rafael Hospital to prohibit Bowers from operating at their facility.

In their campaign to oust Bowers, the Ministerial Association frequently cites a Johns Hopkins University study they claim proves surgery isn’t successful in treating gender identity issues. Bowers (marcibowers.com) calls the 1972 John Hopkins study “a sham,” that misinterpreted its own data and has never been replicated. Originally pioneers in sex reassignment surgery, Johns Hopkins abandoned the practice decades ago, partly based on the study’s findings.

“If you look at the actual study itself, the satisfaction rates and happiness rates after [surgeries] were overwhelmingly positive,” Bowers insists. “Their interpretation of the study was that the respondents—the patients themselves—couldn’t possibly be accurate about what they were feeling, because they were crazy in the first place.”

The 40-something Bowers, who practiced as an OB/GYN for nearly two decades says that today’s vaginoplasties bear little resemblance to those 30 years ago, and she boasts, “Sixty percent of what I do no one else does anywhere else in the world.” . . .

Transgender groups lobby for protection




Washington, D.C. - More than 100 transgendered people lobbied Congress for protection from being fired because of gender. Susan Stanton, who is in Washington for the event, stayed away from some of the media circus early in the day when the group began the lobby effort.

While you could tell from some of the looks that their agenda wasn't going to be an easy sell, when they went to see their congressmen, they found some sympathetic ears.

"Discrimination is not right in this country," says Rep. Jan Schakowsky, (D-IL). Schakowsky says she is aware of what happened to Susan Stanton and she will co-sponsor the Employment Non-discrimination Act. "It would include gender identity in there," she says. "You can't discriminate on the basis of gender identity." . . .

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Undercover as a man

Video: Journalist Norah Vincent who spent a year disguised as a man is surprised by her findings. Her book is, "Self Made Man."

Facing rejection

Video: Social worker Caitlin Ryan, Ph.D. on how rejection affects transgender children.

A very important area for research.

TransYouth Family Advocates

TYFA Believes: All people, especially children, have the right to be listened to when they express something as core to their sense of self as gender identity, particularly when that gender identity expression differs from their assigned birth sex.

TYFA Believes: Anyone who supports and honors a child’s gender identity expression deserves in return the support and respect of their extended families, neighbors, communities, schools, child welfare agencies, the courts and last, but not least, the medical community.

TYFA Believes
: There is no greater gift we can give, or positive role-modeling we can do, than to teach our children to respect and cherish diversity.

Susan Stanton debuts in D.C.

She will join a large group to lobby Congress today for transgender rights.

By LORRI HELFAND
Published May 15, 2007


Author Jennifer Finney Boylan awards Susan Stanton a toaster Monday for "coming out" at a celebration with members of the National Center for Transgender Equality at the National Press Club in downtown Washington D.C.
photo

Monday, May 14, 2007

In February, Steve Stanton's secret was out. He lost his job as Largo city manager. Then the world came calling. But not for Steve.

By LANE DeGREGORY
Published May 13, 2007


LARGO -- She couldn't sleep. She lay for hours in the dark.

In the morning, she would pose for her first portrait, at age 48. All her life, she had dodged and wavered and contemplated every avoidance, even suicide. Now, 12 hours to go.

She got up at 1 a.m., made coffee. She took a mug into the den of her Largo home, pulled out her red journal and started to write:

So here I sit. Alone in the early morning hours. Waiting for the rest of my life to begin.

She had spent years planning for this day. In the last month, she had frantically built a wardrobe, learned makeup, fretted over her too-short hair. She thought she looked good. Pretty. Professional.

Her debut would come after four decades of self-examination, in the dust of a leader's best-laid plans, in the remnants of her family. It glowed with the promise of possibility. Like new skin.

But what if others didn't see her the way she saw herself?

She had already lost her job, her friends and her home -- the things that gave her an identity -- for admitting she wasn't the person they knew. Now that she was showing them a second self, would they reject that person too?

She knew that some people would never even see Susan Ashley Stanton.

They would see a man in a dress.

Shedding a life usually means starting over, quietly, somewhere else. Slip town. Get a new job in a place no one knows your name.

For Steve Stanton, that wasn't an option. . . .


Click on title above and view related video.

Transgender Student Named Prom Queen

Web Editor: Matt Bush, Online Content Producer
Created: 5/14/2007 1:58:32 PM
Updated: 5/14/2007 2:12:14 PM

























FRESNO, CA (NBC) -- Johnny Vera is not your average prom queen. He's a transgender teen on a mission to spread positive attitude. That's why this crown means so much.

Former Lesbian Feminist Reports on The Man He’s Become

By Jacob Anderson-Minshall
Published: November 2, 2006


This Bridge Called My Back Contributor Chronicles His Transition

Max Wolf Valerio isn’t the man he expected to be. Before beginning testosterone treatment nearly two decades ago, the American Indian, Latino, Sephardic Valerio was a lesbian feminist poet whose pre-transition prose is enshrined in the essential feminist of color tome, This Bridge Called My Back. Today he sometimes makes grown women weep.

As he chronicles in his new memoir, The Testosterone Files, within five years on testosterone he’d become a sometimes aggressive, virile heterosexual man accused of being sexist. Valerio sheepishly admits, “I’ve heard of women actually crying after I read the chapter, ‘Cock in my Pocket’ which is graphic about the heightened sex drive, and takes on the issue of rape and violence against women. Because of the intensity of the writing and the fact that I don’t pull my punches when describing intense feelings and impulses, people are often shaken.”

In Testosterone Files Valerio boldly asserts that there are fundamental differences between the sexes, which are rooted in hormonal influences rather than socialization. Saying he’s gained a “darker understanding” of how testosterone activates aggression, Valerio argues that violence seems “a part of the male inheritance.”

He admits that some women have found his conclusions about gender contentious, and his frank discussions about sex and violence disturbing. Willing to address even the most controversial issues, Valerio admits, “I known FTMs who tell me that their sex fantasies became more violent or aggressive.”

Under the influence of testosterone, Valerio says that his own sexual impulses became “colored by an intense and sometimes edgy desire, a sudden desire to take, or even overpower.” Over time, he says, he’s grown into his new sexuality, and, he says, “The heightened drive is just another part of who I am now.” . . .

Poet Embraces Multiplicity

By Jacob Anderson-Minshall
Published: April 12, 2007


“I’d rather be a verb than a noun,” says award-winning poet Thea Hillman. “I try not to identify if I can help it. Things that are more true than not about me: I’m a queer, intersex writer, and culturally Jewish activist. I go by she.”

A frequent presenter and spoken word performer addressing intersex issues, Hillman has also chaired the board of the Intersex Society of North America (ISNA). The premier resource for information about reproductive anomalies and disorders of sex development, the ISNA is dedicated to ending unwanted genital surgeries for those born with anatomy atypical to males or females. ISNA urges that all children be designated as boys or girls without surgical intervention.

Hillman’s first book, Depending on the Light, was a collection of short fiction and poem-stories about sex, family, queerness, language and social change. Her latest, For Lack of a Better Word, is a “very personal, intense book” about family, sex and relationships—centered around growing up intersex. It’s due out later this spring.

Since the mid ‘90s, Hillman has produced spoken word performances. She recalls that the early events, “Morphed into community-building and strengthening events. I brought together really talented people to talk about things that weren’t getting enough exposure anywhere, including on stage: intersex, trans and genderqueer issues, [particularly] from older and younger people and from people of color.”

Although trans issues have gained visibility, Hilman insists, “There are still trans stories that aren’t being told, especially from transwomen and poor and incarcerated trans people.”

Hillman says that while both intersex and trans people face sex and gender oppression, “What is generally true and unique to people dealing with intersex issues is that the bodies they were born with put them at risk of…medical intervention…[that they] had no say in…either because they were too young to consent or were never even told what was being done to them.” . . .