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About Just out. (Portland, OR) 1983-2013 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 20, 2004)
32 JUSt OUt• auflust 20. 2004 eatingout eatit out out eatingout Gender identity and you OMt JS Why nondiscrimination policies should include trans queers TREAT YOURSELF! This essay is the second in a series of four by Christa-Margaret Nelson reprinted in Just Out from trans awareness workshops sponsored by Basic Rights Oregon. "Gender Identity and You" was first presented in May and is reprinted now in celebration of the Human Rights Campaign's recent decision to write a new nondiscnminatu/n bill that includes gender identity. enaissance B 'llkne £ Open 5pm to 10pm Tuesday - Sunday Frz Sat to Midnight 344 NE 28tb & Flanders — Hand-Thrown “Pizza with Pride” ____________________________________ Since leSd Since 19S4 * efore I transitioned my social and physi cal gender more than five years ago, 1 neyer identified as queer. I lived a fairly conventional heterosexual lifestyle—1 was romantically involved with people of the opposite sex, 1 was passable in the perfonnance of my assigned gender, and I pretty much pur sued the traditional cultural expectations of finding a mate, with the hope of eventually starting my own family. Yet through all of this 1 always knew I was trans. Although I wasn’t familiar with much con cerning the issue and experienced great shame from even thinking about it, I was always secretly drawn to stories of transsexuals and Christa-Margaret Nelson transvestites, in whatever form I would run across, no matter how ing gender in a culturally accepted way doesn’t tahxi or discouraging. need to be interpreted. But because queers are These stories represented a possi often out with their gender identities as well as bility of there being a hopeful chance their sexuality, they are understood as such. of someday being who I felt I was. I When a gay man presents himself in a way that always considered whether or not 1 is not considered appropriate for his gender, he was gay, as this seemed a more logical will be outed for his sexuality as well. conclusion to me for someone who This means that discrimination can happen desired to change his gender. not necessarily because of one’s sexuality but, Yet I continued to be solely rather, from one’s gender identity. If a butch les attracted to women through my bian is experiencing difficulty with the dress code transition and spent the first few of a workplace, this is not an issue of her sexual years with my pretransition partner. orientation but of her gender identity. If a man is It wasn’t until 1 fully transitioned assaulted after being identified as gay based on and began to experience negative nontraditional gender behaviors, then this is an reactions that I began to realize I issue of gender identity, not sexual orientation. was queer—and this arose not from What all of this means to all queers is that my sexuality but from manifesting while the issues of sexual orientation and my inherent gender identity. gender identity do at times seem not all-too- To most people, queemess is immediately related, they really have a great deal of con associated with sexuality. For a long time, before vergence. While the queer community can the inclusion of the “T” in GLBT, queemess did point out the distinctions and differences in seem to revolve around this issue. After trans our members to the greater world, we’re all people were included within the queer agenda, just “gay” to them. the issue of gender identity began to become From this perspective, then, most non more integrated into queemess. Now being discrimination legislation—even the most queer can include much more than whom one well-intentioned—simply includes sexual ori shares a heart and entation, and this body with. Now language does not being queer could cover all cases of involve a person discrimination with whom that against queers and isn’t even an issue. perhaps may not even apply to a sit omewhere along uation where a gay the line homo or lesbian person is sexuality was being discriminated equated with gender against because of variance—effem i - gender issues. nate men were The inclusion of immediately considered gay, and masculine gender identity into nondiscrimination legisla women were taken as lesbians. While this can tion not only benefits trans people, but all be the case, obviously it’s not always true, and people—queer or otherwise. And the more we many of these situations arose from not having recognize and work toward this, the closer we other identities to choose from. When there’s come to fully protecting all queers. jFl no “T,” a masculine woman finds a home for her gender identity within lesbian culture, a C hrista -M argaret N elson is a free-lance man within the traditional gay stereotype. writer, musician, member of the Trans Advocacy But another thing that has always led people Group at Basic Rights Oregon and facilitator of the to identify queers by sight is gender presenta Trans Youth Group at the Sexual Minority Youth tion. To the average stranger, someone present- Resource Center. — Three Locations — • 7804 SE Stark 503-254-2016 • 3 Monroe Pkwy Ste S, L.O. 503-675-7377 • 1600 NW Fairview Ave., Gresham 503-328-0018 ■ J kz& Seafood S If a butch lesbian is experiencing difficulty with the dress code of a workplace, this is not an issue of her sexual orientation but of her gender identity