🐱 Columbia students reflect on ‘passing’ and ways to support trans students - Passing is SO HARD

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Charlie Warren, a first-year film and television major, identifies as non-binary, which is a term for people whose gender identity doesn’t sit comfortably with “man” or “woman.” Warren found themselves not even being able to attempt to transition or experiment with passing as another gender in their hometown in Kansas.

However, during their time at Columbia, they have been able to experiment more with how they present and how they like to be perceived.

The annual Trans Day of Visibility is over, but the trans experience is a year-long experience for those who identify as trans, nonbinary, and gender nonconforming. With the experience, comes a lot of joy, a sense of contentment, but also some struggles.

“[I’ve learned] I want people to assume at first glance that I’m masculine or a male,” Warren said. “Something along those lines. Not that I am [male], but that’s what I want to pass as.”

Warren said not passing can be difficult, but they try not to take it too personally when they are misgendered. According to U.S. Department of Justice’s Office Victims of Crime, passing is when someone is perceived as male, female, or another gender, however, how a person is perceived by others is not always consistent, which can lead to misgendering.

“I do recognize that I don’t necessarily pass very well. I get [called] ma’am a lot by people. Usually, I’ll correct them, and they’ll get better after that,” Warren said. “But, initially, [passing] is not something I think I do necessarily very well.”

The concept of passing itself is a bit controversial, with some people having the idea that those who pass are superior to those who don’t, which consequently invalidates and dehumanizes those who may not pass. Online, Warren has seen many trans kids ask others how well they pass, even going as far to ask people to rate them on how well they would pass if they saw them on the street.

“It’s not a healthy thing,” Warren said. “I don’t want to discourage trans people from thinking it’s wrong to want to look the gender that they identify as, but there’s a really toxic mindset that goes into ‘if I don’t look trans enough, or if I don’t pass, then suddenly it’s not acceptable.’”

While others don’t pass, some do. Finn Schulz, a first-year photography major, now a year on hormones, has what he called “passing privilege,” which is a privilege a trans person who is perceived as cisgender has that may limit their risk of facing prejudice, harassment and risk of violence, as well as result in better employment opportunities.

“I know that not everybody can [pass]. Personally, I like passing and it is my goal, but I don’t have the idea that everybody needs to pass,” Schulz said. “It’s up to them if they want to have that as a goal or not.”

Schulz began transitioning his junior year of high school, which was when the COVID-19 pandemic was starting. There, he began to present online and in-person as male. Schulz’s transition, like many others, did have some struggles, as he was often misgendered by people close to him.

“I got misgendered for a really long time, and honestly, I still get misgendered by those people in my personal life, like my family,” Schulz said. “Now that I’m on hormones, I have a deeper voice and I appear as a masculine figure, and pass to strangers.”

Schulz said it is important to not make assumptions of what people’s pronouns are and to always make sure to ask them when you first meet them.

Matthew Rillie, coordinator of Student Support and Engagement, works closely in the Student Diversity and Inclusion office on advocating for trans students, as well as other issues concerning the student experience.

“If a policy or a resource is not actively inclusive for trans students, then we’re [SDI] going to fight to change it,” Rillie said. “If it’s not actively doing work to include and affirm and help heal students who have been hurt by systems of power, then I’m not interested in it.”

Rillie said resources such as Gender-inclusive housing, gender-inclusive restrooms, the trans union, first name change forum, The Rack, and more, have all been student demanded and fought by students.

Despite the resources having grown and expanded over the years, Rillie said there is still a long way to go.

“We also try to create a space for like healing. I think that piece [healing] gets ignored widely,” Rillie said. “As resources grow, that’s great, but often when they’re not there, there’s a lot of harm that happens. So we center a lot of our work on both healing, and advocacy.

August Miller, a junior computer animation major, works as an intern for Student Diversity and Inclusion, where his role is to research, develop and orchestrate ways to better the lives of LGBTQ+ students on campus.

Miller runs the Trans Student Union, which caters to students who identify as trans, nonbinary and gender-nonconforming. The group has open discussions, arts and crafts sessions and more.

The group meets weekly on Fridays from 4 to 5 p.m. at 618 S. Michigan Ave. on the fourth floor.

“Basically, we just want to create a safe, affirming environment for trans people to exist in a space for an hour every week,” Miller said. “Whoever wants to come can come and there is not a certain amount of meetings you have to come to.”

For students looking for gender-inclusive resources, visit Student Diversity and Inclusion’s Gender Resources page.
 
What happened to certain groups learning to assimilate into society instead of always forcing everyone to change to accommodate the needs of a few?

It reminds me of Hollister having to redesign their stores because their front entrances had steps, even though they still had doors in front to accommodate people in wheelchairs. That simply wasn't good enough, and was "discrimination".
 
More people should stop using she/her pronouns for troons "out of politeness." It's not nice--it's a kind of 2-way gaslighting that will lead to trans people ending up even more damaged when attitudes inevitably shift and gender transitioning is eventually thought of as a lobotomy-like medical mistake.

And more importantly, language directly corresponds with how you process and think about things. If society tells you that blue is actually yellow and vice-versa and threatens to get you fired and ostracized if you use the real words for those colors, realistically you'll probably go along with it, but the demands are not going to end with those two colors. As more demands to change your fundamental truths roll in, the old ones that you were just going along with settle in as your new "truths." You're not just sacrificing one or two words for security, you're sacrificing your free will and our ability to have a shared framework of reality.
 
What happened to certain groups learning to assimilate into society instead of always forcing everyone to change to accommodate the needs of a few?

It reminds me of Hollister having to redesign their stores because their front entrances had steps, even though they still had doors in front to accommodate people in wheelchairs. That simply wasn't good enough, and was "discrimination".
Lmao beaten by stairs; why do we cater to such genetic failures?
 
The only thing this woman passes as is a pepperoni pizza.

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Jokes aside, cystic acne is fucking awful. This young woman hates herself so much she takes a drug that literally causes her skin to erupt in painful, scarring boils. This is some crazy medieval shit being passed off as progress.
Misgendered? Least of her worries. "Nigga, you look like you died last week."
 
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How do you "pass" as something that is made up (ie nonbinary)?

Actually passing as enbie is easy and anyone could do it as a 10 minute halloween costume. Nose ring, rainbow hair, side shave, dirty rumpled Hot Topic clothing. Done.

It's easy because it's a mythical character. Like you can "pass" as Mario by putting on a mustache and that cap.
 
While I literally know nothing about this.

I assume the passing issue comes down to the general insecurity over one's looks and the jealousy of others.

This is further complicated because the ideology is telling them that they are whatever gender they identify with, regardless of any appearance. Yet this is not how they perceive themselves. This is not how everyone, including everyone that is prescribed to the same gender ideology, perceives them. So there's a major cope because there's a central pretence and lie that everyone is playing along with. As much as they try and shut out this reality. It is every present. This is why they get so upset at misgendering. It's a fragile existence always on the edge because everyone can tell biological sex and they know it but have to pretend it isn't true.

Surgeries and other cosmetics are sold as a way around this. People have to buy into the idea that there is a way around this central issue. Yet there isn't.

Current gender theories around trans have gone too far into fantasy land because it's trying to deny biological sex and place it all on gender expression. When it needs to incorporate and embrace biological sex and gender expression as part of trans people's identities. You can't run away from biological sex, yet people are sold a worldview that tells them biological sex doesn't exist and it's only gender.

Biological sex isn't incorporated because the bullshit post-modernist ideologies can't handle objective facts. So in this case, they have to ignore it. Pretend it doesn't exist. Now we have loads of people indoctrinated into a world view which doesn't incorporate biological sex as existing. Yet even though they don't, they are aware. They just have to ignore it and it's driving them nuts.
 
While I literally know nothing about this.

I assume the passing issue comes down to the general insecurity over one's looks and the jealousy of others.

This is further complicated because the ideology is telling them that they are whatever gender they identify with, regardless of any appearance. Yet this is not how they perceive themselves. This is not how everyone, including everyone that is prescribed to the same gender ideology, perceives them. So there's a major cope because there's a central pretence and lie that everyone is playing along with. As much as they try and shut out this reality. It is every present. This is why they get so upset at misgendering. It's a fragile existence always on the edge because everyone can tell biological sex and they know it but have to pretend it isn't true.

Surgeries and other cosmetics are sold as a way around this. People have to buy into the idea that there is a way around this central issue. Yet there isn't.

Current gender theories around trans have gone too far into fantasy land because it's trying to deny biological sex and place it all on gender expression. When it needs to incorporate and embrace biological sex and gender expression as part of trans people's identities. You can't run away from biological sex, yet people are sold a worldview that tells them biological sex doesn't exist and it's only gender.

Biological sex isn't incorporated because the bullshit post-modernist ideologies can't handle objective facts. So in this case, they have to ignore it. Pretend it doesn't exist. Now we have loads of people indoctrinated into a world view which doesn't incorporate biological sex as existing. Yet even though they don't, they are aware. They just have to ignore it and it's driving them nuts.
The real problem with troons, however, isn't just the physical sex issue.
They don't act, dress, talk or think like men or women in the "wrong" bodies. They are hyper stereotypical and sex obsessed.

Example- I know of (not personally met) a transexual near the city I live in who is considered a pillar of the community.
No one, not even the most hardcore Trumpers, give a shit that people call her "she". Why? She sings in choir with a great
female voice, is incredibly helpful to all the patrons at the church she goes to, frequently runs the soup kitchen and is
considered a great dresser.

"She" was also severely injured when she was 11 by a horse kicking her nuts, effectively gelding her.

Now, they might be absolutely nuts in their homelife and try donkey sex, I dunno. But they are well liked and the result of
a freak accident, not choice.

Huh, thinking about it, the only trans I know that aren't crazy are the results of accidents and not mental illness... weird.
 
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