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To every trans person reading this: You belong to a lineage of resistance that stretches back through the Compton’s Cafeteria riot, through the two-spirit people of indigenous nations, through the cross-dressing soldiers and the salon-keeping outlaws. You are not new. You are ancient. And you are necessary.
We are not our trauma. We are our joy. Resilience for the transgender community is not about being “tough” in the face of cruelty. It is about building something stronger than the cruelty.
The data is stark: The Trevor Project’s 2023 survey found that 56% of transgender and nonbinary youth wanted mental health care but could not access it. Suicide rates remain devastatingly high. Yet these numbers are not destiny. They are a diagnosis of a society that has failed to provide basic safety. horny shemale thumbs
But here is what the statistics don’t capture: the trans woman who runs a mutual aid network from her living room. The nonbinary teacher whose students say, “You made me feel like I could be myself.” The trans dad who coaches Little League and is just “dad” to everyone who matters.
And to the broader LGBTQ culture that walks alongside us: your solidarity has been the fire in the cold. But solidarity must never become passive. This is a moment that demands we listen—not just to the loudest voices, but to the most vulnerable among us. Let’s name the truth without softening it. In 2024 and beyond, legislative attacks on transgender people—especially transgender youth—have reached a fever pitch. Bathroom bans, healthcare restrictions, drag bans designed to erase gender expression, and educational gag orders are not anomalies. They are coordinated efforts to push us out of public life. To every trans person reading this: You belong
There is a particular kind of courage that lives in the transgender community. It is not the courage of a single, loud moment—though those exist too. It is the slow, tectonic courage of waking up every morning and choosing to exist as you in a world that often demands you be otherwise.
To our transgender family: You are not a trend. You are not a debate. You are not a political wedge or a headline. You are the neighbor who gardens at dawn, the nurse who holds a patient’s hand, the teenager who finally heard their own name called at graduation. You are the oldest story on earth: the story of becoming. And you are necessary
For too long, trans lives have been narrated by doctors, politicians, and journalists who see us as case studies. Take back the pen. Write the poem. Film the vlog. Paint the portrait. When we tell our own stories—messy, triumphant, boring, beautiful—we rob our enemies of the caricature they need to dehumanize us. A Call to Our LGBTQ Siblings To the gay men, lesbians, bisexuals, queers, and allies: The fight for trans liberation is not a distraction from “mainstream” LGBTQ goals. It is the same fight. The Stonewall uprising was led by trans women of color like Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera. The AIDS crisis taught us that when one of us is abandoned by the healthcare system, all of us are vulnerable. The marriage equality victory did not end homelessness for queer youth—most of whom are trans or gender nonconforming.
By Kai Ashworth