Welcome back, everyone.
Speaker AI am so, so delighted for you to listen in to these three amazing women that I have as guests on my show today.
Speaker AAnd there's just so much to learn.
Speaker ASo grab a pad of paper and a pen and be ready for some really awesome information.
Speaker AKate and Jeannie and Jaina, I am so, so happy to welcome you onto Just Read.
Speaker AAnd I'm really looking forward to just your three different perspectives, as well as just tons of tips and strategies and great information.
Speaker ASo I just want to start right.
Speaker AKind of at the top.
Speaker AYou all three have written books, and they are specific but similar.
Speaker ASame but different.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo I'd love for each of you just to give a little bit of a.
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker AWhy did you write the books that you wrote?
Speaker AAnd we can start.
Speaker AWhy don't we start with you, Kate, and then we can kind of flow from there.
Speaker BWonderful.
Speaker BSo when I first began writing, I didn't realize I was writing a book.
Speaker BAs a writer, I often put pen to paper to process big feelings.
Speaker BAnd my son realizing she was my daughter seemed like a big thing.
Speaker BSo I had lots of feelings about it and began writing.
Speaker BAnd over time, I realized that I was writing the book that I wished I had had when my daughter was transitioning.
Speaker BNot a prescriptive narrative per se, but kind of an affirming one with some humor, some candid conversation, heartfelt honesty, and lots, lots of heart.
Speaker BSo thus transistor raising twins in a gender bending world was born.
Speaker BKind of like my third child.
Speaker AYeah, I understand the humor thing.
Speaker AWe.
Speaker AWe think very similarly in that way.
Speaker AI find humor, especially when things are tense and NER racking, somehow breaks through, doesn't it?
Speaker AJeannie, would you like to talk a little bit about the Savvy Ally?
Speaker CSure.
Speaker CSame Z's, Kate, as far as this was the book that I wanted when I got started.
Speaker CExactly the same motivation there.
Speaker CI'm a straight cisgender ally to the LGBTQ communities, meaning I'm not part of the community.
Speaker CAnd I knew absolutely nothing when I got started.
Speaker CZero had to ask what the initialism stood for.
Speaker CUh, and so my book, the Savvy Ally, is the book that I wanted when I got started.
Speaker CIt's basically a guidebook for how to be an ally to the LGBTQ communities.
Speaker CAnd I also.
Speaker CMy goal also was to make it kind of light and kind of fun and, you know, use humor where it was appropriate.
Speaker CUm, I think I'm funny.
Speaker CHopefully other people do too.
Speaker CBut at the same, I think humor really connects people.
Speaker CAnd so my book is not A heavy academic slog.
Speaker CIt's, it's just really, I, I have some fun with it.
Speaker CI add pop quizzes and things like that, but it's really, it's not for people who aren't sure if they want to be allies.
Speaker CIt's for folks who already know they want to be allies and they really just want the tools to know how to do that and how to be the best ally that they can be.
Speaker AWhich you did very, very well.
Speaker AAs you know, that is one of my very favorites and it's been on my shelf since, since the beginning.
Speaker AAnd you know, like the two of you, I wrote the book that I needed.
Speaker ASo isn't that, isn't that interesting how we do that?
Speaker AJaina, your book is a little bit different.
Speaker AYou wrote your book in novel format, so I'd love to hear a little bit about that.
Speaker DSure.
Speaker DSo the.
Speaker DYes, it's, it's different.
Speaker DYou would probably say if you've read it that it's not light hearted at all.
Speaker DAlthough I think there is humor in there.
Speaker DI certainly worked at it, but it's perhaps subtle.
Speaker DIt is a book not that I needed when I was 10 or 20, but that the world needed.
Speaker DAnd so if I were to mix up these two questions a little bit, one of them was about how do you react to the increase in anti trans legislation today?
Speaker DAnd I thought, okay, how do I express that simply, well, these legislators are equivalent in my view, to President Snow of the Hunger Games.
Speaker DI thought that was about the best analogy that I could come up with.
Speaker DAnd that's where they're taking us.
Speaker DSo I think that, I think people, until the last few years, with the politics being where they are, people don't realize how close we were to having a socially sensible attitude toward gender identity.
Speaker DAnd we're moving backwards very, very rapidly as far as I can see.
Speaker DSo the novel.
Speaker DI wrote a novel for many reasons because, um, as they put it, there are three reasons actually.
Speaker DEmotion, emotion and emotion.
Speaker DUh, if the.
Speaker DA nonfiction book or memoir can.
Speaker DAnd, and then these are absolutely essential.
Speaker DAnd we have two wonderful examples.
Speaker DBut they can't tell you what the life is like and obviously nobody can.
Speaker DWe can only get to live our own lives.
Speaker DI can't say what it's like to be a black woman and a cisgender person can't say what it's like to be trans.
Speaker DBut a good novel that puts you in the heart, head of the reader can come close.
Speaker DSo that's the reason.
Speaker AThat is maybe the most well said reason I'VE ever heard for that.
Speaker AI mean, that's really.
Speaker AI think that that makes me want to just run out and read it right now.
Speaker AMy apologies for not getting it read before this.
Speaker AVery quickly, just everybody listening.
Speaker AIt's on.
Speaker AIt's on my.
Speaker CMy list.
Speaker AAnd I'm so thrilled, and I love words, Heather, that you compared this legislation that's going on to presidents now.
Speaker AThat is such something that's going to resonate with everyone and really talks about how frightening this is.
Speaker AAnd how do you think that your, you know, people reading your novel are going to say, like, how is that going to click for them?
Speaker DSo I. I think, let's see, how do we say.
Speaker DI just tried.
Speaker DI mean, really, this was not a.
Speaker DThis was not an.
Speaker DSomething that was planned.
Speaker DIt.
Speaker DIt came to me as something that I had simply had to do.
Speaker DIn fact, I was just writing some notes to.
Speaker DI used to, like, tell stories to myself.
Speaker DSo I was going to sleep and I would forget what I'd done the night before.
Speaker DAnd so I said, I'll just make a few notes.
Speaker DAnd that turned into 40 single spaced pages.
Speaker DAnd I, you know, sent it to somebody and they said, oh, this is wonderful.
Speaker DWhich I did not expect them to say because it had all the nasty parts in it.
Speaker DAnd so then I had to learn how to write a novel.
Speaker DAnd being a scientist, that took a little while.
Speaker DIt's really.
Speaker DYeah.
Speaker DYou know, you can't write.
Speaker DEverybody's experience is different.
Speaker DAnd so you.
Speaker DYou have a character in a novel, and their experience is unique.
Speaker DSo it's not for everybody.
Speaker DAnd yet I think I did make an effort to touch on the themes that pretty much every transgender person is going to encounter to some extent in such a way that you can see, you know, what we deal with.
Speaker AYou've humanized.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AI mean, I think that's one of the biggest things that I've.
Speaker AThat I see, and it makes me so sad and angry, is the dehumanization.
Speaker AAnd it sounds like that's exactly what your novel does.
Speaker AAnd thank you.
Speaker AI'm so grateful that you wrote that and that came to you and that you've kind of paid attention to those.
Speaker AThose thoughts and notes that were coming to you as you fall asleep.
Speaker AI think we get some of our greatest ideas in those moments.
Speaker AI'm going to switch gears just a little bit, and Jeanne, come to you and talk about a little bit about who allies are, why they're so important, especially right now.
Speaker CSure.
Speaker CI define ally broadly.
Speaker CSo, you know, I think if we just look At a dictionary definition, we get something like an ally is a person who's not a part of a particular marginalized group, but who stands up for and advocates for the rights of people in that group.
Speaker CAnd when we think about trans folks, we're really focusing on a transgender today.
Speaker CWe are, you know, we specifically think, oh, well, allies must be the cisgender folks, the folks who are not part of that community.
Speaker CBut I really like to go broadly with this in that, you know, if you're a white transgender man, you can be an ally to trans women of color who are marginalized and victimized in much different ways.
Speaker CSo I really feel like there are roles for us all to play as allies because there's, there's subgroups within the groups and everyone's treated differently.
Speaker CAnd so I do want folks to think about it that way.
Speaker CBut basically, I think allyship is so critical.
Speaker CI've got, you know, lists and lists, but I'll just share a few of my favorite reasons why I think allies are so impactful.
Speaker COne is that I think people are.
Speaker CMost of the people who I speak to are really big hearted people who want to do the right thing and they're just scared to death to open their mouth.
Speaker CThey're afraid they're going to mess up, they're going to accidentally offend someone.
Speaker CAnd if a transgender person is in the room and they know that, they're way less likely to, you know, ask a question that might be embarrassing.
Speaker CYou know, maybe they're afraid they're going to use the wrong word or they're going to offend someone.
Speaker CWhereas if you're ally to ally having a conversation, people are much more likely to open up.
Speaker CAllies are able to create spaces where people can ask those silly questions and not feel like they're going to be judged.
Speaker CYou know, if we do it well, we can, we can do that as allies.
Speaker CAnd I think those allied ally conversations are so critical, which kind of gets to my next point, which is that the education should not always fall on the shoulders of the folks within those marginalized groups.
Speaker CThey've got enough on their plate.
Speaker CYou know, if we think about.
Speaker CI like to give concrete examples.
Speaker CIf you think about walking into the doctor's office and you're confronted by the or fox, which is standard.
Speaker CI can't believe how often I still see this, but just standard M or F, what are they asking?
Speaker CAre they asking about our, our biological sex or our gender?
Speaker CWell, it doesn't matter for me because those align.
Speaker CI can just check the F box and I'm fine.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CBut for transgender people, for intersex people, for non binary people, what do they check?
Speaker CThey're not even.
Speaker CThey're not seeing themselves on this form.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker CSo this is a perfect place for an ally to step up to the plate because the folks who are not seeing themselves on the forum at that doctor's office are already feeling vulnerable and scared and maybe unsafe.
Speaker CWhereas myself, as an ally walking in, I see myself on that forum.
Speaker CI'm the perfect person to.
Speaker CIt's not risky for me, right?
Speaker CI can write a little note on that form and say, hey, this form could be more inclusive for, you know, trans folks and non binary folks, which I do all the time and which I encourage allies to do.
Speaker CBut it's just sort of showing the place where allies can take some of that heavy lifting and often do it in a way that's much less risky to us than to the folks who are already feeling vulnerable.
Speaker CSo those are just two of the many reasons.
Speaker CAnd I'll welcome my, my co presenters here to chime in if they've got other thoughts on that.
Speaker CBut those are two of my favorite reasons why allies are.
Speaker BI'd love to chime in.
Speaker BI think allyship is particularly important for trans youth.
Speaker BWe've likely all seen the statistics that there are higher rates of suicidality, depression, bullying when it comes to trans youth.
Speaker BAnd allyship and affirmation from everyone, and particularly from parents, because not all parents are allies, can be critical to the well being of trans kids.
Speaker BI'm reminded of the words of one of my favorite mentors throughout this process, a gentleman named Jean Malpass of the Gender Family Project.
Speaker BHe was fond of saying, is protection meaning that if you accept your child, if you affirm his, her or their gender identity, you're already helping to protect your kid.
Speaker BAnd if other allies outside of the family can do the same thing, it can have a mountainous effect.
Speaker BAnd that protection, that layer of protection, can grow.
Speaker BThere is this study that was conducted in 2016, I'll throw this in there, that tracked a group of trans kids and a group of cisgender kids.
Speaker BAnd it found that the trans children who were supported by their parents and had their identities affirmed had similar mental health outcomes to the cisgender group of kids.
Speaker BMeaning if we just affirm, if we act as an ally in the home and outside the home, then our kids are actually safer.
Speaker BAnd particularly in this time of anti trans legislation, anti, you know, hate that's out there.
Speaker BI think this allyship and this affirmation in and outside of the home becomes more critical, because I.
Speaker BAnd I really do believe, getting back to all three of our books, that a lot of the hate out and the anger really stems from fear.
Speaker BFear of the unknown.
Speaker BAnd I think when we can increase awareness, educate people, and normalize, quote, unquote, and I use quotes, because what is normal and humanize, which is a better word, the transgender experience, we can go a long way, mitigate some of that fear and hate.
Speaker BAnd I think all three of our books help to do that.
Speaker BAnd that's why I think sometimes writing the books that we did becomes even more important.
Speaker BAlways important.
Speaker BBut in today's day and age, especially where this hate is so in everyone's face.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BBut back to allyship.
Speaker BI think allyship, affirmation is just so critical, not just to the physical well being of the transgender community, but.
Speaker BBut to the emotional well being of that.
Speaker BOf this community, as that is very true.
Speaker AThank you so much for sharing all of that.
Speaker AJayna, did you want to add anything to that?
Speaker DSo it's hard to see exactly what to add to those great statements.
Speaker ANo pressure whatsoever.
Speaker AI just wanted to give you the opportunity.
Speaker DYeah, no, I think maybe the coming back to or underscoring the question of normalization, again, it's.
Speaker DIt's a dangerous word to use without, you know, people understanding it.
Speaker DBut hopefully listeners will understand that we're not talking about normal and abnormal, but being part of feeling that, in fact, there is you.
Speaker DYou feeling that your interactions with the group, whatever.
Speaker DWhatever group it is, are not defined by gender identity because they shouldn't be.
Speaker DThat's really just a background to your life.
Speaker DAnd it shouldn't.
Speaker DNot only shouldn't it dominate what goes on, it should be invisible.
Speaker DAnd so what Jeannie and Kate have been talking about, I think are important steps to that end.
Speaker AAbsolutely.
Speaker AThank you so much.
Speaker AKate, I want to circle back a little to what you were saying about higher rates of depression and suicidality and bullying.
Speaker ACan you talk specifically about being a parent to a trans child in this environment and this, you know, with everything that's not only going on right now, but in the past, you know, five, seven years, because this is, you know, I.
Speaker AHow long you've been kind of going on this journey?
Speaker BYes.
Speaker BWhat I would say is, in general, as a parent, all I want to do, among the things, I want to create happy, healthy, kind children.
Speaker BBut as part of that, I feel the need to protect my children.
Speaker BAnd I can't always do that.
Speaker BIt's not feasible.
Speaker BIt's not reasonable.
Speaker BAnd My kids need to learn how to, you know, stand on their own two feet.
Speaker BSo it also wouldn't be healthy.
Speaker BBut in particular, the world is not so safe right now for one of my children.
Speaker BMy daughter faces different obstacles than my son does, and both of them have obstacles.
Speaker BBut there are times when I fear simple things.
Speaker BWhen my daughter goes to the beach and puts on a bathing suit because I don't.
Speaker BMy fear as a parent is that someone will realize that her anatomy is not what they would typically think of when they see a girl and make fun of her or harm her physically or emotionally.
Speaker BShe's 15 years old, right?
Speaker BAnd she likes boys.
Speaker BRemember?
Speaker BGender, sexuality, two different things.
Speaker BI fear for her emotional well being when a boy figures out that she's trans because she knows in her mind that she has to tell them early on for her own safety physically and emotionally, and for the, the, the boy's safety emotionally.
Speaker BThat scares me.
Speaker BIn order to have a first kiss.
Speaker BShe feels, and we feel that she needs to have this conversation.
Speaker BThat's scary.
Speaker BThere are times when she walks in certain neighborhoods where, where that might be more prevalent to cat calling.
Speaker BOr in certain areas, I fear for her.
Speaker BWhat if someone rubs up against her in the subway and feels a body part that again, that they don't associate with the female anatomy?
Speaker BWhat could the repercussions be?
Speaker BNow I say all of this and acknowledge I do not think there is any privilege in being trans.
Speaker BAnd if there was, I feel in some ways my daughter has trans privilege.
Speaker BWhy?
Speaker BAnd again, no privilege in being trans.
Speaker BShe's born into a family that affirms her identity.
Speaker BShe's in a city, we live in New York City, where largely there is an overwhelming sense of affirmation.
Speaker BShe has access to gender affirming care.
Speaker BRight now, transgender youth in 21 states don't have access to gender affirming care.
Speaker BThat's 35% of all trans youth don't have access, which is crazy making to me.
Speaker BAnd our family happens to have the resources that if, the financial resources, and I always say if we didn't, I would chop off a lemon, sell it on the market.
Speaker BWe have the resources to make sure that my daughter gets all of those things.
Speaker BI fear for my daughter on a day to day basis and I fear probably more for the trans youth who are not in the position that my family and my daughter are in.
Speaker BThat scares me.
Speaker BSo many kids are in homes where they're not affirmed.
Speaker BSo many students go to schools where they're not affirmed.
Speaker BThat is the scary Part to me.
Speaker BAnd that's why I think, again, not to beat a dead horse.
Speaker BSharing stories, humanizing the transgender experience can help so much to lower the fear, lower the temperature, and make things safer for everyone.
Speaker BAnd that might sound simplistic, but I think little steps like that can go a long way.
Speaker BSo, yes, as a parent, I fear for my kid.
Speaker BI fear when she goes to summer camp, she's.
Speaker BWhen she first went to sleepaway camp, she's in a girl's bunk.
Speaker BHow would the other parents.
Speaker BHow would the other campers react?
Speaker BHow would their parents react?
Speaker BThings that maybe not everybody parent has to think about, but these are things that my daughter, you know, deals with every day.
Speaker BAnd some of them, you.
Speaker BYou can't predict what she's going to encounter in a day.
Speaker BYou can't protect or predict everything that's going to happen.
Speaker BSo you do the best you can.
Speaker BBut short answer, it's scary in today's environment.
Speaker BAnd I know that my daughter.
Speaker BAnd she shouldn't be.
Speaker BI shouldn't say, she's lucky to live where she does, and she is.
Speaker BEveryone should be.
Speaker BEveryone should be accepted, and it's just not the case.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker AAnd I think you touch on something that's so very important there.
Speaker AI mean, you very clearly named four things that.
Speaker AAnd I totally understand your reluctance to use the word privilege.
Speaker AAnd it's accurate, right?
Speaker AAnd it.
Speaker AAnd it's something that all trans kids.
Speaker APeople should have.
Speaker AAll LGBTQ plus people should have.
Speaker ASo naming that like.
Speaker AAnd I say we said this before we started recording.
Speaker AI said, I feel so much better that my son lives in New York City because I know he's safe.
Speaker AWhich to most parents wouldn't just say that sentence, right?
Speaker ABut I happen to know he lives in a neighborhood and that they, you know, he can walk around and people don't think twice about it.
Speaker AGosh, that makes me feel so safe.
Speaker ASo being.
Speaker AThat's just like, the extra layers, like you said, the things that parents think of, right?
Speaker ALike, is my child going to be safe?
Speaker ACan they go to a school that's in the South?
Speaker ACan they?
Speaker AYou know, what friends will they have?
Speaker AThis is a big conversation in my house.
Speaker AYou know, where are we going to college and.
Speaker AWhich you will have soon, too.
Speaker AAnd it is.
Speaker ASo I appreciate you breaking that down so very clearly.
Speaker AThank you so much.
Speaker AThat's very, very helpful.
Speaker ALet's talk a little bit about pronouns.
Speaker AJeannie.
Speaker AI think that, you know, I know the savvy Ally does such a phenomenal job, and it's part of your email signature and all of the things.
Speaker ABut I'd like to talk a little bit about that, because, like, being transgender, that seems to be something that a certain group of people have kind of glommed on to as their favorite hot button topic, as are pronouns.
Speaker ASo let's talk about why they're important, why we still march forward and we use them, we respect them, and then we understand them.
Speaker ASure.
Speaker CI love talking about pronouns.
Speaker CI'd love to start the conversation of pronouns with Abby Wambach.
Speaker CDo we know the superstar Abby Wambach, the.
Speaker CThe soccer star?
Speaker AYes.
Speaker CInterestingly, when I do my workshops, I like to start by throwing out the idea, the.
Speaker CThe notion that there are plenty of transgender people who move through the world, and the correct pronoun is always used for them.
Speaker CLaverne Cox, for example, she.
Speaker CPeople look at her.
Speaker CThey're like, she.
Speaker CPeople get that, right?
Speaker CAbby Wambach, who's not transgender, she says gender, has talked publicly about how she is often misgendered in public.
Speaker CSo she's very tall, she's got broad shoulders, she's got short hair, and people refer, you know, sir, you're in the wrong restroom.
Speaker CThey say he instead of she.
Speaker CShe's not transgender, and she's absolutely affected by people using the wrong pronouns.
Speaker CSo the reason I like to start this way for our audience listening in today and in my workshops is I really dislike it when pronouns get framed as, you know, a transgender issue.
Speaker CThis is a trans.
Speaker CAlmost as this.
Speaker CAlmost as if it's like pronouns didn't exist before transgender people made it a thing.
Speaker CPronouns are important for every single one of us, and those of us who are have the privilege of being oblivious to that fact are oblivious because we move to the world, and the correct pronoun is used for us.
Speaker CSo it becomes really, really easy to forget about, like, how important they are.
Speaker CBut one of the most respectful things that you can do for a person is use their correct name and pronoun.
Speaker CAnd for most of us, that's easy peasy, because people, you know, again, they guessed correctly.
Speaker CBut as I said, it's not just a transgender issue.
Speaker CIt's a human issue.
Speaker CIt's really just about, you know, rather than having to guess what someone's pronoun is actually asking them or.
Speaker COr hopefully seeing that on a tag, so you're making sure you're using the correct pronouns.
Speaker CSo with that said, I do want to talk about what a lovely ally action it is to share your pronouns if you feel comfortable.
Speaker CI think pronoun sharing should absolutely be optional.
Speaker CI always say it's an opportunity to show your pronouns if you'd like to dislike it.
Speaker CWhen I sign up for a conference and they've got like a mandatory space for pronouns, I don't think we should be forcing anyone to share their pronouns, but I think it should always be there as an option.
Speaker CAnd speaking of a conference, I'll just give you an example of how beautiful this action is as an ally.
Speaker CImagine a conference where the only people who are wearing pronouns on their name badges are the ones whose pronouns aren't obvious.
Speaker CTalk about othering, right?
Speaker CThey're the only people walking around with this big old pronoun badge.
Speaker BLike, that's just weird, right?
Speaker CWell, the way we make it not weird is if everyone walks around with their pronouns on their name tags.
Speaker CSo every single time an ally, you know, takes a pronoun pin or puts their pronoun on their name tag, even if it's obvious, which is my case, I'm helping to create a, an environment where this just becomes sort of the regular thing to do.
Speaker CI'm creating a culture where this becomes again, here comes this word normalized using it.
Speaker CBut like, what a beautiful thing to do, right?
Speaker CI'm just sort of, again, taking some of that weight off there, off of people's shoulders.
Speaker CAnd so, and I just think, so sharing pronouns in your email signature on, again, a pin or on your name badge, it just makes it so much easier and so much safer for others who really have to share their pronoun in order for people to get it right.
Speaker CSo I just think it's a wonderful ally action.
Speaker AI completely agree.
Speaker AAnd I wonder if you could share just a little.
Speaker AWhat would you, what advice would you give to someone who really wants to be able to do that, to be that ally?
Speaker AAnd whether it's putting their pronouns on a name badger in their email signature on their zoom name, right?
Speaker ABut they're.
Speaker AThey're nervous.
Speaker AThey're afraid to offend.
Speaker AThey're afraid, like, they're in that.
Speaker AI feel like so many people have come to me and they're like, I'm just scared.
Speaker AI'm scared I'm going to say the wrong thing or I'm scared I'm going to do the wrong thing.
Speaker AWhat would be your advice to that person?
Speaker CI love to, I love to educate with stories.
Speaker CKind of what Jaina was talking about.
Speaker CLike, stories really, they.
Speaker CThey touch hearts and minds, right?
Speaker CThey make it human.
Speaker CAnd so I like to share a story that I heard in one of my workshops, which was so impactful to me there.
Speaker CI'm going to use the name Ari.
Speaker CThis wasn't the person's actual name, but this.
Speaker CThis individual in my workshop named Ari.
Speaker CPronouns.
Speaker CThey.
Speaker CThem started a new job, and there was no opportunity, no easy way for.
Speaker CFor them to share their pronouns, right?
Speaker CSo first meeting, there wasn't a hey, let's share our name and our title.
Speaker CAnd, you know, if you feel comfortable, your pronouns, there was no form that said, hey, if you' to share, no opportunity.
Speaker CSo they didn't share their pronouns because they weren't feeling super safe about that.
Speaker CThey weren't sure they could, or if people would even accept the fact that their pronoun, their pronoun was they.
Speaker CEverybody just looked at their appearance and guessed and assumed that their pronoun was she and started using the pronoun she.
Speaker CAnd this went on for weeks.
Speaker CSo here's AI in a new job, feeling very vulnerable.
Speaker CEveryone's using the wrong pronoun for them.
Speaker CAnd eventually what they decided to do was they noticed that several of their co workers had shared their pronouns in their email signatures.
Speaker CSo they're getting emails back from some coworkers, and there's their pronoun.
Speaker CAnd Ari was like, wow, this.
Speaker CThese are my people, right?
Speaker CThese are either they're part of the LGBTQ + communities themselves or they're allies to the community.
Speaker CThese are the folks who can help me.
Speaker CAnd Ari went to those people who had shared.
Speaker CThat's all they did was they just shared their.
Speaker CTheir.
Speaker CTheir pronouns and their email signature told these folks what was going on, you know, and these allies bonded together, helped Arie, helped let people know what Aries pronouns were, helped others get it right, and also started to implement systems in the workplace to prevent what happened to Ari.
Speaker CLike, make it really easy for people to share their pronouns when they first enter that job.
Speaker CAnd so when I think about people saying, like, well, I don't want to share my pronouns, I feel like it's virtue signaling, or I might get some pushback.
Speaker BLike, you might.
Speaker CAnd people might say, it's virtue signaling.
Speaker CIt's actually ally signaling.
Speaker CAnd so, you know, I think those stories, I'm not going to say, like, you're not going to get pushback.
Speaker CI think those stories really help us understand how critical a move like that is.
Speaker CAnd it's not a big thing.
Speaker CIt's a little thing, adding your pronouns, but it can be.
Speaker CIt can mean the world to someone like Ari, who was in a setting that felt very, very unsafe.
Speaker BMay I share another pronoun?
Speaker BStory?
Speaker AYes, please.
Speaker BI Sometimes it's not even about.
Speaker BI have found that it's not even about sharing your own pronouns.
Speaker BThere are still other ways to show allyship.
Speaker BFor example, I happen to be on the admissions team for university's business school and I speak to candidates every day.
Speaker BCandidates who are nervous, they're applying to get into business school, they want tips, they're excited, they're scared, nervous sided, if you will, because they want to get in.
Speaker BAnd when they say, hey Kate, do you have any tips?
Speaker BAnd one of them I say, listen, we won't read an application until everything's there.
Speaker BSo when it comes to that recommendation, the recommendation isn't in.
Speaker BWe'll wait until it gets in and then you'll be at the bottom of the pile.
Speaker BSo when you think about who you want your recommender to be, be sure to get it to him or her or them as quickly as you can so that everything's in there all at one time.
Speaker BAnd I remember early on someone said to me at the end of our conversation, hey Kate, I just want you to know that you said he, she, or they or him her, them in the beginning of our conversation.
Speaker BAnd I really appreciated that that meant something to me.
Speaker BAnd when I, and, and I'm, I'm getting chills saying that story because it was, it was a little thing I thought, and it meant, it was a signal to the person on the other, on the other side of the phone that, wow, this could be a safe.
Speaker BI didn't tell the person what my pronouns were, but when I, and now, and initially, and I used to joke about this in my book, they used to be really hard for me.
Speaker BThey is going to the bathroom.
Speaker BThey are going to the bathroom.
Speaker BHa ha.
Speaker BAnd now it's easy for me because I practice and that's one of the things Jeannie, you said to do in your book is practice.
Speaker BAnd now he, she, they rolls off the tip of my tongue.
Speaker BI have friends who identify as they.
Speaker BIt rolls off the tip of my tongue.
Speaker BSo even an email signature is awesome.
Speaker BJeannie, I love that.
Speaker BI love your story of the friend in the workplace.
Speaker BAnd just using it in speech can signal to.
Speaker AAbsolutely, absolutely.
Speaker AThat's so, so powerful.
Speaker AThank you, thank you so much for sharing those stories.
Speaker AI would like to now shift to something that we were all talking about again before we started recording, which is the next three months and the upcoming election.
Speaker AAnd we were sharing some, some nervousness and some anxiety and some, and just a little bit about how we're feeling about it.
Speaker AAnd I would love to have a little bit of a deeper conversation about it and have you each kind of share whether you have some great tips for actions that we can take these next three months or if you have a tip for something, if you're just feeling so incredibly anxious about this and you can't even function or you're having a hard time functioning, if you have a tip for that, I think people really would appreciate all of these pieces.
Speaker ASo I'll just.
Speaker AI'll let you kind of take it and.
Speaker AAnd run with it.
Speaker CI don't mind starting.
Speaker CIs that okay?
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CSo I actually am less anxious than I have been in a long, long time with the news that Kamala Harris is running.
Speaker CI am, like, amazingly energized.
Speaker BI am so excited.
Speaker CSo I'm going to let the other folks chime in if they've got some tips for anxiety.
Speaker CI am feeling so energized.
Speaker CAnd so I want to be a part of this.
Speaker CI want to do everything I can to motivate people to get out and vote.
Speaker CAnd so what I did was I immediately went to kamalaharris.com and if anyone's interested in learning how they can take action, they've got a take action button.
Speaker CAnd I kind of browse that.
Speaker CAnd I have to say, like, nothing kind of fit for me.
Speaker CLike, I was like, oh, maybe I can call people on the phone.
Speaker CAnd for me, that didn't feel like a good fit.
Speaker CBut I kept poking around and I found.
Speaker CBut that may fit for some folks, so I know you're going to include that link.
Speaker CBut I kept poking around and I found a site called turnout.org and post/ postcards.
Speaker CAnd what they're doing is this is right up my alley.
Speaker CYou can sign up to get a pack of postcards.
Speaker CI ordered 300.
Speaker CI'm going to throw a postcard party here at my house.
Speaker CAnd what it is, is you're basically, they're.
Speaker CThey're sending you 300 names and addresses of folks who are registered Democrats who are in the swing states, and you're basically filling out handwritten postcards saying, please vote.
Speaker CIt's so important.
Speaker CYou live in a state.
Speaker CPlease vote.
Speaker CAnd what they're finding is that this is an enormously effective way to get people out to vote is if they get a handwritten card from someone in the mail.
Speaker CAnd so that's what I'm doing.
Speaker CAnd I'm very excited.
Speaker CI'm getting my pack in a couple weeks.
Speaker CAnd as I said, I'm going to Have a party.
Speaker CAnd I'm going to have the party early enough that if we don't get all postcards done, then I'm just doing like 10 a day every night, you know, in front of Netflix or whatever.
Speaker CBut that just felt really empowering for me and it felt like a good fit for me because I'm kind of crafty anyway, so I'll figure, you know, I'll sticker it up and do stuff like that.
Speaker CBut I am, I'm just so, so, so excited.
Speaker CAnd I just want to say that one of my bucket list items, although I don't know if it can be a bucket list if you actually have no control over it.
Speaker CWell, I have some control over it.
Speaker COne of my bucket list items is I want to be alive to see the first woman president in the United States.
Speaker CAnd that the idea of it being a woman of color is just like a little bonus.
Speaker CSo that's what I have to say.
Speaker ALove it.
Speaker AI love it.
Speaker ALove it.
Speaker AThank you.
Speaker AThose are.
Speaker AThat's one I did not know of.
Speaker ASo that is not only going in the show notes, it is going on my website.
Speaker CSo that is amazing.
Speaker AOh, my goodness, Kate.
Speaker BSo I've given this a lot of thought and like Eugenie, in the past week, my anxiety level has just absolutely plummeted.
Speaker BAnd I could not be more ecstatic to be supporting the Kamala Harris ticket.
Speaker BAnd I've been kind of racking my brain.
Speaker BI've been on the website, I've been on some Kamala calls or team, team calls.
Speaker BAnd I think what I came up with, for me, I mean, freedom really is on the ballot in so many ways.
Speaker BThat's what Kamala says.
Speaker BAnd it, and it truly is, and particularly for the trans community, it is.
Speaker BAnd I hate to be a downer, but Trump literally said, quote, on day one, I will revoke Joe Biden's cruel policies on so called gender affirming care.
Speaker BThat's what he said in a video more than a year ago.
Speaker BAnd I kind of, when somebody says something, I think you should believe them.
Speaker BSo I'm taking the orange man at his word.
Speaker BI'm trying with all of my heart to talk, to write, to get the word out that way and to try to.
Speaker BI was thinking about this earlier.
Speaker BI write articles from time to time and I really just am going to spread the word and keep talking about the importance of the election, hopefully being able to do something that resonates in those swing states.
Speaker BAnd I don't know that that will be the most effective way but my mouth and my words are usually my go to and I like to believe that human beings are in apparently nice and kind and that if people understand what the stakes are on a personal level, enough people, even if it's just a few, will able be able to put us over the top.
Speaker BCould be very idealistic.
Speaker BAnd I think I'm also going to do a postcard party now that I've heard about it.
Speaker AJeanne I know.
Speaker AOh that's so great.
Speaker AWell, I think you hit on something there too, which is play to your strengths.
Speaker ALike what are you good at?
Speaker AWhat do you what sounds like really fun or really interesting that you can do.
Speaker AThere's something out there that'll help you be part of this.
Speaker AWhich, you know, I think too when you are taking action and doing that in and of itself helps to bring the anxiety down.
Speaker ASo that's a big, a big thing.
Speaker AJayna, I'd love to hear what you your thoughts on this.
Speaker DThe, the postcard.
Speaker DSo what as far as the these practical steps, I have read enough reports in various places that I believe were trustworthy that the postcard writing is among the most effective things you can do.
Speaker DAnother thing that I believe is extremely effective, there's the former secretary, I don't know how well known his name is, the former secretary of labor for Bill Clinton.
Speaker DRobert Reich has an organization, he has his own blog and so on.
Speaker DHe's been until this year, professor of economics at UC Berkeley.
Speaker DBut he has a blog and he has a group called Media Matters which is run by a woman named Heather, Heather Lofgren.
Speaker DI think they do videos.
Speaker DReich is very good at doing these little, you know, like drawing type, you know, videos where he illustrates in simple graphics, you know, what he's talking about.
Speaker DHe's a very good speaker and he can get it into about five minutes.
Speaker DI think these are typically five to maybe 10 minutes.
Speaker DAnd he claims, and I mean this is somebody who, it doesn't, you know, traffic exaggerations and lies that, that these videos are among the most effective in moving people, the voters who, who, who are brought together to see them of, of any type of conversation, like 10 to 15 percentage points of swings and so on.
Speaker DSo I believe of all the places that one might support that's that's the one I would, I would do so so that's my encouraging idea.
Speaker DNow the I, I just, I'm sorry, I cannot not say this.
Speaker DIf Trump loses, he is not going to try.
Speaker DHe is not going to go away.
Speaker DHe is not going to go away without Violence.
Speaker DAnd I believe.
Speaker DI don't know what the right answer is, and I'm sorry to say this, but people who have guns legally are going to have to fight, stand up against those who don't have them legally or who have them.
Speaker DWhen I say legally, basically, I mean, you know, the FBI and the military have got to be on our side, otherwise it doesn't matter what we vote.
Speaker DThat's my opinion.
Speaker ADon't apologize.
Speaker ADon't apologize.
Speaker ABecause that is something that is very real.
Speaker AAnd, and I think just from seeing, watching what's happened in the past four years is very true.
Speaker ASo I think it's while good to be energized and feeling some hope, it's also good to hold that piece as well, because he has not only shown us who he is, he has told us and he is telling us even more.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAs the days go on, it's extraordinary the things that he's actually telling us, if people would really take it seriously.
Speaker ASo thank you for bringing that up.
Speaker AAnd I think that is something that is good to be aware of and hold is.
Speaker AIt's both.
Speaker DAnd I want to say one more thing about the candidates, and I think so.
Speaker DTwo weeks, roughly two weeks ago, I went to a workshop for two days on interracial sisterhood.
Speaker DSo this was a group of about 15 black women and, well, people of color.
Speaker DWomen of color, mostly blacks, Latin, Latina, Latina and, and one of Asian origin and then the other is white.
Speaker DAnd it was an opportunity to be frank, open and respectful.
Speaker DAnd, you know, so the frank part got intense at times, which is really very valuable.
Speaker DSo I won't go into all of the details of that, but I got to talk with more black women than I've ever seen in, you know, a long time, because in my isolated place, I don't see.
Speaker DSee them very often.
Speaker DAnd some of these very forceful, energetic, I mean, women with a lot of accomplishment, they didn't believe this was before the announcement of, of Biden's withdrawal.
Speaker DThey didn't believe that a black woman could be successful in, in winning the presidency.
Speaker DSo my point about saying it is just that I honestly think this is almost better than anything else.
Speaker DI mean, let's like, let's put this country to the test and let's see what you can do.
Speaker DSo, yeah, I, I am on that.
Speaker DI'm hopeful.
Speaker DI think we need to capitalize on this.
Speaker DIt's like, yes, this is your time.
Speaker BSo if I might add, Heather.
Speaker ASure.
Speaker BYes, I'm excited and I'm hopeful.
Speaker BBut even Prior to this, since we are talking in, in many ways about parenting our LGBTQ teens, I have let my daughter know because she's scared.
Speaker BIf Trump gets in office, am I gonna again, am I gonna be able to have an operation?
Speaker BAm I gonna be able to get my gender affirmation surgery?
Speaker BIs everything going to go words?
Speaker BShe has anxiety as well, and as her mother, I try not to project my anxiety.
Speaker BI'm honest with her and what I have told her I was.
Speaker BAnd I think I can.
Speaker BI do believe this.
Speaker BIt will be okay.
Speaker BI said, sweetheart, it will be okay.
Speaker BRegardless of who wins, you will be okay.
Speaker BIt will be okay.
Speaker BAnd dad and I will make sure you're okay.
Speaker BNow, the particulars of that, how are we going to do that, I have no idea, and I believe it.
Speaker BAnd I think that LGBTQ teen population needs to know that whatever happens, we are there for them.
Speaker BAnd that's a little bit, I think, assuaged some of my daughter's concerns.
Speaker BAgain, how are you going to back this up, Kate?
Speaker BI have no idea.
Speaker BIf I have to hug her for four years, I will.
Speaker BAnd I do believe it.
Speaker BI do believe no matter what happens, we all will still be there for our kids.
Speaker BWe have to be there for them.
Speaker BAnd I think it's important that they know that at the end of the day, we got your back.
Speaker BYou will be.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker AThank you for saying that, because that is very powerful.
Speaker AAnd I think it's a also a good reminder to parents that even when we're feeling all the feelings, that it is important to hold fold both.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo we can feel all the feelings.
Speaker AAnd that's true.
Speaker ABut we can also say to our kids, it we've got you.
Speaker AAnd both of those are a thousand percent accurate.
Speaker ASo thank you for sharing that.
Speaker AI'd like to just wrap up with each of you sharing some very specific tips on action tips or strategies that are very specific to you and the work that you're doing in the world.
Speaker ASo, Jayna, I'd love to start with you and just hear some tips as from a transgender woman.
Speaker AWhat are actions that others can take and strategies that you have found to be helpful?
Speaker DSo thank you.
Speaker DYeah.
Speaker DSo in.
Speaker DIn.
Speaker DIn my position in life at this point, I'm.
Speaker DI'm not really like implementing strategies in the way that some other people.
Speaker DBut this is what I can say about what I think is.
Speaker DIs perhaps I would like to see.
Speaker DIt would be wonderful if the dialogue about why you have gender affirming care could be changed from the best that the positive side that the affirmative side seems to be able to present in political discussions is it prevents suicide.
Speaker DPreventing suicide strikes me as a rather low bar for a social policy.
Speaker DIs that the highest goal we can ach.
Speaker DThink about?
Speaker DAnd improving or improvements or degradations of mental health doesn't strike me as much better.
Speaker DYou know, I was like, that's great.
Speaker DWe should have better mental health.
Speaker DI mean, but is.
Speaker DIs that the only reason that we care about affirming transgender people?
Speaker DHow about allowing transgender children to become prize winning scientists or journalists or actors, or even just retire from their factory job with accolades for mentoring and leading the safest team and have a sense that they'd had the chance to accomplish all that they were able to in life?
Speaker DBecause none of this is likely to happen to a person when you can't live your true self.
Speaker AKate, what would you like to add?
Speaker BThat's a tough act to follow.
Speaker BIt is to parents, to my fellow parents out there of trans kids, it really goes back to me.
Speaker BIt goes back to.
Speaker BAcceptance is protection.
Speaker BAccept your kid, affirm your child, love your child, hopefully respect your child.
Speaker BAnd when someone tells you who they are, believe them.
Speaker BKids can know.
Speaker BA child can know they're transgender.
Speaker BIt can take them until an adult can realize they're transgender.
Speaker BBut when someone says that a kid isn't old enough to know, studies indicate otherwise.
Speaker BAround 2, kids start to have be conscious of physical differences between boys and girls.
Speaker BBefore their third birthday.
Speaker BMost kids can identify themselves as either a boy or a girl.
Speaker BAnd by age 4, most kids, not all seem to have a stable sense of their gender identity.
Speaker BSo believe your child.
Speaker BIf your child says am this, believe them.
Speaker BThank them for sharing with you.
Speaker BLet them know that, wow, that's a brave thing.
Speaker BYou're telling.
Speaker BYou're brave.
Speaker BThank you for sharing.
Speaker BSo just affirm your kid.
Speaker BIt doesn't mean that you're running to a doctor in the first five minutes.
Speaker BIt doesn't mean not every trans person wants surgery.
Speaker BIt just means affirm your child.
Speaker BLet them know that you love them and that sharing this big thing with.
Speaker BWith you is.
Speaker BWhat a gift.
Speaker AThank you.
Speaker CYeah, I want to play off that before I add some of my more practical tips.
Speaker CI 100% agree with what all of you said.
Speaker CI think Jana should have gone last because that was like, okay, that.
Speaker CLet's just wrap that up.
Speaker CMaybe you can rearrange that when you create the.
Speaker AI know.
Speaker CI was just thinking, how do we follow that act?
Speaker ACut and paste, right?
Speaker BYes.
Speaker CTo follow up on what Kate said I think I hear so often from parents, you know, I just feel like this is just a phase.
Speaker CYou know, it's, it's the, it's the, it's the hip thing to do to say you're non binary, for example, and I don't think it's going to stick.
Speaker CAnd, you know, I just, I always say, like, okay, it, maybe it is a phase.
Speaker CLike, let's be real.
Speaker CIt could absolutely be a phase.
Speaker CThat's what adolescence is all about, is kids, like, trying stuff out and how beautiful that we've created a world which didn't exist when I was a teenager, where we actually can kind of figure stuff out for ourselves, right?
Speaker CAnd maybe it won't stick, but the fact is, you know, whether it's a phase or not, it's that child's reality right now.
Speaker CAnd just a hundred percent, like, just be there with them.
Speaker CYou don't need to ask them if it's a phase.
Speaker CYou know, even if you think, well, this might not be the identity that they're going to have in 20 years, fine.
Speaker CIt's who they are right now.
Speaker CAnd so respect that.
Speaker CAnd, you know, don't automatically go to that, like, oh, it's just because I'll.
Speaker CWhat the kids are doing.
Speaker CJust listen to them and accept who they are and realize that it may stick and it may not.
Speaker CAnd exactly what Kate said.
Speaker CThis doesn't mean that next week you're going to be taking them to the surgeon.
Speaker CYou know, it's like they're, they're figuring it out.
Speaker CAnd giving them the space to do that is beautiful.
Speaker CBut I'm, I'm a, I'm a practical person.
Speaker CI'm always like, practical tips.
Speaker CSo I'm going to end with some practical tips for folks.
Speaker CAnd these are just really common tips that I think help most of the people I talk with.
Speaker CThe one I just talked about, like, maybe it's a phase.
Speaker CThe switch IT technique.
Speaker CI think implementing the switch IT technique is fantastic.
Speaker CWhich means basically, you know, replace the, in this case, transgender identity with a cisgender person and ask yourself, like, is this okay to ask or would this question fly?
Speaker CWould I ever ask this is gender person this question, you know, so would you ever ask your cisgender child, like, are you sure you're cisgender?
Speaker CMaybe it's just a phase.
Speaker CLike, never in a million years would we ask that.
Speaker CAnd the switch IT technique helps us understand that maybe that's going to be a little ouchy to ask our, our trans or our non binary child that so the switch it technique is a great like self coaching tip that I'm always pulling out for myself and it helps to also educate others.
Speaker CThe other one I just want to share, Kate also touched on it earlier was practice.
Speaker CI'm sorry, Jaina, I can't remember who it was someone mentioned practicing.
Speaker CAnd this one I think is huge.
Speaker CYou know, the idea that we could switch pronouns or names with a child who has been a certain name and pronoun for their entire life up until this moment and all of a sudden now we've got to be using a new name and pronoun.
Speaker CAnd your child, you know, may or may not be super.
Speaker CYou know, some kids are very patient and others are just like, you need to get it right this second and that's really hard.
Speaker CAnd so be kind to yourself while you are working on it.
Speaker CAnd a great way to do it is, you know, the, the way the memory retention is very interesting.
Speaker CYou know, when, when a human's first learn things, they can recall it very quickly right away, you know, within a couple minutes, but you know, a day later it's, it's like gone unless you practice it.
Speaker CAnd so the same is true with pronouns.
Speaker CSo I would say find ways, everyday things that will remind you to practice that pronoun.
Speaker CSo if your child, for example, is using the pronoun they and you're really struggling with that, you know, you walk in their room and you're like, oh my gosh, they're, they're such a slob.
Speaker CTheir room is so messy.
Speaker CI'm going to make sure they clean it up when they get home.
Speaker CYou know, and if you're not doing that in your head, if you're back to like, oh, her room is.
Speaker COh, I meant their room is so messy.
Speaker CYou can do that all day long because you're thinking about your kids, you're seeing things that remind you your kids just do that in your head using the correct pronoun so that you can practice, practice, practice, practice.
Speaker CAnd you're way more likely to get it right when you're right in front of your child and way more likely to cause events.
Speaker CSo those are just a few like practical tips to take away.
Speaker ALove it.
Speaker ASo, so helpful.
Speaker AAnd that is one of, you know, has been one of my favorite things about, about your book.
Speaker AAnd I think it was in your book just kind of adding on to that one where you talked about, maybe it was somebody else as well that shared this with me, that they used their dog to help them.
Speaker ASo they changed the pronouns of their dog and just refer to their dog by new pronouns.
Speaker AAnd that's how they practiced.
Speaker CAnd I was like, my cat, Carlos.
Speaker CI practiced on Carlos, and Carlos did not seem to mind, did not care what pronoun I used as long as I fed him on time.
Speaker CYes, I practiced singular they on Carlos for.
Speaker CFor a while, and I got incredibly good at it.
Speaker CAnd if you don't have a pet, you can do it with.
Speaker CWith animals you see outside.
Speaker CI mean, you don't know the gender of a squirrel.
Speaker CSo while you're walking around the streets, you know, drinking your coffee, you can be like, you know, oh, look at that cute squirrel.
Speaker CThey're carrying a nut.
Speaker BYou know, use.
Speaker CUse they for the squirrel.
Speaker CLike, it's just.
Speaker CIt's so easy.
Speaker CThere's so many ways to practice that.
Speaker CIt is.
Speaker CIt is.
Speaker AAnd it takes that.
Speaker AThat just that difficulty right out of it.
Speaker ASo thank you so much for sharing those.
Speaker AThank you all so much for sharing your wisdom and your sharing so vulnerably all of these.
Speaker AAll of the tips, all of the thoughts, all of the wisdom.
Speaker AAnd I. I'm just grateful.
Speaker AGrateful to be a part of it.
Speaker ASo thank you for asking me to moderate this lovely conversation.
Speaker AI cannot wait for.
Speaker AWell, now everybody will be listening to it.
Speaker ASo as you get to this part, you're gonna be like, what are you waiting for, Heather?
Speaker ABut I. I am delighted to put this out into the world and just delighted to know all of you.
Speaker AThis was such a treat.
Speaker ASo thank you.
Speaker AThank you so much for being here.
Speaker CThank you.
Speaker DThank you for having us.
Speaker DThank you.