“Lauren” is a 32-year-old lesbian who has moved with ease across the gender spectrum over the course of her lifetime. Lauren offers a positive story about how being gender non-normative and having a complicated gender experience can be a pleasant and interesting experience. Cautioning against the heavy and urgent discussions about medicalizing gender expression, Lauren wonders if we can become more playful and even joyful about gender?
Links:
Lauren’s Blog: Theanxiousskeptic.wordpress.com/
Extended Notes
- A little bit about Lauren and her experience with gender.
- The way our society is handling trans children is completely different from when Lauren grew up.
- Lauren feels a bit betrayed by the LGBTQ community.
- What was Lauren’s childhood like?
- How did Lauren’s family deal with her and her older sister’s masculine gender?
- Can you be gay and Mormon?
- Lauren was always the good child and her older sister was the problem masculine child. So it threw everyone for a loop when they found out Lauren was a lesbian, and not her sister.
- When Lauren dressed in drag, she felt much more comfortable in her own body.
- Men’s clothing was just easier to understand and when Lauren took on a more butch persona, it was a lot easier for her to date.
- Lauren was a butch lesbian for about 10 years before switching back to a more “feminine” look.
- In Lauren’s mind, being butch is almost like a third gender.
- At one point, Lauren identified as trans.
- The trans community has really affected the way lesbians see themselves. Lauren knows several people in same-sex relationships who have identified as trans at one point in time in her friend group.
- When it came to having children, how did Lauren and her wife decide who should have a child?
- A lot of Lauren’s friends who were butch were transitioning, either to a more feminine persona or trans. And she felt like she could not grieve this sense of loss. She just had to be happy for her friends.
- When random people were shouting slurs at Lauren and her wife, it only really started to bother her as she got older and was going to become a parent.
- What’s it like being a mother?
- Eleven-year-olds are being asked if they want to preserve their fertility. It’s crazy.
- Lauren has gone through many different gender identities and went on to have children. She gets fired up and passionate when young children are forced to “choose.”
- We have to think about the long-term well-being of children and teenagers first. Not our politics.
- Can we be more playful with our gender? Why do we have to always pick a side?
This podcast is partially sponsored by ReIME, Rethink Identity Medicine Ethics:
Rethinkime.org
Learn more about our show: Linktr.ee/WiderLensPod
This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.widerlenspod.com/subscribe