little jess.

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summer, must you bring with you such dysphoria? i would like to walk around shirtless, too.

    • #trangst
    • #this only happens in the summer
    • #why even
  • 5 days ago
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yesterday we all had to wear pink shirts to work for some employee appreciation day thing. (note: i feel like a better way to appreciate employees is by giving them a day off, but whatevs…)

yesterday, three people commented, “omg jess is wearing pink!”

today… it is not even 9:30am, and already someone has remarked, “no pink today? haha!”

so now i’m all like,


basically y’all think i’m a dyke (lies, fairytales, and fallacies) and therefore i am “like a dude” and therefore must completely despise the color pink, amirite? sick binary, bro!

    • #trangst
    • #when work gets overwhelming remember you are going to die
  • 2 weeks ago
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soooo this just happened…
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soooo this just happened…

    • #i hate facebook
    • #trangst
  • 3 weeks ago
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i am so sick of reading these “why do trans people hate cis people?” posts. it’s like, motherfuckers, we don’t. just cis scum. cissexist, transphobic, cis. fucking. scum. but you go on ahead and keep justifying the othering of the trans community by downplaying the necessity of the word “cisgender” and the necessity to call out cis privilege. go ahead and keep shifting the responsibility of visibility (and of safety) back solely onto trans people, and never holding cis folks accountable for checking themselves - because, heaven forbid, they should be offended by the word “cisgender.” go on and keep making excuses for these cis people. go on and keep telling trans people to be a little “nicer”, to be a little more “trusting”, to be a little more “lenient.” go on, go ahead, and thanks for nothing.

    • #trangst
    • #own yr cis privilege
    • #facepalm
    • #tumblr i can't with you today
  • 3 weeks ago
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when i was about 7 or 8 years old, i was playing in my neighbor’s backyard, and he went to pee behind a bush. i also had to pee, so i went after him. his dad came outside, yelled at me, and brought me home. he told my parents what i’d done, and i remember my dad sort of scolding me for it, but halfheartedly, like he was bullied into doing it. i cried because i didn’t understand why i was in trouble.

    • #baby jess
    • #gender memories
    • #trangst
    • #little little jess
    • #growing up trans
  • 1 month ago
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dear friends: THEY or GTFO! (or: going public as not putting up with shit anymore)

(inspired by the spot-on article, dear diary: am i genderqueer enough?)

i need to talk about preferred gender pronouns (PGPs) - specifically, mine. not only because i am approaching the one-year mark of being publicly they, but largely because i still have folks in my life that i am constantly correcting for misgendering me, and… i am just about over it.

as mentioned, i have been identifying as they for almost a year now to my friends and a few members of my family. so many people have been 100% supportive and awesome! props to them! but there are a handful of folks very dear to me that just keep she/her-ing me on the regular. i can attribute these perma-fuckups to two possible things going on:

1) you think of me as female.
2) you really don’t care.

so, up until very recently, i was finding myself carrying around a lot of guilt whenever i called out a friend for misgendering me, as i felt like i should “cut them slack” because of our friendship. however, this entire thought process was blown up last week when i was home in rochester for a visit. my friend’s five year-old, anouk, corrected herself for misgendering me after being told my PGP once, and used they with no problem afterwards.

anouk didn’t have a problem using my PGP or correcting herself when she misused it, because to her, this is just a thing about me that she knows, and something she believed without question. “just like you are she, and that person is he, little jess is they” and that was it. (in a perfect world, everyone in my life would just take my PGP at face-value, like my eye color - or even my queer identity, which no one i know has any problems with(!!))

a trend that has been extremely pervasive among some of my peers: the defense of “being used to” binary pronouns and therefore not using mine. no! that is not a thing, because of reasons: you have been used to a lot of things in your life that have changed. look how you adjusted to those changes! here’s a fucking cookie. no, i lied. but here are examples:

1) your friend tells you that they really want to start working out, but they suck at sticking to it and want your help: you are a good friend and remind them, or maybe you even go to the gym with them, etc.
2) your friend makes an important life choice, like not drinking anymore: you are a good friend and don’t ask them to go to the bar all the time, and you don’t get drunk around them.
3) your friend is sad about a breakup and doesn’t want to talk about it right now: you are a good friend and consciously do not bring it up with them until they are ready to talk.

while all obviously unique scenarios, all of these involve basic processing, awareness, and human empathy. PGPs are absolutely no different: when someone you love asks you to respect something about their identity, you fucking DO IT.

okay, so you are a cisgender person with a transgender friend that you just can’t seem to stop misgendering. what now?! how about actually sitting down for more than a few seconds and processing why it’s so difficult to think outside a binary. ahh, you’ve found that you actually don’t know too much about trans* people, right? how about, then, instead of brushing it off and continuing to make someone you love totes uncomfortable all the time, you ask your trans* friend some stuff! find out about trans* people! read about pronouns! you already know gender binaries are fucked up, you’re halfway there!! …seriously, i’d be so happy if people just wanted to know, and asked questions, instead of acting like they give no fucks, over-apologizing all the time, and never changing their behavior.

another helpful thing for allies to do is staying consistent with pronouns. as in, when you talk about me when i’m not there, use my PGP. when you think about me (wink, wink… no, j/k. creeps!) use my PGP. that way, when you’re addressing me directly, you’ll use my PGP! it really works! try it today for free.

and finally, my nearest and dearest friends, don’t do it “for” me just because i am your friend. i guarantee you, this mindset will only fail you, though your heart is in a good place. besides, i am not the only trans* person you will know in your life. PGPs are something that many cisgender folks have the privilege of not having to take seriously, and that needs to be called out, so check yourself when you get called out, and call other people out on their shit! remember that asking (not assuming!) PGPs, and respecting them - mine and everyone else’s - is benefiting a lot of people. 


with love and respect,

little jess (they, them, their/s)

    • #pronouns
    • #trangst
    • #REALLY IMPORTANT THINGS
    • #gender
  • 1 month ago
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a call for constructive suggestions: navigating trans*phobic spaces.

okay, tumblr queers/trans*folks/allies/et al…

the short version of my situation is this: i am working in a trans*phobic space and do not have the privilege to just leave it/quit my job. besides that, i like what i do and feel there is potential for teaching/learning experiences among staff. i will not cite specific incidences here, but if you read back, i allude to many in #microaggression posts. more than once, i have left work feeling angry, frustrated, invisible, and saddened as a direct result of these occurrences. i have not figured out a “perfect” way to deal with this, other than to suggest that i lead a trans*101 type training with my co-workers. but doing this makes me feel tokenized, and pressured to represent a community. it also brings up more hostile feelings, as i am frustrated that so many folks do not take initiative to check privilege and learn for themselves, and instead just wait for some trans*person to act as a mouthpiece…

therefore, i ask of you all: what is the most effective course of action to make this a more affirming space without feeling tokenized by others as “the cute little queer one” or “the trans* person” …and without feeling as though i have contributed to said tokenization by sort of “offering myself up” as what can be easily misconstrued as a person who speaks for an entire community (which i obviously do not.) …?


how do we navigate uncomfortable, emotionally unsafe, cissexist spaces that we are, for lack of better words, obligated to continue to affiliate with? how do we do this while maintaining self-care and emotional stability? trans* folks often state that it is not our obligation to act as educators for everyone, which i agree with completely, but if that’s the case, when do we educate? and more importantly, how?

    • #trangst
    • #trans*
    • #trans education
    • #work woes
    • #cissexism
    • #activism
    • #tokenization
  • 4 months ago
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just to make myself clear on this topic,

i give zero fucks if my pronouns of choice are “hard” for you or “weird” for you or if you’re “just not used to it.”  i am also not socially obligated to “cut people slack” for constantly misgendering me, especially when i’ve addressed pronouns and actually explained trans* to said people multiple times already.

it is not the responsibility of me or any trans* person to act as a personal trans* tour guide of trans*land (sidenote: can we make this a real place?) to everyone we meet. if you have a question, ask. if i tell you my pronouns, use them. if you fuck up, apologize and move on. but i will not feel responsible for how others read my gender presentation, and i will never be accommodating to cissexism.

i’m not sorry if you’re uncomfortable with the word “they” and it’s not your life, so use it or suffer the wrath of me being a huge jerk to you always and forever, the end.

    • #trangst
    • #real talk
    • #dgaf
  • 4 months ago
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#microaggressions

every time i am leading a meeting, and the person i am speaking to keeps looking expectantly at my white, male co-worker as though he is going to jump in and start taking control at any time.

related: every time i walk into an establishment with said white, male co-worker, and the person greeting us addresses him first, and speaks directly to him when giving instructions.

both of these situations occur regularly, despite the fact that i am far more assertive and outspoken than my co-worker… not to mention more competent and experienced: i’ve been working in this field for 4 years, and he just started last month. 

it feels sexist, like folks are assuming i’m female and automatically dismissing me. then it makes me feel misgendered, since i am not female. and then i feel like i am not taken seriously because of my short stature and young appearance. 

    • #microaggressions
    • #cissexism
    • #ageism
    • #sexism
    • #trangst
  • 6 months ago
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#microaggressions

at a work meeting, sitting in a restaurant with 4 female co-workers, 1 male co-worker, and male boss. all are cisgender.

a female co-worker laughs and says to boss, “i bet you are relieved to finally have a guy on our team!” referring to my male co-worker who was just hired. everyone laughs but me, and my boss says, “yes, now we can talk about guy stuff!” and proceeds to begin a conversation about working out directed exclusively at our male co-worker. a female co-worker says to the rest of us, “it must have been so awkward for him with just us girls around before” and smiles.

i stare at my food as if it is the most interesting thing i’ve ever seen. i feel misgendered and invisible, and i say nothing. 

    • #microaggressions
    • #gender
    • #trangst
    • #bad feelings
  • 6 months ago
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little jess.



tiny, tender queer *
tiny genderqueer . ▽
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