- 8A - z - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 18, 2004 NEws "PRANSGENDER PERSONS ENCOUNTER SEVERE DIFFICULTIES IN VIRTUALLY EVERY ASPECT OF THEIR LIVES, BOTH INTERNALLY IN COPING WITH THEIR OWN FEELINGS, AND THEN SOCIALLY IN INTERACTING WITH OTHERS. - UNIVERSITY'S REPORT OF THE TASK FORCE ON THE CAMPUS CLIMATE FOR TRANSGENDER, BISEXUAL, LESBIAN AND GAY FACULTY, STAFF AND STUDENTS T~ 0e hiving I TRANSGENDER Continued from page 1A three children. She now has estranged relation- ships with some family members and says the hardest part of transitioning is the anguish the decision can cause in relationships. "I've had a long life that I can't just ignore," she said. Choosing to Live - Andre Wilson came to the University as an under- graduate transfer student in 1978. He graduated in 1986 and entered the College of Architecture in 1996. He describes his experiences as a "typi- cal transsexual story." "Things were really hard. ... It was like slog- ging through mud," he said. Wilson said he felt a deep sense of confusion in finding happiness, describing his struggle for identity. "I didn't hate my body, it just didn't feel like mine," he said. "Everything was on strike, my body and my mind, and I couldn't read the words on the picket signs," he said, describing the point a few years ago when his life slowed to a halt. "Finally I realized that I had been repressing something very big and it was the fact that I am transgendered," he said. Eventually, he said he realized he had a life- or-death decision to make - for him, choosing to live meant accepting his transsexuality and beginning a transition. "The most miserable, self-hating moments are when one is in the closet," he said. A lesbian during his life as a woman, Wilson realized that coming out as a transsexual was a big next step. However, he feared that by transitioning, he would lose his friends and the support that he received from the gay and lesbian community. He feared some people might view the transi- tion from "an out female-to-male transsexual" as "taking the easy route out of lesbianism." Once he made the decision to transition, how- ever, he said his life prospects turned around. outside the world of sexual "Within two days of starting hormones, I was a different person," he said. He said that for the first time, he felt like a fully functioning person. Wilson said his suicidal thoughts and feelings waned and his depression lifted; things now feel right for the first time in his life, he says. He emphasized the difficulty that transgender people face when trying to receive proper medical care., "To get medical services, you have to con- vince others of your identity," Wilson said. "Most doctors refuse to treat transsexuals." He also said almost all insurance carriers have exclusions against transgender people. Despite this, Wilson emphasized that he is "cheaper" to cover now than before his transition, since hormone therapy has made his depression virtually disappear and he is now taking fewer medications. He said he would have transitioned a quarter of a century earlier, if not for the lack of information, medical services and social support. Happy with his decision to transition from female to male, Wilson says he will never go back, but his struggle is far from over. "I do not know how I could find a job as an architect as an out female-to-male transsexual," he said. Opting Out of Surgery - Stephen Stephen Rassi is a 50-year-old trans- gendered individual and is currently a doctoral student in social work and psychology. He emphasizes that transgender is an umbrella term encompassing a wide variety of people, not just those who are transsexual. "There are so many different ways that people can be, you can't put them on a chart," he said. Rassi said at the age of 18 or 19, he fell in love with another man. At the time, he says he did not even know what it meant to be homosexual. At the age of 33, he said he realized he could not see himself living life as a straight person. But at that point, he was not exactly sure where he fit in. "I'm not a woman, I'm not a man, I'm some- where in between," he said. Rassi struggles with what he describes as a society that makes people feel they must fit into prescribed categories of gender. He said people could be any gender and any transsexual individuals, or those wt into gender stereotypes, being fire based solely on their gender identitie In 1984, the Seventh Circuit Cot case of Ulane v. Eastern Airlines. Z based upon a transsexual who ha from her job as a pilot for Eastern she underwent sex change surger denied transsexuals the rig tion under the Title VII, w protect against discriminatio in regard to job discriminati In 1989, a case was br U.S. Court of Appeals for of Columbia Circuit. The Waterhouse v. Hopkins, wa woman who claimed she h brought up for promotion b ure to conform to gender The court ruled that sex tion was protected underI this case, specifically, tha are not allowed to discrimi employees who do not conf gender stereotypes. In a 2004 case, Smith v. the Sixth District Court rule( ful for employers to discrim those who do not conform t( reotypes. This case involved, who had been working as a fi seven years, when she was fi the transgender community h case will lead to more transgender Title VII. Moving Forward Currently, there is a growing sta movement attempting to make up fo call the lack of federal protection dered individuals. "It discriminates against an en people simply for who they are," sai A University report issued earlier categories ho did not fit ter highlights the lack of federal protections. d from jobs "At the present time there is thus little likeli- s. hood that significant protections will be forth- urt heard the coming from the federal government," said the The case was University's TBLG Taskforce Report. d been fired In 1999, Ann Arbor became one of only five Airlines after cities in Michigan to include gender identity in y. The court city laws against discrimination. ;ht to protec- The others include Grand Rapids, Ypsilanti, hich aims to Detroit and Huntington Woods. )n, especially Despite the lack of federal protection, the on. University's transgender community is trying ought to the to make strides in order to receive more societal the District recognition. case, Price A task force created last spring has result- .s based on a ed in a thick report on the campus climate had not been for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender ased on fail- faculty, staff and students. Some of the rec- stereotypes. ommendations include increased education discrimina- about LGBT issues and more funding for the Title VII; in Office of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Trans- t employers gender Affairs. Another recommendation nate against is the creation of more "non-binary" gen- orm to rigid dered, unisex bathrooms to provide a safer zone for transgendered individuals than tra- Salem Ohio, ditional male and female bathrooms. d it is unlaw- "I don't use binary named bathrooms ... it feels inate against bad; internally, deeply terrible," said Wilson. o gender ste- He said when he is forced to make a choice a transsexual between bathrooms, he acutely feels disconnect ire fighter for between his gender identity and what society red. Those in regards as the proper way to act, according to hope that this one's gender. rights under He also expressed concern that there are issues of safety when others in the transgender community are forced to decide which restroom they should use. This is just one of many issues that the Uni- ate and local versity is beginning to respond to regarding the r what many transgender community on campus. of transgen- The Office of LGBT Affairs is also sponsoring several events in the next month in order to raise tire class of awareness about the transgender community. d Wilson. This Friday, there will be a Transgender Day of r this semes- Remembrance Rally held on the Diag at noon. 0 sexuality, or any combination. Despite his conflict with society's expecta- tions, he says he has no desire to transition from male to female. He says he is comfortable being himself, although American society provides no word for who he is. "I have no interest at all in surgery and hormones." Ruling on Gender There have been few notable cases regarding transgender legal rights. All of the cases involved "SINCE TRANSGENDERISM IS GENERALLY AN INTENSELY PRIVATE MATTER, IT IS IMPOSSIBLE TO ESTIMATE ITS INCIDENCE, ALTHOUGH CLEARLY IT IS NOT EXTREMELY RARE." "TRANSGENDER PERSONS MAY BE EITHER HETEROSEXUAL OR HOMOSEXUAL WITH "AT THE PRESENT TIME THERE IS THUS LITTLE LIKELIHOOD THAT SIGNIFICANT PROTECTIONS SI RESPECT TO THEIR NON- BIRTH SEX" FOR TRANSGENDERISM WILL BE FORTHCOMING FROM THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT. ALL QUOTES FROM THE UNIVERSITY'S REPORT ON THE CAMPUS CLIMATE FOR TRANSGENDER, BISEXUAL, LESBIAN AND GAY FACULTY, STAFF AND STUDENTS f I