photo of individual

Asher

(He/Him/His)
The first moment I could see my future as a trans man or trans masculine person was...
My gender journey was very difficult when it began - I was still a child when I realized something wasn't right. I hit puberty early and genetics did not do me well in the chest zone - it was like I was blindsided and betrayed by my own body. I spent most of my youth miserable trying to fit into boxes that didn't work for me and once I came out as a teenager having my transness doubted by the rigid standards of passing as male. I saw my future on two occasions - first in college once I was able to untangle myself from the shackles of binary gender and the roles attached. I realized that I had to fight for and be myself and what that looked like for me was not being a binary man but whatever felt right. The hardest part was recognizing that this is *my* body to change into what I want it to be not anyone else's to decide what is or isn't good enough. The second occasion was when I was finally recovering from top surgery just a year ago from writing this. That surgery was the best thing to ever happen to me - it honestly wasn't even an explosive beautiful moment of joy. It was just finally normal. Like the sun coming out after the longest rain shower.
Resources that helped me...
Community online and in person with other trans people who understand what it's like. Additionally my therapist who helped me make it through college my psychiatrist who has supported me since the beginning of my transition and my surgeon in Detroit Michigan whose amazing work made my body feel more like a home.
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Character drawings by Joey Borrelli.
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