A New Not TransEnough Video Find

Yet another video found today. It really makes us sad that so many folks are hearing all these “rules” about what it means to be TransEnough. Keep seeking your own voice, your own truth. We love your individuality. And now, the video . . .

 
The YouTube TransEnough Video Project

We shared this exciting project that a few folks on YouTube are coordinating and yesterday they posted part one of the collaborative project. We find it incredibly inspiring and empowering to see so many folks respecting their experience, their truth, their reality. Please keep participating. We are TransEnough!

 
The Genderbread Person

We recently found this image floating around Facebook and wanted to share it with everyone. We discovered it originated from this blog post on It’s Pronounced Metrosexual. We think its the best explanation we’ve seen thus far on the complexity that is gender and gender identity. When you look at this, remember there are many, [...]

 
I'm Not TransEnough Video

Yet another great video find!

 
Ryan Cassata: I’m Not “Trans Enough”

We love all the videos that are suddenly popping up on YouTube. Ryan Casatta is a singer, songwriter and activist. This is his video against transphobia within the FTM community.

 
We Support This Project

This is not our project, but we want to support it and hope you will consider participating in it. They are accepting submissions through January 23. To participate, send submissions to: transenoughproject@gmail.com

 
Gender Fluidity – Part 2

For part one of this column, please click here. The Possibilities of a Fluid Gender System By redefining gender as fluid, it undermines the legitimization of bias and breaks down the ability to attribute traits or roles to a specific gender grouping. In doing so, a new method of thinking begins to take shape. A [...]

 
Gender Fluidity - Part 1

Stereotyping is the mental categorization of individuals in order to affect greater social control. In Gender Stereotypes: Reproduction and Challenge, Mary Talbot suggests, “Like caricatures, they focus on certain characteristics, real or imagined, and exaggerate them” (468). Although simplicity is the goal of stereotyping, the nature of stereotyping is anything but simple—a complex relationship between [...]