A Changed Mind and Heart
by Barbara Sinacore
Albany Meeting
Two scenarios brought about my transformation of mind and heart regarding Trans people.
Snapshot:
As a senior citizen, I listened to a song:
I Only Want to Be Pretty
By Debra Burger
It’s not the coarse hair on my chest that defines me.
But a knowing inside about who I am
I’m missing the round breasts that should be there instead
But I do the best that I can
I only want to be pretty,
In a red velvet dress
With the scent of perfume in my hair
To feel the soft touch of
French silk on my skin
To gracefully dance on the air
They called me a homo, a
Sissy, a queer
I ate all my lunches
Alone
There’s no place in
School for a girlie-boy
No place to be welcomed
and known
I tried to be normal.
I packed up my pearls
No lipstick or lace for two years
I went through the
Motions, gray day after day
With no laughter, thin
Smiles and dry tears
I’ve made friends with
the mirror and my new
lipstick brush
I’ve a red velvet dress that I wear
Some folks snicker, some
Laugh, when I walk down the street
Some hold their breath
while they stare
And I wonder why they
Would care
I only want to be pretty
My heart hurt and enlarged. Just because of that song.
Snapshot:
Years earlier two naive girls hitched rides in the UK in winter with dark approaching. A truck pulled over. We got in. The trucker did the usual courteous talk. But then: “You girls wanta see something?” Below workaday jeans were black fishnet stockings and cherry red spiked heels.
The frigid weather, being women alone, and the encroaching dark made us appreciative of his ride. That day a trans person became three dimensional for me. The ride may have saved two lives.
How to deal with my unconscious prejudices toward trans people/others?
- Can I recognize that I am doing this, preferably at the time of the thought, before acting?
- Do I accept I had this thought? Remember: Thoughts come up to be healed. Also, change is difficult if there is no acceptance that one has done something in the first place.
- Am I, as a Quaker, comfortable with this thought/or action?
- If not, how can I replace faulty with reliable information about the problems/victories of trans people/others?
- Using accurate details about difficulties with housing, employment, health insurance, see a video in the mind’s eye: a scenario with conversation. See YOURSELF as trans and experiencing this. Let yourself feel into that role. Ask, how would I handle this?
- What can I change in attitudes and behavior? What would make escalation into action less likely?
- Give yourself “a star” inwardly for facing yourself. Hard to do.
This nation, I believe, is suffering from a lack of imagination. Divisiveness and prejudice feed on not being able to place oneself in someone’s red shoes. We can imagine it, IF we value it.