Teen Sissys

Teen Sissys




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Teen Sissys
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NEW BALTIMORE, Mich. (WJBK) - A local mom is going viral over a big decision to give her teenager hormones to transition into a female. The video is being shared millions of times on Facebook tonight and now Erica Maison is talking about her decision.
Anticipation and excitement was on display as the 14-year-old New Baltimore girl opened a hidden box from her mother. It wasn't jewelry or concert tickets.
"Do you know what that is?" Erica asked, as Corey smiles and moves toward mom for a tearful hug.
Corey's mom surprised her with her first dose of hormones, something the transgendered teen has waited to get for three years. Erica wanted to capture the emotional moment.
"I just started crying," Erica says.
"I opened it, I read the top and it said 'estrogen, Corey says. “I stopped and froze for a second. I was so happy I started crying."
"It was such a relief," Erica says. "It had been so many years waiting."
It hasn't been easy for Corey who was born a boy and feels she spent the first decade of her life living in someone else's body. The signs started young.
"My second birthday I got a truck, my sister got a Barbie doll and I wanted nothing to do with the truck," Corey remembers.
"[Corey would] dress up in my heels and dresses," Erica says. "All little boys do that, that is a phase usually. As Corey gets to be 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 years old, it didn't stop."
They say everything became clear when they found online videos from Jazz Jennings, one of the youngest publicly documented people to be identified as gender dysphoric, or a person who identifies with a different gender than they were born with.
"I blurted out, 'I'm just like her!'" Corey says.
Corey's turning point was at 10 years old. After extensive research by mom and evaluations by a medical team at a gender clinic in Chicago, Corey received an implant to begin hormone suppression.
"The hardest part for me was the journey I knew we had ahead of us," says Erica. “Negativity scared me as a mom."
Like so many transgendered teens, the 8th grader has had to deal with bullies and cruel comments. But with the help of counselors, her supportive parents, siblings and friends, she is learning to overcome it.
All of it leading to this pivotal moment, receiving her long-awaited estrogen and go ahead from the doctors. A moment mom knew would mean the world to her little girl.
"It was like a dream, it was surreal," Erica says.
"It was the best feeling ever," Corey says. "Like, I told my mom, I felt like I was in a box in a long, long time and I was just unlocked."
See the original video below.
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It’s never been easy being a sissy. Society has long vilified any behavior in men that even hints of effeminacy—acting like a woman meant that you were weak, that there was something wrong with you.
Sissies have even faced rejection from their fellow gays: How many times you’ve seen “no fems” or “masc only” on a hookup profile? But the truth is it takes courage to be a sissy—to revel in thumbing your nose at society’s expectations of masculinity.
In celebration of nancy boys everywhere, we’re profiling 13 legendary sissies who made it safe to be swishy in the face of rejection, ridicule and even violence.
The author of The Importance of Being Earnest and The Picture of Dorian Grey, Wilde was imprisoned for the crime of homosexuality and died penniless in exile.
But even in his final days, he kept his sissy wits about him, reportedly remarking, “My wallpaper and I are fighting a duel to the death. One of us has to go.”
Born eight years after Wilde’s death, Crisp took up his fallen sissy mantle and skipped all the way through the 20th century, becoming the grand dame of swishes.
Embracing his feminine tendencies at an early age, Crisp traipsed about pre-WWII London in makeup and blouses, receiving vicious beatings for breaking social norms. He eventually parlayed his eccentricities into a bona fide career — if you consider “raconteur” a career. Which I do.
His autobiography, The Naked Civil Servant , is essential reading on the art of life.
The prolific novelist, essayist and playwright began exploring and challenging ideas of race with the novel Go Tell It on the Mountain and his collection of essays Notes of a Native Son . But for his third effort, Baldwin pulled a literary about-face and produced probably the greatest gay-themed novel ever, Giovanni’s Room .
When he wasn’t actively participating in the civil rights movement, Baldwin also BFF’d and inspired a trio of epic ladies: Maya Angelou, Nina Simone and Toni Morrison. Oh, the soulful, life-affirming kikis they must have had.
When you think subtlety, one name comes to mind: Liberace. Behind that candelabra, a sequined-tuxedoed Lee tickled the ivories in Vegas — mostly for straight older ladies who were willfully oblivious to his, shall we say, particular charms.
But it was a different time and a man with more white diamonds than Liz Taylor would barely raise eyebrows and could become the highest paid entertainer in the world just for playing a piano with remarkable flair.
Taking a note from the Liberace playbook, Little Richard cemented his reputation as the “architect of rock and roll” with his groundbreaking hits in the ‘50s, including “Tutti Frutti,” “Good Golly Miss Molly” and “Long Tall Sally.”
Always cagey about his sexuality, Little Richard’s androgynous look was born — at least in part — out of practicality. “I wore the make-up so that white men wouldn’t think I was after the white girls,” he told a reporter in 1984. “It made things easier for me, plus it was colorful too.”
Capote heralded his arrival with an eerily seductive jacket photo on his first novel, Other Voices, Other Rooms . He continued on to early success with In Cold Blood and Breakfast at Tiffany’s before settling into a comfortable life as official hanger-on to New York society ladies like Lee Radziwell and Babe Paley.
During his long, boozy decline, Capote struck a gin-soaked match and burned nearly every bridge to the ground. A series of short stories ridiculing his gal pals and their husbands through thinly-veiled characterizations formed the basis of his unfinished novel, Answered Prayers . The original Burn Book, Answered Prayers was published posthumously in 1986.
Who would really want to hurt Boy George? In his Culture Club heyday, this colorful imp was America’s sweetheart with his non-threatening androgyny and bag full of pop hits. He famously professed his preference for a “nice cup of tea” over sex, even though he was in a rocky relationship with CC drummer Jon Moss at the time.
George’s life and times would later become the basis for the short-lived Broadway musical, Taboo , for which he wrote the lyrics and snatched a Tony nomination.
For decades male figure skaters fought against the notion that they were swish. Weir, meanwhile, embraced it, with fierce costumes—both on and off the ice— and Gaga-channeling short programs. Challenging the sport’s conventions, Weir was a polarizing figure in skating until his retirement in 2013.
Even with his blades hung up with care, Weir continues to turn heads with his unique sports commentary with new straight-girl BFF Tara Lipinski.
Paul Lynde hammed his way through Bewitched as that mischievous but lovable warlock, Uncle Arthur. And if he and Endora (played by noted lesbian Agnes Moorehead) went at it, watch out.
Lynde cemented his place in entertainment history as Hollywood Squares’ sassy center square and Templeton the Rat in Charlotte’s Web , but made countless sitcom appearances and was in the original Broadway cast of Bye Bye Birdie. All while his sexuality was Hollywood’s worst-kept open secret.
What could easily have been offensive became one of the highlights of this 1976 blaxploitation classic, as Antonio Fargas owns everything as Lindy, one of the first black queer characters in film.
Being a trailblazer, Lindy also helped introduce the word to reading when he shot down a homophobic hater.
In Living Color ’s pearl-snatching answer to Siskel and Ebert, Blaine and Antoine (Damon Wayans and David Alan Grier) shared their sharp observations on the best and worst cinema had to offer, before branching out into other areas in need of their particular brand of critiques.
Some cringed at two straight men miming gay stereotypes, but the performances were so over-the-top they almost transcended parody. Twenty years later, Blaine and Antoine’s looks are still giving life.
Two snaps around the world and back!
Sean Hayes’ Jack McFarland was the flamboyant foil to Will’s “straight man,” embracing—and at times lampooning—stereotypes of the quixotic Manhattan gay.
And with Megan Mullalley’s gin-soaked Karen Walker, this spastic ball of energy also formed one half of the greatest comedic duo in recent sitcom history. As soon as Jack and Karen bumped tummies, it became clear: this was their world and Will and Grace were simply living in it.
Before Klaine overshadowed everything, Kurt (Chris Colfer) was a sweet kid with a sweet voice and an even sweeter face.
“Porcelain,” as Coach Sue (not-so-affectionately) referred to him, became a hero to a new generation of effeminate kids, who just wanted to sing their little hearts out—and maybe wear a Ralph Lauren poncho without fear of repercussion.






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Published: 00:00 BST, 23 July 2013 | Updated: 10:59 BST, 10 January 2014
Teenagers Arin Andrews and Katie Hill look like any normal young couple posing in their swimwear.
It is hard to believe that just two years ago Arin was a girl called Emerald, and Katie was a boy called Luke.
Arin, 17, and Katie, 19, from Tulsa, Oklahoma, have both undergone surgeries to change their gender and now are enjoying being in their bodies they always wished for.
Young and in love: Transgender teens Arin Andrews, 17, seen posing for a picture with sweetheart Katie Hill, 19, at the Oologah Lake in Tulsa, Oklahoma
Living life to the fullest: The teenage couple have been bullied and lost friends but have been able to support each other through their gender treatment
Just over a year ago Katie, a university student, had gender reassignment surgery, thanks to an amazing $35,000 donation from an anonymous donor who read her story in a local newspaper.
Now, Arin, who is still at school, has undergone an operation to remove both of his breasts, and is proudly showing off his new male physique.
For the last year, Arin has been binding up his chest to try to hide his female body, but can now go topless for the first time after his surgery in Cleveland, Ohio, in June.
He said: 'Now I can wear a tank top, which I couldn't before, I can go swimming shirtless, I can walk outside, I can just be a regular guy now.
'I hated my breasts, I always felt like they didn't belong - now I can finally be comfortable in my own body.'
He added: 'Now when I'm out in a public pool, or lifting weights, no-one raises an eyebrow, they just think I'm a guy - just a skinny dude in the gym trying to build some muscle.
Enjoying life: The teenagers say that they are now both comfortable in their own bodies
Defining themselves: Last year Katie had a $35,000 sex change surgery to turn her into a woman - and now Arin has followed his dream to have a flat, male chest following an operation
'My family have really surprised me with how supportive they have been throughout the surgery. I'm so lucky to have them and Katie to rely on.'
Katie and Arin met nearly two years ago at a support group for transgender teenagers and bonded through their shared experiences.
Katie said: 'To me, Arin's just my Arin, he's always looked manly to me. But now he's had the surgery he's much more confident and comfortable with himself.'
But now that the teens' physical appearance matches their gender, both of them are excited to be able to go swimming, boating and sunbathe like other couples.
Katie added: 'Being transgender myself, I understand Arin probably better than anybody else, how good he feels and how complete he feels.'
True love: The couple have been able to rely on each other through their transformation
Happy and healthy: Arin and Katie pose in their swimwear at the lake and later looking casual at home
Light at the end of the tunnel: The couple were both bullied and lost friends who could not cope with their changes
In the future, Arin might consider having genital surgery, but this can be complicated, and for now he's delighted with his new body.
Both the couple's families are supportive of their relationship and say the way the way the teenagers have supported each other has helped in their transition.
Arin's mum Denise Andrews said: 'Seeing Katie go through her surgery was helpful to Arin.
'It was being around it and seeing her getting to transform. And being a couple at the time was I think just the cherry on the cake.
Changed lives: Emerald Andrews, before she became Arin, at the age of five in Tulsa, Oklahoma (left) and Luke Hill (right), before he became Katie, aged seven
'Every transgender person would love to have the transformation physically because it just completes them as a person.'
The last two years have been very difficult for the teenagers.
Katie was bullied at school, and Arin had to change to a different high school when he revealed he was transgender, and has lost friends in the process.
'I lost one of my best friends through the transition,' said Arin. 'We used to go on vacations together and were like sisters.
Making a splash: The couple met at a group that supports transgender teens
'But I got the chance to open her eyes and show her I'm still a good person. I'm still the person I was, I just look different.
'She was gone for a while but then she came back.
'It taught me that the people who really love you need some time, but they'll always come back around.'
Happy: Arin had an operation to remove his breasts and is proud of his new physique
After he began dressing as a boy, Arin also lost a new male friend who learned about his past as a girl.
'He said: ''I pictured you as a girl, and I can't do it anymore,''' said Arin, adding: 'You can't just force people to be your friends.'
Katie started her degree course at an Oklahoma university last autumn but has struggled to make new friends because of prejudices against transgender people in the traditional Southern State.
She said: 'I had quite a lot of friends in college that were really close to me and then all of a sudden they just stopped talking to me.
'I think what happened is they found out I was trans through a story or word of mouth and they decided that was too much for them.'
The last two years have also been difficult for the teenager's families as they've come to terms with losing their son and daughter, and also some of their own friends.
Arin's mum Denise said: 'There are still a group of people we don't interact with any more. I know that they questioned me as a parent, they're not comfortable with it.'
But she added: 'A lot of people worry about losing the gender of their child. But as you look through albums and realise your babies are growing up, we also watched them grow up and turn into somebody different.
'Whether they stay the same gender or not, they become independent.'
Now their outward transformation is complete, the teenagers hope people will accept them as their new genders, and their difficulties will become a thing of the past.
Young romance: The couple have been together for two years
Carefree teens: Katie and Arin have both had the loving support of their families while they made the life-altering decision
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