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The young person’s guide to conquering (and saving) the world. Teen Vogue covers the latest in celebrity news, politics, fashion, beauty, wellness, lifestyle, and entertainment.
Corey Maison is happy now, but fifth grade was a nightmare for her. When she was younger, Corey was bullied by her classmates to the point where one even told her that if she killed herself, no one would care. At 14, though, Corey found happiness and new friends all because her family and her new school accept her as a transgender girl.
In a now-viral video , Corey is posted in the girls’ bathroom at her new school, holding up note cards that track her transition from bullied and sad to happy and glowing.
This content can also be viewed on the site it originates from.
Corey shows in her video that she never fit in with her peers when she was younger. She was shunned by girls and teased by boys, and even laughed at by adults later on.
“I felt so stupid. Like a freak,” Corey’s notes say. “Like a misfit.”
Eventually, the bullying got so bad that her parents pulled her out of public school and opted to home school her instead.
That’s when Corey’s mom did something that changed everything.
“One day my mom told me to come watch something online,” the video says. "It was a documentary about a girl named Jazz Jennings . She was a beautiful girl...that had been born a boy!! I said to my mom, ‘OMG, I’m just like her, I AM a girl!!’”
That’s when Corey realized that there was nothing wrong with her, she’s transgender. At 14, Corey started taking hormones to transition into a female, a day she described as the best of her life.
Now, Corey is happy and back in public school. This time, though, she’s at a school where her peers and teachers accept her. She plays on the girls’ soccer team and uses the girls’ bathroom , just as she should.
This acceptance is so important. Though 41% of transgender people will attempt suicide at some point in their lives, we know that support and love from their community can help prevent that. Even though Corey overcame a lot at a young age, she’s found happiness and love from those around her. That's the message that Corey passes along to other transgender kids who might see the video: someday it will get better and you can live your best life as your true self, just like Corey is doing now.
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Now Reading What It's Like To Be Young & Trans
From the moment photographer Charlotte Hadden started her project Between , in which she photographs transgender children in the UK, she knew exactly how she wanted to approach the subject: on the children's own terms. "With all the misunderstanding surrounding young gender-questioning and trans people, I wanted to give them an opportunity to share their stories," Hadden tells Refinery29.
She sees transgender children as having to live double lives, "not only adjusting to growing and maturing as a person, but [also] battling to become the person they feel inside and to have the freedom to express that." With that in mind, Hadden aimed to give them a chance to be their whole selves in front of the camera.
By setting up in the children's homes and taking plenty of time to get to know them, Hadden makes her process as unobtrusive as possible — and makes sure that the children are part of it. She only takes a photo when it feels right, when the kids are totally comfortable with her.
Between doesn't make any grand, sweeping generalisations about the transgender experience. Instead, it highlights the regular, everyday lives of its subjects, from how they talk about their gender identity to how they spend time at home. "I want the viewer to look at the portraits and to just see them for the fun, awkward, amazing kids that they are," Hadden says.
Parents can get in direct contact with Hadden (whose project is ongoing) through Mermaids , a UK-based organisation that provides support for transgender children. She says that their interest in her work — and the kids' willingness to share — has overwhelmed her in the best possible way.
"I’ve been really moved by how open they have been with me," Hadden says. "The courage it takes to talk to a loved one about your gender, and how you might be questioning it, I just can't even imagine. [The children] are all incredibly smart and open."
Ahead, four of the kids Hadden has photographed talk with their parents about coming out.
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Published: 19:47 BST, 5 January 2017 | Updated: 19:47 BST, 5 January 2017
Choosing to undergo gender reassignment surgery is an intensely personal and monumental decision — one that, understandably, many trans people choose not to reveal much about.
But one brave teenager named Emmie Smith is not only speaking out about her surgery— the 18-year-old allowed a National Geographic photographer, Lynn Johnson, to come along for the procedure and film her and her Massachusetts-based family through the process.
The magazine has since released a nine-minute video documenting the experience, including interviews with Emmie, her identical twin brother Caleb, her mom, and her plastic surgeon.
Big change: Emmie Smith, 18, was born Walker but transitioned from male to female as a teen
Brave: She let National Geographic's cameras come along for the momentous occasion
Love: Her mother Kate (left), an Episcopal reverend, has been very supportive and was at the hospital for the surgery
Emmie is lucky in that her parents and twin have been very supportive throughout her transitional process, even if it was a shock to come to terms with.
'When I first learned that my child was transgender, I couldn't speak the word, I was so — I didn't know, I didn't know anything about it,' her mother Kate Malin, a reverend at an Episcopal church, says in the video, stuttering out her thoughts.
'Here I was, this "good mother" that researched everything before we, you know, bought a diaper. I was the one in the know, and all of a sudden I didn't know anything and it was frightening and it was other and I didn't want my child to hurt or be hurt or be judged.'
Emmie, formerly Walker, found that she's mostly received a positive and nonjudgmental response to her news.
Kate said finding out about Emmie was a shock because she knew nothing about being trans
Unique: Emmie has an identical twin brother, Caleb, making them one of a very small number of identical twins of different sexes
Family: Caleb is proud of that fact and has been supportive of his sister
'Being closeted was one of the worst parts of my life. Being out, it's not so much a personal change, it's a social change,' she said.
She shared the news publicly for the first time on Facebook two years ago, and her social circle seemed to adapt quickly.
'The thing I really remember about coming out, was I was in a play. I went to rehearsal, and they were getting my pronouns right, they were using my name,' she recalls. 'It was just a totally different world. It was incredible.'
'If I was not out, I'm not sure I'd be alive right now,' she adds.
Her brother Caleb, too, has taken the news well. He notes, 'I kind of taking pride in being one of the few identical twin pairs that are boy and girl.'
Important: Emmie said that if she wasn't out, she might not be alive
Unsure: Emmie was hesitant about undergoing the surgery at first, but now says that she has a 'million' reasons for having wanted the change and is happy with the decision
Perfect: She was 'giddy' and 'nervous' on the big day but the surgery was a success
Despite knowing she wanted to be a girl, though, Emmie wasn't always convinced she actually wanted to take surgical steps to change her body.
'When I thought about why I eventually wanted to get this surgery, because I really didn't at first, I think the reason that I ended up really wanting it to happen, started being something more out of convenience,' she explains.
'As it started to get more real and I got the surgery date and all that, I found a million reasons why I wanted it to happen.'
So, on August 30, 2016, she went under the knife, having a surgeon change her penis into a vagina.
National Geographic was there on the big day, as Kate said she felt 'honored' to accompany her daughter on this journey — adding that they were both 'giddy' and 'nervous'.
In position: Emmie's legs were held in place with the help of two braces
Detail: The video goes into great detail about how the procedure is carried out, with Emime's surgeon explaining each step of the operation
Transformation: The penis is used to create a vagina
Complicated: Emmie hopes that by documenting the procedure, she will help to bring new awareness about transgender people
'I think people are fascinated by gender reassignment surgery. They also don't know how to have a conversation about,' Emmie said of her decision to let the cameras in.
Before heading into the operating room, Kate and Emmie are seen waiting and praying together. Kate looks like she is holding back tears as she asks God to lead Emmie through.
The surgeon, Dr. Christine McGinn, then explains exactly what happens once the anesthesia kicks in.
'The glans penis becomes the clitoris, the skin of the penis becomes the labia minora and part of the opening of the vagina,' she says.
'The scrotal skin is taken off and used as a skin graft, it's rolled up into a tube, and that's placed in a space that we make at the base of the scrotum... and that's going to be the lining of the vagina.'
All the details: Her surgeon explained on camera what the procedure entailed; her penis became the clitoris and labia while the scrotal skin became the inside of the vagina
It's all good: Kate cried and smiled as she called family members to tell them that the surgery went well
'The testicles are removed, and the urethra is actually saved, and the flap of the urethra is used to make a hood for the clitoris.'
After all of that happens, Dr. McGinn wakes up a groggy Emmie, telling her the surgery is over.
The doctor explains in a voice-over that though Emmie looked scared, she knows she will be fine — particularly because her family is there for her.
'When people don't do well, after their transition, it's because they have absolutely no support system. Their support system is their families putting on a game face, but they're scared as hell too... She's got everything going for her,' she says.
Outside the operating room, Kate can be seen crying and smiling as she calls family members to tell them the surgery went well.
'I feel like I haven't taken a deep breath in two days,' she says before visiting Emmie and reading her the supportive messages sent by her other family members.
Kate and her husband know this was the best decision and see Emmie is happy
Strong: Emmie's doctor said she would be fine since she has such a great support system
Getting acquainted: Emmie checks out her new equipment after surgery
'What my husband and I keep remarking on to each other is this just feels so right, it's so her, it's so the child we've always known and loved, even thought a few years ago we wouldn't have necessarily anticipated this step,' says Kate.
'And that's where I think, again, transition is problematic. Because it presupposes an end point, where at some point you have transitioned. Whereas every single one of us is in constant development. This is obviously a huge, huge moment in Emmie's life, but it by no means the end point. In some ways it's just the beginning.'
Emmie took nine weeks to recover, and is now working at an art museum and taking a gap year before starting college in the fall.
She hopes to study acting and is working with her brother on a musical, and wants her story to help educate others.
'If you’re not living freely that’s time wasted, and I felt my time was wasted pretending to be a boy.
'[Transitioning] was the best decision in my life,' she said. 'It’s not science fiction or mythology. It's what happens to women just trying to be at peace with themselves and their bodies.'
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