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A local couple opens up and talks about raising a transgender child in our valley

BY RUFUS WOODS on Art of Community

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Last week was Transgender Awareness week. This annual, global event helps raise and center the voices and visibility of transgender people; it brings to light the myriad of issues and discrimination trans and non-binary people face. It is also a time of hope and celebration for this incredibly diverse population.

On the last day of the week, November 20th, the community holds Transgender Day of Remembrance to honor the memory of the transgender people whose lives were lost in acts of anti-transgender violence during that year. I find myself thinking about how our binary and gendered system of male or female excludes and punishes those that don’t prescribe or fit within this social construct. Being excluded, different, or othered can be dangerous.

I’ve been trying to educate myself on this issue over the past few years by considering what life is like for individuals born one gender but then realize they don’t fit that gender assignment. I’m grateful to one local couple for sharing their journey as their child explores their gender identity and expression. This friendship has helped reframe and shape how I see and experience the many nuances of gender.

They asked me to keep their real names confidential because they are adamant about protecting their child’s privacy, so I’ll call them Bob and Lindsay for the sake of this article. “We’ve always believed that gender is a spectrum (rather than binary),” Lindsay told me. But that didn’t prepare them for the day when their child started crying and said, “I have always felt more like a boy.”

That event started a challenging family journey they could have never imagined — one that began with a lot of fears and private tears by the parents. Immediately they began to methodically reach out to mental health providers and connected with other parents of transgender children.

Pride flag burned outside Pybus coffee shop

By Pete O'Cain in Wenatche World

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Little Red’s Espresso & Bakery hung a Pride flag at a table in its courtyard on Sunday evening in support of the first Wenatchee Pride & NCW BLM Action Council march.

The next morning, employees of the coffee stand outside Pybus Public Market found the rainbow flag had been set on fire overnight. No other property was damaged.

“I personally feel like it was obviously a very directed message,” said owner Aubrey Dickinson on Tuesday. “It’s not my battle, it’s not my journey, but ... I feel like it’s my job to stand up for what’s right and I feel like that was very wrong, personally.”

Security footage from Pybus has been turned over to police, Dickinson said. She hadn’t seen the footage when she was interviewed Tuesday, but was told by Pybus officials that the video apparently shows a single person setting fire to the flag about 12:30 a.m. Monday.

As of Tuesday morning, there have not been any arrests. The suspect, if arrested, would likely face charges of reckless burning and malicious mischief, and possibly arson, according to Capt. Edgar Reinfeld with the Wenatchee Police Department.

Pride leaders adapt to support LGBTQ community during Covid-19

BY RUFUS WOODS in the Art of Community

hysical distancing is necessary during the coronavirus pandemic, but maintaining social connections while being physically distant is absolutely essential. We, humans, are social animals, and isolation is not healthy, after all.

Fortunately, we are finding different ways to connect. We can interact with each other on various online platforms while social gatherings have been discouraged. Social disconnection is a problem for all of us, but its impact is especially serious for marginalized people. Our neighbors who are part of the LGBTQ community find it challenging to be accepted for who they are in the broader community. In some cases, youngsters find that they cannot be their authentic selves at home.

Recently, I spoke with several members of the Wenatchee Pride board of directors, including Tan Gleason, Jillian Danley, Micah Vacatio, Ashley Olson, and Luz Estrada, about moving the annual Pride Day to an ongoing Pride series of events. With the coronavirus shutdown, the group has chosen instead to launch a series of virtual events beginning in May and lasting through the summer. On May 8, for example, an online meditation class has been scheduled, you can obtain tickets to this free event using this link,https://www.eventbrite.com/e/wenatchee-pride-guided-meditation-for-youth-and-families-tickets-103616700340?utm_source=eventbrite&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=post_publish&utm_content=EBLinkEvent&utm_term=fullLink, and the group plans to have a series of other events, including art and yoga events.

“The (LGBTQ) community is already socially isolated,” noted Olson. With the shelter at home recommendations in place, the virtual events will allow members to connect on an ongoing basis.