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Miscellaneous See other Miscellaneous Articles Title: 'It's just how you really are inside': 9-year-old shares transgender journey Jacob Lemay, now 9, knew he was a boy before he could properly pronounce the word transgender. It's not how you act, or what you wear, or anything like that, Jacob said of being trans. It's just how you really are inside. ... You just feel like you just got put in the wrong body. With the support of his parents, Mimi and Joe Lemay, Jacob socially transitioned when he was just 5 years old. The couple said the journey was not initially easy, and they struggled as Jacob pulled away from them. It was almost like he was a thousand miles away from us and retreating, Mimi Lemay said of Jacobs pre-transition years. It wasn't until we were able to say to him that we believed him, and that he could live as the boy he always knew he was that's when we got our child back. The Lemay family initially shared their story with NBC News in 2015, when their son had just transitioned. Their story quickly went viral and remains one of the most viewed videos on the NBC Nightly News Facebook page. After their familys journey was made public, the Lemays said they heard from other families all over the country. Now, Mimi Lemay has written a memoir titled What We Will Become about love, acceptance and change. When NBC News caught up with her to discuss the memoir and her familys journey over the past several years, Mimi Lemay expressed how difficult things have been recently for the LGBTQ community, particularly transgender individuals. She cited the recent spate of bills targeting trans youth that have emerged across the country in the current legislative session. More than half a dozen states, most recently Ohio, have introduced bills seeking to ban gender-affirming health care for minors. This type of care, Mimi Lemay said, will save the lives of children like Jacob. Jacob is now in fourth grade. He has a pet hedgehog named Trinket, and he loves hockey, jumping on his backyard trampoline and playing with his sisters. He is a typical 9-year-old boy in every way, except for being transgender. He said some of his friends know and some dont. But to most kids, its just not that big a deal. Over the last five years, he has grown and matured, and he is more sophisticated now when he talks about what it means to him to be transgender. And since he has reached the early stages of puberty, Jacob has opted to take a puberty blocker. This is a completely reversible step endorsed by the medical community. It is also the very kind of treatment that some state lawmakers are looking to stop. Joe Lemay said Jacob understands what his options are, and what each step in this process will bring. He's becoming educated on what future choices he'll need to make, he said. That's one of the reasons why he is, you know, taking a puberty blocker, so that we know he's had years to think this through. When asked what he wants the public to know about the transgender community, Jacob said, I want people to know that it doesn't make you any different from anyone else. He added that its not always easy to tell people that hes transgender, but he thinks if people just understood it a bit more, the world might change. Most of the people aren't bad people, he said earnestly. They just don't really understand. Mimi and Joe Lemay said their entire family now advocates for transgender rights. In fact, Jacob recently asked presidential hopeful Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., a question at a televised town hall. The Lemays said they want to keep sharing their story to help other families with trans kids. Your child will be OK as long as you support them, Mimi Lemay said. There is no harm in saying to your child, I see you
and believe you, and you are who you say you are. Poster Comment: This is child abuse. Christ, I thought I was a bluejay for a day when I was six, but my parents had sense enough not to tape some feathers to my ass and drop me from a tree limb. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
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LOL, I'm suing my parents because they never saw me as the kid that did not throw a pipe-wrench at my brother. I am not one of those weak-spirited, sappy Americans who want to be liked by all the people around them. I dont care if people hate my guts; I assume most of them do. The important question is whether they are in a position to do anything about it. My affections, being concentrated over a few people, are not spread all over Hell in a vile attempt to placate sulky, worthless shits. - William S Burroughs
They said my twin sister was a tomboy. She never played with dolls when she was a kid. When I lived in her attic flat in Chicago when I was older, I went downstairs to visit her. She was drunk and wanted to go out driving. I hid her keys. When she got that bug out of her ass I said, "Oh look! Here's your keys." LOL "When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall, one by one." Edmund Burke
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