We Live Here: The Midwest (2023)

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We Live Here: The Midwest (2023)

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soft choir singing

Here in Iowa, there is

something called "Iowa nice."

It is really Iowa passive aggressiveness,

and it is--

no one is ever gonna say,

"I don't support you" to your face.

They're going to be very kind to you,

and then they're gonna have

a letter-writing campaign

to get you kicked off of

whatever committee

or whatever thing behind your back.

We both grew up in Des Moines.

We've been here our whole lives.

We've never left.

Yeah.

And then, we both had similar home lives

and church lives.

We met in second grade,

and became really best friends in--

- Eighth grade.

- Yeah.

You accepted me and I--

before I even could accept myself,

and I don't know that you

even knew what it was,

but you saw the essence of me,

aside from gender.

In our small private school

and in our churches,

when you dated,

you were dating to marry someone.

So, when we started dating

at 17 and 16, respectively,

it was pretty much on the marriage track.

I did want a really big family.

That's just always been something for me,

that family is.

And then, I loved the whole thing.

I loved being pregnant,

I loved giving birth.

It was so fantastic.

And then they just kept coming,

and we were like,

"Okay, let 'em come."

And then we decided to adopt.

They are so loved and well-respected

in our community.

You know, because our kids are in school,

they're seen more than we are,

and so they really do pave the way.

By the time that people get to us,

they already know our kids,

and they're like,

"Oh, you must be great

because your kids are fantastic."

I initially came out to myself,

and came out to Katie the same day

that I kind of came out to myself

'cause I thought that was only fair

based on our relationship.

When we told the kids,

she did a really good job

of drawing a picture for them.

I drew a picture

for the kids that was,

"Here's our bodies,

"and some people have male bodies.

"And some people have female bodies.

"Here's our spirits.

"Some people have male spirits,

very masculine spirits,

"and some people have

very feminine spirits.

"And so sometimes,

those things go together.

"Other times, they don't go together.

"So sometimes,

our outsides match our insides,

"and sometimes they don't,

and that's called being transgender."

And they were like, "Okay, duh."

Like, they didn't have

any reservations about it.

- You wanna cr*ck the eggs?

- Dads always cr*ck the eggs!

It was a little weird,

but we all like kind of...

- Adapted.

- Adapted pretty quickly.

- Well, we just added an O to Mom.

- Are we making scrambled eggs?

- Yeah

CHILD: We still call both of them Mom,

but it doesn't get confusing.

It's just like we know

who we're talking about.

- If I asked one of my moms

to come downstairs to tuck me in,

the other one comes.

Mom, I'll take three!

- Three?

- Three.

You know, whatever they needed

to call me, they could call me.

And so, they called me Dad for a long time

after I had come out,

and even after I had started to transition

and had come out really publicly,

and we finally got to a point

where we were

on a cross-country road trip

down to Texas,

and we were in a Southern state

in a gas station,

and I'm coming out

of the women's restroom,

and they're yelling across the Conoco

or whatever it was,

"Dad! Dad!" whatever.

And we got in the car, and I said, "Okay.

"We might need to rethink this

because this,

this may end up not being safe for us."

Within the hour,

they were like, "How about Momo?"

And I'm like, that's great, you know?

And they switched like on a dime,

and have not looked back.

- It's on your French toast.

- Yeah, but it's not on this one.

It's more unusual here in rural Iowa

to have two parents

with the same gender.

So, it's coming out more,

but they're pretty good,

and they know how to handle

that kind of stuff.

My family was very surprised.

I think they thought

they had the all-American man

and father and son.

They came back immediately and said,

"I love-- We love you." You know?

And that was kind of it.

And I thought, oh, that's a good response.

And then, it kind of,

from there, you know,

more discussion about religion

and things like that,

which, um, kind of devolved over time,

and so, they, they were surprised,

and I think remain that way

to this day.

I do not have contact with my parents

or my sister.

I do have a brother that I speak to.

It took me by surprise for sure.

Nia and I's relationship has, um...

it was incredibly strong.

We were very close,

our families were very close.

You know, over the years,

it's just evolved into something

that wasn't what it was before.

He kind of acted as

the middle man between Nia

and the rest of the family.

And I think that that's

a very difficult position for anyone.

So, I would hope that that can be...

mended to a place where we're close.

We're all close again.

But I think too that

there's so many boundaries

that have to be drawn

in order for everyone

to stay safe and continue healing.

Katie was preaching at our church

and it was a non-denominational

evangelical church.

I mean, the stance is

that h*m* is a sin.

- That's the byline, right?

- Yeah, yeah.

- And I think that there

is a push towards welcoming,

but not affirming.

I don't think the realization

has been made

that that's more damaging

than just saying, "No."

When I came out,

all of the energy got focused

onto Katie and her preaching.

Nobody would outright say, you know,

something that was transphobic,

but it was, "Katie, your theology is bad."

I think the other layer to that,

too, with being a woman

preaching in the evangelical context

was already like,

"We're allowing you to do this."

Because we were

a more progressive evangelical...

non-denominational church.

We just pushed beyond what that tradition

was willing to hold.

I desperately miss the church.

Nobody really asks me

this question, so sorry.

There's like a lot of emotion

attached to it.

I gave a significant amount

of my life to the church

because I love the people so much.

And I really love the ideas

that Jesus represents.

Of unconditional love,

of reaching out to those

who are marginalized.

I mean, probably because

I did have a q*eer identity.

I didn't know it my whole life.

That Jesus spoke those things to me,

that I was acceptable.

And it utterly breaks my heart

that my unconditional love for Nia

was the thing that had to break

my relationship with the church.

Because, for me...

it is the church.

Like, for me, this is my religion.

This is my faith.

This kind of love.

Yeah, I tried out

a couple different names

and had like some close friends

use it with me

and my siblings.

- Mm-hmm. Yeah.

How did that process feel?

- I mean, it was odd.

- Yeah.

- Because there was nothing

that felt right for a while.

- Yeah.

I have found community in other places.

That is the thing that

the church really gave me,

and the thing that I loved about church

was the relationship,

and I think God is relationship,

and so, to me,

you know, finding that in other places

is, is finding God elsewhere.

- Yeah, absolutely. Hi!

- Good to see you. Hi.

One of the biggest struggles for me

is finding belonging.

When Nia came out,

finding my own label was really difficult.

I'd like to say that Nia

gifted me my queerness.

She really gifted me that

awareness that,

you know, you thought

you were this one person,

but because you didn't have

the experiences that you needed,

you didn't get to find out

that your whole person

is a lot richer and

deeper than you thought.

- Let's talk about a dream summit because

when was the last time we did that?

I say ambiguously q*eer

because I don't know.

And I was just talking with another spouse

of another trans person the other day,

and they were saying the same thing.

"I don't really know where I fit.

I don't know what label you'd put on me."

So, I think we're like the labelless few

right now

of, you know, spouses of people

who have transitioned.

And I think, for most of us,

we're okay with that.

But it does feel a little bit like

where do we belong

inside of the q*eer community?

I keep asking you!

We have thought

about leaving the Midwest.

- We think about leaving

the Midwest all the time.

It seems like on a daily basis,

our state does not want us here

as q*eer individuals.

We legalized gay marriage 13 years ago.

Now, we've swung the other direction,

and we are with all of the states

that are leading the way

with anti-LGBTQ legislation.

What really got me involved

in kind of the political scene

was they tried to take

the gender identity protection

out of Iowa code.

Which would mean, if that was gone,

I could get fired,

I could be denied housing,

I could, you know,

be denied credit for being a trans person.

I think the biggest struggle

in the trans community

is being seen, and it feels like

we're not seen at all.

As humans, as people

who have lives and kids.

We're an issue currently,

and it's hard because,

other than

one-to-one conversations,

how do you help people understand that

these are our lives

that we're talking about?

They're not issues.

I still don't feel rooted

into this community.

But, you wonder,

do we stay and fight,

or do we go somewhere?

But, where do you go?

Where putting down roots is acceptable?

Where there's stability and safety.

Because it does feel like, at any moment,

anywhere, it could change.

In this community,

we 100% stand out.

Absolutely.

- We are probably one of the...

one out of three Black families,

let alone gay families.

A lot of people assume that

we're brothers or cousins.

You just know they're kind of like,

"What is this? Like,

which one? Who's the--"

- "This is new in Midwest Nebraska."

- Yeah.

- "What is this?"

Spink will be over here as well.

They never assume

that we're dating until we tell them,

and then they're like, which one's

more masculine, more effeminate?

You know, we're just who we are.

Our baby brings joy.

When I see her,

I am just overwhelmed with emotion,

and, wow.

This little sweet thing loves me,

regardless of what I do.

All she knows is her dads,

and her surrogate mom, who's involved.

Ariel is the biological mother

of our child.

We did mystery sperm.

- Mystery sperm. Mm-hmm.

- And so, you know, we did our thing,

put it in the cup, swirled it around.

- So that we both had a fair chance.

- Yep.

- I got my hair done today,

and they're like, "So...

How'd you hear?

Like, did you sign up for this?"

I'm like, no, I...

- It just kinda came about.

- Yeah. I was like,

I actually know these guys.

Mario and Monte told us

they were looking to have a baby.

My cousins actually joked, like,

"Hey, you should ask Ariel.

She has super easy labors and births."

- She calls, and says, "Hey,

I would actually be willing to do that."

- Hello!

Hello. Hi, Daddy's baby girl.

Little cute shoes.

- Oh, those are cute. I love that bow.

Mm-hmm.

My mom was very supportive about it.

My dad, not so much.

He told me that, you know,

"I still don't believe in this,

but you do what you wanna do."

Halle, look what I got.

There's a lot of people

who are more conservative

in our family and lean more towards

like a traditional family.

So, I think that played

into effect a little bit.

We don't wanna focus on that.

We wanna focus on the fact

that Monte and Mario are here

to have a family, a positive family,

and raise Marayla with good values

and to be a good person.

We want to raise her somewhat opposite

of how we were raised a little bit,

like kind of forced to choose

and forced to be,

you know, pretend to be

something that you're not.

We believe in choice,

when she's able to have choice,

but we don't wanna

force her to do anything

that she's not comfortable with.

My grandfather was a pastor.

Growing up in the church,

that's all I knew.

singing gospel music

drums, keyboard playing

- We met at the church.

I was a director of music.

I think he noticed me more

before I noticed him.

Well actually, he was flirting with me,

and I didn't know that he was.

I didn't even know that

he was gay, honestly.

I remember coming out

to my mom with Monte.

That was scary because

growing up in the church

and where everyone stands with that.

Do you remember me coming out to you?

- Yes.

- What was that like for you?

- It was pretty traumatic.

I cried probably for 72 hours.

It affects me to this day

because...

in the Christian community,

we still struggle with that.

- Okay.

Have you ever prayed, like,

to at least make

make me not gay or...

- Oh yeah, of course, I prayed that.

In the beginning.

I told you I cried for 72 hours straight.

It was a disappointment, but with love.

And there was just love.

The first five years of our marriage,

no one really knew other than

like our really close people.

We weren't able to truly show

how in love we were

and how happy we were

because, at the time,

we're still hiding from the church.

singing gospel music

drums, keyboard playing

So the church found out

that we were dating.

The pastor wanted to meet with me.

Monte's name came up, and then he said,

"Well, what's your guys' relationship?"

And I said, "Well, we're married."

And he says, "Well, right now,

"you're gonna be relieved

from all administerial duties, and...

"we'll figure out what,

what to do from here.

But right now, we just need to stop."

He said, "I don't want a divorce.

I want an annulment."

I was kicked out of a church before

for being known as gay.

And I just remember the flashbacks

of this happened before.

What am I doing wrong? Why--

Why is this being taken away from me?

And...

at the same time,

I still wanted things to go forward.

trumpet warming up

Where your cymbals at?

- You wanna put this on?

After we decided

not to get the annulment,

found the opportunity

to go into the Air Force.

- My professor was a retired chief

of the Air Force Band.

- Right.

- And my thought was ching!

Here we go.

upbeat music playing

Of joy and gladness

Will always banish sadness

And strife

That's where my connection with God

really gets connected from is music,

is worship,

and being in an environment

where there's a lot of people doing

the same thing, same type of mindset.

So, always look for

That silver lining and try to find

The sunny side of

Life...

upbeat music fades

When he told me that we're gonna be

stationed in Nebraska, I was pissed.

We just come from a liberal state,

Colorado,

to this? Like, no.

Long time no see!

Good to see you, sir!

But, in this community,

we have overall been very accepted.

I just didn't think anything of it.

I was just like, oh,

there are two guys over there.

And I was like, okay.

And I was like,

well, maybe they're roommates.

I mean, I didn't know, you know?

And I was like, or they could be together.

Okay, whatever.

Our neighbors, they're great people.

We've never asked them,

I guess, why they've taken

such a liking to us,

which is so polar opposite

of what we believe that they support.

When we know a person that votes

for Tr*mp, it's like, well,

- he stands against everything that we are.

- Anti-LGBT, yeah.

We're so polar opposite,

but it is what it is.

I mean, we trust them enough

to watch our house,

and they trust us to watch their house,

and Mario gives their kid piano lessons,

and I-I don't know how to explain it.

playing piano

- Okay, almost.

We're gonna hit the first chord twice.

- Oh, right.

- Yeah, you got it. Ready?

One, two, three, and...

playing piano

Okay! Dun-dun, down.

We're not in their position.

I can't put myself in their shoes,

but all I can do is, you know,

love on them the way they love on us,

and they're great neighbors.

playing piano

I just keep rolling with my life.

You know,

the church thing, keep rolling.

Air Force thing came up, keep rolling.

I'm still waiting for,

you know, something.

Something's gonna happen.

I don't know when or what's gonna happen.

- Like is it too good to be true?

- Right.

We have always wanted to have land,

and we wanted to be closer to our food.

And we wanted goats.

It's such a weird combination

that a lot of people don't think of.

Farming, and then ranching goats,

and then also being

a same-sex couple.

We get a lot

of backhanded compliments.

So I guess living in the Midwest,

a backhanded compliment at times is like,

well...

we're doing our job.

We're integrating.

Midwesterners have a way of living

that is like having a horse

with blinders on.

- I can't tell you the number of people

that I have met

that they have never left

the town they grew up in.

Marek was born in Kansas.

And he was still seen as an outsider

because we didn't own the house

that we lived in for three generations.

Kinda like a ballet.

You know, I lived in New York,

I've lived in Portland, Oregon,

I've lived in Austin, Texas,

and here, a lot of the...

western women

give a very, very...

- Masculine vibe.

- Yes.

That's an excellent way to put it.

Thank you.

People just assume that I'm a horse girl.

And then Courtney, you know, again,

when Courtney just

dresses how Courtney does,

people just glance over...

...and think that she's my guy.

So , we just let them

make their assumptions.

- Yeah, it doesn't really matter.

And it's been like that my whole life, so.

- Yeah.

I'm like, whatever.

We met in Lawrence.

Couple of dates,

and then we were living together.

So, it was like first date,

the toothbrush,

second date, the U-Haul.

And then, we knew within the first year

that we wanted

to move out of town to the country.

Whoa.

I always, always,

always wanted a baby.

When I was little, I wanted a baby.

As I got older, I wanted a baby.

I was like, let's see where it goes.

- I was like, okay, I'm in.

Marek is kind

and giving and empathetic

and he helps center us.

He is so attune

to the environment around him.

He's really gregarious

and can plug himself in.

And, like you said,

he's a grounding force.

We put him in the art center preschool

in Lawrence,

and that was wonderful.

- It was amazing.

- It was a great program.

And so we continued on

with a public schooling mentality

and put him into kindergarten.

When I went to public school,

it was pretty bad.

Turns out people in a trailer park

in the Midwest

don't really like lesbians too much.

At least their parents don't.

And so, I was called a lot of names,

some pretty aggressive bullying.

- He would come home and talk about things

that kids would say to him

or interactions

he would have on the playground,

and they weren't positive.

And we approached the school

about what happened,

and they basically said,

"Well, what do you expect?

It's just gonna get worse."

Like, I can still

remember a dinner conversation

that we had while he was in public school.

It was before gay marriage was legal,

and we were talking about gay marriage,

and our son actually said,

"I don't think it's right.

Because it's against the law."

- And that was

him being influenced directly by

the people in the community

because, obviously, it wasn't us!

It sparked a conversation of

sometimes, laws are not made

by people that have the most... diverse...

point of view.

We took him out of school and put him in

a virtual learning environment,

where he was able

to make his own schedule and...

explore his own interests.

When my parents

took me out of public school,

the principal said,

"Oh, you'll be back."

I was not back. So,

that was, at least,

a little bit of vindication

that I proved someone wrong

at least once in my life.

He became free

to be who he wants to be

without fear of repercussions.

A theater kid might,

to some people,

have negative connotations,

but just doing theater

and being in that sphere

and not being annoying about it

and not forcing it on other people

is great.

Like, you clearly have a passion

and a drive to do it,

and you feel

like that's what you

wanna do with your life,

which is what I wanna do with my life.

Basically, these Tow here...

- Okay.

- They're getting ambushed

by the Imperium of Man.

I'm--

- Are we playing D&D

with Warhammer minions?

Sure, you could say that, so...

Yeah, you're gonna have a great time,

I'm sure.

I feel like if I didn't

have lesbian parents,

I would probably be

a little bit more close-minded.

I would definitely not be

as open about myself.

I'm bisexual, so I like both genders.

I just look like a guy in the Midwest

where outer appearance is a lot.

It's really easy to just not

say anything and have people

make assumptions,

and whether those be good

or bad assumptions is up to them.

I certainly share some Midwestern values.

I feel like I'm polite and I'm kind

and I'm here to help.

But, I also feel like...

being accepting and being

a general good person

is a lot better than just

pretending to be.

The Midwestern culture

has an overall resistance

to change and altering the mentality

of what defines

a nuclear family.

We are just people living in a community.

And if we're good people,

we're good people.

Okay? Because you take a fall gracefully.

And there's nothing

different about who we are.

I mean, we're just two parents

and a child growing up in the Midwest.

- Mm-hmm.

- Wait. Fore!

- Alright...

First of all, thank you guys for

being part of this and joining us today.

What we'd like to do is just

kind of get to understand what our--

what this safe organization is.

He commands respect in his classroom.

He's been teaching for,

I don't even know,

but far longer than I've been alive,

and everybody knows who he is,

and they respect him for what he is.

- Russ was my choir teacher

for all four years of high school.

He was never shy about who he was

and really helped me

figure out who I was.

He was the first person in Oak Harbor

who I told about my sexuality

just because he made

his classroom a safe space.

As an educator for 26 years,

I had students coming to

my office all the time, saying,

"Mr. Raber, can I talk to you?

Can I talk to you?"

And so, I think sometimes,

just by being visible--

I mean, clearly,

my students knew my husband.

- Yeah.

- He was visible at school events,

and I think just having that

representation for them

was, was very helpful.

I came out in 1995, so I have seen it go

from just the very beginning,

to, I mean, where marriage was legal

in the state of Ohio.

In 2012, when we got married,

we had to get married in New York state

because we couldn't get married here yet.

But, it has changed so much.

Then all of a sudden, 2016 came,

and it's almost like we went backwards.

- Mm-hmm.

The students

and their h*m* and hate.

This one kid believes

that non-binary people do not exist.

It's only two, the gender binary.

I mean, I'm here right now,

so we do kinda exist.

I very much

believe that the bullying

has sort of reemerged

as a hot topic for

LGBTQ+ students.

I think it's more subversive.

It's now 2022,

and I feel like Oak Harbor,

as a, as a collective unit,

is just sort of coming into the 1998

frame of mind.

Trying to combat that

generational mindset

is difficult because

change is difficult for people.

But, when kids' lives, you know,

are on the table,

you have to make the change.

I came out at a later age,

and my family was amazing.

And I, I give them credit.

I like to say my father is not

necessarily an educated man,

but he's truly one of the wisest

people I know. He truly is.

- And he has embraced Mark like a son.

- Oh yeah.

My coming out was different.

I threw myself into college,

and I came out in college in Kent, Ohio,

and kind of resigned myself

that this was the decision

I was gonna make,

but I knew my family of Greek descent

was not probably gonna do well with it.

Now, am I angry with my parents?

No. No, no, no.

They have become amazing,

amazing advocates for me,

and I never had to worry

about them abandoning me.

That is an amazing feeling.

Now, I'm horrified for people

that don't have that.

playing accordion

I probably say that I realized

I was bisexual a few years ago.

At first, I didn't really

feel comfortable telling anybody and...

and then, when I did feel comfortable

telling, it was mainly

just my friends.

And then just recently, I told her.

playing accordion

I'm kind of, you know,

trying to play it by ear.

My big thing was when he told me,

he was gonna let it up to me

and to use my judgment.

It was a big struggle for me

only because

there are a few people in our family that

their reactions could go either way.

And I'm leery of subjecting him

to any kind of undue criticism

from a family member.

playing accordion

My name Vin comes

from a little bit of a story.

Around 2020, early 2021,

I thought I was trans.

And so,

I wanted to go with something

along the lines of my legal name, Marin.

So, I went with the name Marvin.

And so, I started thinking a bit more.

I was like,

yeah, I don't really feel like a man.

Let's chop off that Mar

and just stick with Vin.

And now, a friend calls me Vinny.

The changing of her name

was very tough. Um...

It almost felt like she was...

throwing things away.

Oh, my God, I'm sorry.

And it just felt like

maybe I did something to

make her wanna change.

But I didn't.

- I was the one who did that.

- And now I feel, excuse me, much better

about it, that they're not throwing

their childhood away.

That it wasn't that.

No, it's just different.

And it's hard for me

to understand sometimes

because I don't understand.

But I want to.

What I have

done in Safe, personally,

is feel more confident in myself.

Like I can...

Like I meet a new person.

"Hi, my name is Vin."

Students advocating for equality,

LGBTQ students, racial minorities,

disability minorities, you name it.

- Even people who are in the community...

But they have grown and really helped

to support students

in that community

and surrounding communities.

And I just can't speak enough about it.

It's amazing.

We're making people aware of us.

We're also making it apparent

that like there is a group

where you can come to

if you wanna come out,

or if you don't feel safe,

there is a group you can come to

and talk about it

and join us, stuff like that.

You're not alone

because we have this group

here Oak, like in Oak Harbor.

I look back on past graduates

who you would see them struggle,

kinda come to their identity,

and then once they've graduated,

your, your relationship with them changes.

Just having that representation for them

was very helpful,

and I kinda heard some of those stories

after they graduated.

I do love this community,

but I wanted to expand

my horizons a little bit.

I wanted to kind of explore

new things, new cities.

So I did tell myself that I wasn't going

to permanently come back here,

but I ended up coming back.

I am a third grade

special education teacher.

The parents don't know my sexuality,

and because of that small-town stigma,

I never know what parents

might think about that.

Maybe they might think

less of me as a teacher,

that I'm not as equipped to be a teacher.

I'd come to realize that,

no, I want to do this

because I want people to understand

that we are teachers,

we are doctors, and food service workers,

and we're your everyday people,

and we are good people just like you.

- Can't believe that's what actually

brought us back together as friends.

- I know! We were happen

to run into each other

after how long of not talking.

We kind of lost touch for a while.

- Over a little bit over the summer.

Greg has been

my best friend since sixth grade.

Our freshman year of college,

we were out to lunch.

It had been a while since

we had talked to each other.

And then, I was like,

"What about your love life?

Do you have anybody in your life?"

And he said, "Actually, yes I do."

"Oh, okay, what's her name?"

And he said, "Actually, his name is..."

And that's when--

That's how he came out to me.

- She was one of the first girls

I started-- ever dated.

She was my first kiss

before I even knew who I was.

- I think it definitely

brought us closer. It gave us...

My dad has not been in my life

for about three years now.

As soon as I came out,

he kind of started distancing

and cutting himself off,

until eventually to the point where

we just kind of went our separate ways.

- Do you remember how that happened?

How that conversation went down?

I absolutely have no idea.

We're all gonna find the people

who don't support us

and don't accept us as who we are,

but there's going to be

your biggest cheerleader in your corner.

You just have

to figure out who that is,

whether it's your mom,

your dad, your best friend.

- Did we ever even break up?

Are we still dating

and I didn't know it?

Absolutely not.

I am currently creating centerpieces

for our q*eer prom coming up soon.

So, we have a local...

party supply store in town

who's doing a large rainbow balloon arch.

- Gay marriage did not solve everything.

- No, it did not.

- There is still incredible

amounts of h*m*,

biphobia, transphobia,

every phobia under the sun.

We need to work as

a country on communication.

Not just in small towns. Everywhere.

For the last several years, we were

bombarded with these negative messages.

On the backside of that messaging,

it's so vital to have a safe space

where kids have the opposite message.

It's amazing to me,

as a public elected official,

the amount of threats I get

just for serving in the capacity

of who I am.

No, they're not mad at me

for the bills that I'm presenting.

They're mad at me

because I'm an indigenous q*eer woman

sitting at the table,

and the death threats

that come with that

show that people are still shook

that we're here.

Okay.

Wait, did you ever get a meeting?

- No. Did you?

- No, with Logan's Laws.

Let's follow up on Logan's Laws...

We're seeing a shift in who

our political leaders are

in Minnesota,

but I think also across the nation,

is that we're coming in

as grassroots organizers.

We're coming in as individuals

who haven't seen ourselves

represented in this space.

And so the fact that it's three freshmen

leading this LGBTQ conversation,

um, is really fun.

I'm not in this work for politics.

I'm in this work for people,

and I was sick of seeing this world

be so harmful to people like me.

And I didn't wanna just be a mom

that vented on social media.

I wanted to be a mom that

could look my kids in the eyes and say

I actively did everything I could

to make this world a better place for you.

And so, I wanted to figure out

how to get at bigger tables

and I figured out in this world,

it's all about degrees.

So went on,

got my master's in educational leadership.

Professionally, I went from

sitting in living rooms,

talking to my families,

building really nice relationships

to then taking all of those tools

and that pain that I heard

and turning it into policy and purpose.

Marriage equality did a lot for us.

I think though now we're missing

the acceptance of the family structure.

What our legal rights are with families.

You know I think we have a long ways to go

to be really accepting there.

And I think if we can work

in our school systems

and in those younger spaces

to be more loving

and accepting of all kinds of families,

we teach our next generation

to be more kind and inclusive

to each other, and that's how

we really make the shift.

Transitioning is a huge undertaking,

and it's not for

the faint of heart by any means.

Even though you're the same person,

now, all of a sudden,

you have kind of a new beginning.

And your voice is different

because you're happy.

You're excited.

You're finally living your truth.

You're, you're free.

It kind of feels like

our dad never really existed.

Not only were our parents

getting divorced,

so we were losing our dad that way.

She, at the time, he,

she left, and then, when we met her again,

she was a woman,

and it was completely different.

It felt like we were realistically

meeting a stranger.

- How does it look, though?

- Eh, it's alright.

We met online,

just as platonic friends.

I had a big space

and had a vacant room available.

Um, Debb was obviously separating

from her ex at the time

and needed a place, so I offered it up.

She had an enthusiasm for life

that was something

I was not used to seeing.

And it was just very attractive to me.

We connected on a friendship level

that was very difficult to...

explain.

I'd never really had that connection

with somebody else.

- Three years in July. Yeah.

- Right.

We set up right over there.

- Uh-huh.

- This is where Dad met me

with the...

- the things.

- Right.

Pre-wedding enjoyment in tears.

My dad has come

a long way, actually,

but my sons, I believe,

are wildly transphobic.

Just the other day,

I was talking to my ex-wife, and...

I don't know if this is true,

but, according to her,

my younger son allegedly said

that he would...

k*ll me if he got the opportunity.

Met a girl in college.

We ended up getting married

about a year and a half

or two years after college,

and we started a family together.

My youngest daughter was born in October,

and in early January, February,

I sought out my first gender counselor.

I needed to find out what it all meant

because the feelings

that I had suppressed

for a decade and a half

had all of a sudden come back.

I was diagnosed with

gender identity disorder.

At the same point,

because I was hiding this secret,

my marriage started to break down

because I wasn't honest.

I didn't know the words

to tell my ex-wife...

You know, how do you explain

something to somebody

when you really don't know how

to explain it to yourself yet?

There were signs,

and we had talked about it,

and there were a lot of lies

that came out of it.

And so, there was never really any truth

to the whole situation.

- We would have a fight or an argument

about me being trans.

It, a lot of time, carried over.

We were not real good at shielding

our disagreements from, from my daughters.

I feel like a lot of people ask,

"How is she?

What she's going through?"

They don't realize the impact it

takes on not only me and my sister,

but like my mom and my dad's parents.

Everything like that. It's just...

It's a lot for everyone around my dad,

and that's the part

that people don't realize.

- Their father and I separated,

and we, basically,

were kind of left with nothing.

When she left,

and we lived with our mom,

a single mom who's a teacher,

so it's not like we could afford a house.

We lived with someone

for a year and a half,

and my dad bought this house, lived here,

then met Debb, and had this

like happily-ever-after it felt like.

We went from a 4,000-square-foot house

to two bedrooms.

At one point, my kid was

bullied at her high school

for being technically homeless

because we didn't have

our own home anymore.

When the transition happened,

when I was in high school,

I didn't know how to explain it.

Like, "Hey, my dad, like--"

There, all my friends

are talking about my dad,

but I don't, like, in my head,

didn't have one.

No, you get two for nothing,

and then Em got a run of three.

- Well, I still can take it.

- I was just saying.

- Ten.

It made us a lot closer,

so we try to look for

the positive parts of it

because we could have definitely

thrown the towel in.

Thirty-one.

- Four.

We moved into Minneapolis.

We kind of left not only the safe family,

but the safe suburbs,

and moved to this big city.

That was a big scary move.

And I think it just made us,

all of us,

including my kids,

who were quite young at the age,

see that there's

other people out there

and other ways of life.

Family-wise,

I wasn't expecting to have a relationship

with my ex-wife as friends. I wasn't...

expecting my daughters to be in my life,

and through the work that...

you know,

conversations that Deb and I have had

and some of the work that my ex

was able to do with

helping them understand,

um, we've worked on bringing

them back into my life,

and, and, they're--

they wanna hang out now.

That was a good sh*t, May.

I think we're all in a different spot now.

I can't, I can't say it's perfect.

Like, life isn't perfect,

and things aren't perfect,

but we're able to...

be cordial

and sort of co-parent in a way.

So make sure you

hit right down in here.

I invited my dad to my sporting events

for the first time this year,

and I felt like that really helped.

That's in the white.

That went further than yours.

- Just being able to learn more

about a community

that we didn't necessarily have a part of.

It wasn't that we were

against any kind of community,

but we didn't know a lot about it.

So, May did say she's learned

a lot more about this community

and learned how to talk to people about it

and be more open to accepting others.

Jenn's daughters are my daughters,

for all intents and purposes.

They treat me unexpectedly well.

They were the ones who listened to me

that I was in the Air Force,

and then, as a Christmas gift,

they made me a blanket

with Air Force themes on it.

And it was so touching because

someone had actually listened to me,

and they weren't even related to me.

It helped to know

what my dad was feeling

and why she felt like she did.

It was nice to know

that it was more than just her.

Like there's more people out there

who are like this.

Bring this foot forward just a touch.

There you go.

Good hit! Look at that!

Right down the middle!

I am now Dad to my daughters again.

And even though I'm Jennifer,

and I'm a female,

and I go by she/her pronouns,

that is a title that

I will always own for my daughters

is Dad and Father.

If I can give any advice would be

to just keep moving forward,

making sure there's the honesty,

and not saying what people wanna hear,

but saying what is the truth.

- Think it's really hard to accept someone

for who they are when you've known them

as someone else for so long.

But I also think you need

to give an open mind

because our world is changing

whether people like it or not.
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