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Tag: non-binary

  • Desperate Detroit mother fights for contact with arrested gender-nonconforming child

    Desperate Detroit mother fights for contact with arrested gender-nonconforming child

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    Steve Neavling

    Detroit police arrested a 16-year-old girl outside her home.

    Nicole Walker says she hasn’t slept or eaten since Detroit police swooped in and arrested her 16-year-old child outside her home on Friday afternoon.

    Since then, Walker hasn’t been able to talk to her child, who is lodged in a juvenile center.

    Walker is also worried because she says her child is gender nonconforming and uses he/him pronouns. Although the mother refers to her “daughter,” Metro Times will use the child’s preferred pronouns.

    Her child, whom Metro Times isn’t identifying because he’s a minor, has been charged with felonious assault on allegations he pointed a gun at someone at a gas station near Walker’s home on the city’s east side.

    Walker, who is on oxygen 24 hours a day, says authorities are preventing her and her child from speaking over the phone.

    “I’m going crazy,” Walker, 55, tells Metro Times. “I can’t get information anywhere. They told me they don’t have to tell me anything about my daughter. I haven’t eaten since Friday. I can’t sleep.”

    In general, police in Michigan are barred from interrogating a child without a parent or guardian present. Walker is worried her child will falsely confess out of fear.

    “I’m so afraid they’re trying to get my daughter to say something she didn’t do,” Walker says. “She’s naive.”

    Last week, Metro Times launched “The Closer,” an investigative series about a former Detroit detective who elicited false confessions and witness statements while interviewing teenagers.

    A Detroit police spokesman defended the department’s handling of the situation, saying Walker’s child wasn’t interrogated, and they “have no authority” over who juveniles are allowed to communicate with while in jail. Metro Times also reached out to Wayne County for comment and will update this article with their response.

    “The family member did come to the station, and we advised her of her daughter being in custody,” the spokesman tells Metro Times. “No interrogation was done that night. … If there were any discussions to be made, they would have contacted a family member or lawyer.”

    Walker says her child was walking home from a convenience store when police arrested him. Walker yanked the oxygen tube out of her nose and demanded to know what was going on.

    “They told me to ‘shut the hell up, this has nothing to do with you,’” Walker claims. “They didn’t Mirandize her. They just took her. She even asked, ‘Why am I being handcuffed?’ They wouldn’t say a word.”

    At about 10 p.m., Walker says, she finally got a call from a court-appointed attorney who explained some vague details about the allegations.

    At a juvenile court hearing via Zoom on Saturday, Walker pleaded to speak with her child, but the referee wouldn’t let her. The referee set a $500 bond but indicated that only Walker could post the bond, she says.

    Since she’s unable to leave her house because she’s on oxygen, Walker has been unable to post bond. She sent family members to try to post bond, but they were denied.

    “They flat out told me I personally have to do it, even though I have my husband, who is her father on her birth certificate,” Walker says.

    But she’s not giving up.

    “I have made up my mind that I will die if I have to pick up my daughter,” Walker says. “I will take a chance and die to find my daughter.”

    A hearing is scheduled for 1:30 p.m. Tuesday in juvenile court.

    Walker desperately wants to talk to her child before the hearing to ensure he doesn’t incriminate himself.

    “I’m so afraid,” Walker says. “I’m scared to death. She’s never been in trouble in a day in her life. She’s never even been in a police department.”

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    Steve Neavling

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  • Rejecting Fetishization and Lack: Claiming the Fullness of My Black Demisexuality

    Rejecting Fetishization and Lack: Claiming the Fullness of My Black Demisexuality

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    By Grace B. Freedom

    My name is Grace and I am a gray demisexual ace.

    Rewind: gray doesn’t really suit me. It doesn’t feel vibrant enough. I can be a gray demisexual as it pertains to generic understandings of asexuality, but I want to formally declare that I want a new color. Perhaps I will be a gold-flecked cyan demisexual with rich metallic hints and deep blues that flow into green, in honor of my watery, fluid, and balanced life-blooming nature. For the sake of ease, I’ll stick with gray demi ace (but now you know what my real color would be).

    Much of mainstream ace talk is all about what we are not and what we don’t experience and that is not my ace experience. It seems strange to be defined by the absence of something, no? In so many online mainstream ace spaces (read: white), I am reminded of the lack that defines whiteness and the inherent delusions of supremacy therein- the consistent speaking in the negative, violently erasing power dynamics inside of sexuality and asexuality while engaging in unexamined fetishization of Black bodies.

    I actively resist, dare I say, REBUKE that way of defining my existence. I AM on the asexual spectrum, a gray demi ace — a person who only rarely experiences sexual attraction (as a primary experience) and when it is present it is brought to the fore by deep emotional connection (demi). I am not without sexuality as much as I am without the consistent expression of sexuality in the form of sexual attraction.

    More Radical Reads: How White LGBT Spaces Erase Queer People of Colour

    I often discuss my nuanced experiences of the erotic, pleasure, and sex with a friend who is very allosexual. She is fascinated by all the ways I experience sex and sexuality inside of my asexuality that have nothing to do with my or anyone else’s genitals. She affectionately calls these experiences “Gracesex”. Gracesex describes the pathway to my marvelous propensity for sensuous multi-orgasmic life experiences, most of which do not require genitals or even nudity. I am a big proponent for asking for what I want and deep, sensual, intimate connections are at the top of that list. This is what it means for me to be a sex-positive gray demi ace. We outchea, y’all; as my Caribbean community might say, “Tell dem we reach.”

    More Radical Reads: How I Realized I’m Demisexual In A Sexual World

    My gray demi asexuality is not about what I am without but more like where I am full. I feel full of attractions — they are deep, juicy, complex, and fluid. My asexuality is embodied. My gray demi aceness is Black AF, is nonbinary AF and queer AF. Sometimes my attractions are hard to parse out from each other, but they include sexual attraction. They just do not center sexual attraction as my primary attraction. My gray demisexuality is aesthetic, spiritual/emotional, and sensual attraction forward and exists inside of the immeasurable yearning to be present to unplumbed emotional connections. It shows up as interdependence and curiosity inside of intimate connections that are reciprocal, where I can practice the vulnerability of my wholeness.

    My (a)sexuality has agency and is powerful. Inside of this cyan, gold-flecked, metallic-hinted, deep-blue-into-green exists a glorious being. I AM verdant, I AM fecund, I AM whole, I AM full, I AM vast, and I belong wholly to myself and my (a)sexuality.

    I am sexual in the infinite ways I know myself and seek to know myself. My (a)sexuality exists inside of my I AM. While the seat of my erotic does not rest on the legs of white supremacist cis heteropatriarchal allosexuality, there is indeed an erotic seat and it is indeed hot.

    My name is Grace. I am a gray demi ace and my Black (Gr)ACE is “IAMsexual”.

    [Feature image: Photo of Grace B. Freedom, a Black non-binary person with short dark hair, facial hair, pierced ears, and a nose ring. They’re wearing a navy hooded jacket with a reddish patterned scarf and are standing in front of a blurred rural autumn landscape of yellow and brown trees and brush. A few industrial tower structures rise up to the grey sky in the background. Grace greets the viewer with a contagious grin on their face, a smile that is also present in their eyes. Source: A. De La Cruz.]


    Grace B Freedom (all pronouns combined with they/them pronouns) is a Black Genderfluid Queer creator of the Black Love and Care (BLaC) Ethic . She is supported by a grant from the Effing Foundation to write the My Black (Gr)Ace series. They have been described as a penetrative and inescapable force, but mostly they want to be in deep conversations that are guided by mutual tenderness and curiosity that center a BLaC ethic . You can find them asking a lot of questions and sharing their freedom practices on Instagram @madquestionasker and you can follow her writing on patreon @madquestionasker.

    TBINAA is an independent, queer, Black woman run digital media and education organization promoting radical self love as the foundation for a more just, equitable and compassionate world. If you believe in our mission, please contribute to this necessary work at PRESSPATRON.com/TBINAA 

    We can’t do this work without you!

    As a thank you gift, supporters who contribute $10+ (monthly) will receive a copy of our ebook, Shed Every Lie: Black and Brown Femmes on Healing As Liberation. Supporters contributing $20+ (monthly) will receive a copy of founder Sonya Renee Taylor’s book, The Body is Not An Apology: The Power of Radical Self Love delivered to your home. 

    Need some help growing into your own self love? Sign up for our 10 Tools for Radical Self Love Intensive!

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    Sonya Renee Taylor

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  • TransAkron Raises Awareness and Shares Stories of Akron Transgender Community

    TransAkron Raises Awareness and Shares Stories of Akron Transgender Community

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    Press Release



    updated: May 31, 2018

    The Gay Community Endowment Fund (GCEF) of Akron Community Foundation has unveiled a new photojournalism series aimed at fighting stereotypes, increasing inclusion for the transgender community, and celebrating Pride Month.

    Created by award-winning photographer Shane Wynn and writer H.L. Comeriato, the TransAkron series shines a light on trans, nonbinary and gender-nonconforming people in Akron, Ohio. The project captures the lived realities of these individuals and tells the stories of their journeys while adding a data-driven narrative about the transgender community nationwide.

    The TransAkron project is part-narrative and part-resource, and at the Gay Community Endowment Fund, we are proud to be on the front lines of advocacy through storytelling.

    Phil Montgomery, Chair, Gay Community Endowment Fund of Akron Community Foundation

    The photos and stories can be viewed online at TransAkron.com.

    The TransAkron series features the stories of eight individuals, including U.S. veteran Giovonni Santiago, who opened the country’s first transgender-specific clinic in the Veterans Affairs system, and Rylee Jackson, who, after experiencing a dozen foster homes and four different high schools, found joy through her love of dance. 

    “The idea of TransAkron originated in early 2017 when I had a conversation with Shane Wynn — a local artist and advocate — about her photography and how we could use images to humanize people and advocate for the GCEF’s important work in the community,” said Phil Montgomery, advisory board chair of the Gay Community Endowment Fund of Akron Community Foundation. “The TransAkron project is part-narrative and part-resource, and at the GCEF, we are proud to be on the front lines of advocacy through storytelling.”

    TransAkron was made possible thanks to funding and support from the Gay Community Endowment Fund and several community partners, including ArtsNow (an innovative nonprofit that connects arts and culture through collaboration) and the EXL Center at The University of Akron. The series’ writer, H.L. Comeriato, is a former University of Akron student who was identified by faculty member Dr. Heather Braun.

    “People are often unaware that their friends, neighbors, civil servants, police officers, doctors, etc. identify as trans,” said Nicole Mullet, executive director of ArtsNow. “Breaking down that sense of ‘other’ helps us come together as a community. We are Akron – all of us.”

    Established in 2001, the Gay Community Endowment Fund accepts grant applications for programs and services that positively impact the LGBTQ+ community and Greater Akron as a whole. It also raises awareness about equality issues and rallies the LGBTQ+ community around a common philanthropic purpose. Since its founding, the GCEF has invested nearly $475,000 into local causes that change the lives of LGBTQ+ people in the Greater Akron community. Recent grants have advocated for countywide nondiscrimination protections, supported a mentoring program for LGBTQ+ college students, and raised awareness about domestic violence in the LGBTQ+ community, among other critical initiatives.

    To support the Gay Community Endowment Fund, please visit GayCommunityFund.org. Gifts of all sizes will make a permanent difference in the LGBTQ+ community. For instance, a gift of $600 could provide safe housing and basic living essentials for one homeless LGBTQ+ young adult, who is more likely to become a victim of violence, abuse and human trafficking than their heterosexual peers. Likewise, a gift of $100 could provide HIV testing and prevention education for five LGBTQ+ people in Akron. All gifts are fully tax-deductible and are invested and grown over time, so gifts made today will continue to multiply for generations to come.

    For more information about the TransAkron project, please visit TransAkron.com.

    CONTACT:

    Phil Montgomery
    Chair, Gay Community Endowment Fund of
    Akron Community Foundation

    330-714-8178
    ​monty.phil@gmail.com 

    Source: Gay Community Endowment Fund

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