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  • - Growing up, I didn't even know what trans was.

  • It was always, "You're not a girl.

  • You're not a girl. You're not a girl."

  • If you brought your heels with , please put them on.

  • - Black trans woman from Trinidad and Tobago,

  • that doesn't go over well.

  • DOMINIQUE JACKSON: Step up. Don't be scared.

  • I don't bite till after midnigh.

  • [class laughing]

  • I did not see a future for myse.

  • Walking, a lot of times, we don't understand

  • we carry our emotions with us when we walk.

  • If you are late for work,

  • it's gonna be... excuse me. Exc. - [class laughing]

  • Get out of the way, right?

  • - Ballroom becomes salvation fo.

  • DOMINIQUE: When I first put on my hair...

  • and I realized that I could be ,

  • there was no going back.

  • dance music playing

  • Five, six, seven, eight, walk.

  • But what I've discovered by walking with my head up

  • is being able to say, "No.

  • I don't care what you think abo"

  • CARLOS WATSON: The most extraordinary lives

  • follow undefined paths.

  • To find your voice,

  • you may need to journey into the unknown.

  • I'm Carlos Watson, editor of OZY,

  • and these are Defining Moments.

  • EDWIN TORRES: I don't know if it's straight o.

  • DOMINIQUE: Yeah, I like that.

  • I never thought I would have put my mother on my wall like t.

  • - Hey. How are you? - Hi, Carlos.

  • A pleasure. Welcome. - How are you?

  • - Welcome to my little, little .

  • CARLOS: Thank you. Beautiful pl. DOMINIQUE: Thank you.

  • Thank you. Thank you. In the spirit of the holidays.

  • CARLOS: I was gonna say, you're getting ready for Christ.

  • Is that your favorite holiday?

  • - Eh, you know, um,

  • for quite a while I really didn,

  • get into holidays and stuff lik,

  • because there was so much more going on.

  • I really couldn't put up photos.

  • Like, everyone does. They have ,

  • but I didn't value my life.

  • So therefore, I didn't celebratf by putting up my photos.

  • I was living in survival mode.

  • CARLOS: What was it like for you growin?

  • Were you able to be open...

  • - No. - ...as a trans girl, trans wom?

  • - I would never have come out

  • if I was living in Tobago.

  • Trans people on the islands are murdered.

  • And there's nothing done.

  • CARLOS: Was there anyone else growing up on the island,

  • like, were there any other peope who felt like their gender...

  • DOMINIQUE: There was this one person...

  • People on the island treated this person horribly.

  • Like, they couldn't get into ta. They had no place to live.

  • I would see people discriminate against them.

  • I would see people laugh at the.

  • But this person was so happy.

  • When you saw them, they weren'tg with their heads down and feeli.

  • They were walking around, like,

  • really happy. Like, singing and, and a lot of people would say,

  • "Oh, they're crazy. They've lost their mind."

  • But what I've come to realize i, that person had found their tru.

  • They didn't care what anyone el.

  • Going through life, growing up,

  • when it came to understanding m,

  • I was so excited about my truth

  • that I thought that everyone should just be like,

  • "We accept you. We love you. Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah."

  • For my mother, who is rooted in her church,

  • in, in her Bible,

  • she did not understand it.

  • CAROLE LYONS: My name is Carole.

  • And Dominique is my son.

  • My... sorry.

  • Is my daughter.

  • My firstborn.

  • Dominique was a wonderful child.

  • Loving. Kind.

  • He was always a performer. He was a great dancer.

  • DOMINIQUE: I played Wonder Woman.

  • I didn't want to join the Boy S. I joined the Brownies.

  • And when I got to a certain age, it was no longer cute

  • for me to do the girly things.

  • Now it was like, "Look, this can be kind of seri"

  • I had an aunt who, every time I opened my mouth,

  • she would say, "Speak like a boy!

  • Act like a boy! You're not a girl."

  • Okay, but, this is where I rela.

  • - From what age did you feel th?

  • - It was about when I realized that girls had vaginas

  • and boys had penises, and I didn't want one.

  • - So, you're talking, like,

  • - five, six, seven-- DOMINIQUE: Four.

  • I remember first asking the que,

  • "What is this? Why is it here?"

  • To them, it was like, you're born male.

  • But to me, it was like, this is.

  • So, somebody fix it.

  • - Were you saying this to Mom--

  • - To my grandmother, but they weren't hearing me.

  • I was taken out of dance classe, and put into soccer.

  • I went to church every Sunday, Sunday school.

  • CAROLE: Religion was very much a part of our lives.

  • He was very involved with the Anglican church.

  • He was an acolyte at the time I left Tobago...

  • in 1986.

  • My husband and I at the time,

  • and my three children, we moved to Baltimore, Maryland.

  • JAYE BREBNOR: Mom came over to the Unites States for a bett,

  • to prepare a better life for us.

  • CAROLE: Dominique's grandmother didn't want him to leave Tobago,

  • so he left him with her.

  • DOMINIQUE: I'm about to become an acolyte,

  • so now this is a prestigious thg on the island.

  • Your child is serving on the al. They're closer to God.

  • And then the priest,

  • I started to feel really strange vibes from him.

  • He took me to the beach,

  • myself and another acolyte, and I'm thinking,

  • ooh, everyone else is gonna be ,

  • because now I'm close to the pr.

  • To me, it was like being close to a president or something lik.

  • And so we're in the water, and..

  • he takes off his shorts.

  • My priest was not a homosexual. He was a pedophile.

  • CARLOS: And you were how old at this po?

  • DOMINIQUE: Eleven, probably.

  • I cannot tell you if I was penetrated in the water or not.

  • I just know I felt pain.

  • I know that things did not feel.

  • CAROLE: When I heard that...

  • if I was able to travel,

  • I'm sure I would have committed.

  • DOMINIQUE: Religion was always a part of m.

  • But religion also hurt me.

  • At those times, I didn't feel le I had any connection to God.

  • Even though I knew he was there,

  • I just didn't feel like He lovee or cared for me,

  • because I was told that I was an abomination for being .

  • Years later, I got a phone callg that one of the acolytes had pa.

  • It was from AIDS complications.

  • And so, when I heard that the priest may have HIV,

  • in my entire being, all I heard was "run."

  • "Run."

  • CARLOS: By age 15,

  • Dominique had experienced enough fear and abuse

  • to last a lifetime.

  • Now, she'd leave the only home she'd ever known

  • seeking the one thing she neede:

  • family.

  • CAROLE: She came here to Baltimore.

  • I said, "Okay, that's fine. You can stay with me."

  • And basically, that's when...

  • let us know about his new lifes.

  • It was a shock to everybody.

  • DOMINIQUE: I was being hot in the booty.

  • Went downtown Baltimore. Snuck away from home.

  • I needed to find a place that he

  • find some kind of feeling that I was normal.

  • I met this guy.

  • Taller than I was,

  • and I'm standing there, and I'm like,

  • "Ah, yeah. We're gonna go out." And then here these people come.

  • Trans women.

  • I didn't even know what trans w.

  • But I'm thinking to myself,

  • okay, something's different abo,

  • and I relate to it.

  • And they're like,

  • "Oh, you're not dating him."

  • "I don't know you."

  • "No, you're not dating him."

  • They told me he contracted HIV,

  • and the way that he dealt with t was to do this thing called "gi"

  • His idea was, someone did it to,

  • so I'm gonna do it to everyone .

  • And they held me and they walke.

  • But they were from ballroom.

  • Ballroom saved my life that nig.

  • - For people who've never been to the shows,

  • take 'em inside.

  • What were the shows like? - Fantastic.

  • dance music playing

  • DOMINIQUE: You could be coming into that br

  • with all kinds of burdens and t,

  • and then this person would get ,

  • and you would see makeup, and you would see hair,

  • and you just feel this sense of.

  • dance music playing

  • It was ballroom, and we were vogueing at night,

  • and doing runway, and tying sheets around to make.

  • It was a place for us to just really have community.

  • It's like, why are you going to?

  • Because that's where you feel your comfort.

  • I had found my chosen and prove.

  • People who were just like me.

  • CARLOS: Dominique's initiation into the world of ballroom

  • helped her define what she'd always been feeling.

  • It also provided sanctuary to l,

  • as the person she saw in the mi.

  • JAYE: I found out when I was about 10

  • that my brother is no longer my.

  • It's my sister.

  • So, of course, like any other p,

  • Mom has rules, standards, guidelines.

  • If you don't want to live under my household, you know, leave.

  • And, you know, that's what happd at that point in time.

  • CAROLE: If you love someone,

  • it's not about acceptance.

  • That's how I see it.

  • In my eyes, it's wrong.

  • We were taught by my grandmother to always live for the Lord.

  • That's how we lived.

  • And there was nothing about bei, or anything like that.

  • DOMINIQUE: I couldn't go back h, because if I had gone back home,

  • then I would have to de-transit.

  • So, because I could not live in my mother's house

  • as a female at that time,

  • the voice came back to me. "Run."

  • I ended up in New York.

  • - Tyra Allure Ross is who we kn.

  • You all know her by Dominique J.

  • So when I say Tyra, I mean Dominique Jackson.

  • She was a legend. A bona fide legend.

  • HOST: Miss Tyra Allure.

  • - MICHAEL ROBERSON: In the house of ballroom commun,

  • particularly her category,

  • the trans women are overly made, if you will.

  • This notion of a Jessica Rabbit,

  • small waist, big breasts,

  • and here's this tall, slender wn

  • who would walk in a club

  • part the Red Sea like Moses,

  • have all these little young gayn surrounding her.

  • Like Janet Jackson, like Naomi ,

  • Tyra has that same kind of powe.

  • And when she does it, you would never think

  • someone like that is struggling with self-esteem issues.

  • DOMINIQUE: When you came to New, you only knew one place.

  • Going down to Christopher Stree.

  • And it was either 42nd Street or Christopher Street.

  • And this is where we survive.

  • You remember Tiffany's, right?

  • Tiffany's was a restaurant that.

  • you would hang out on Christopher Street all night.

  • If you had to do sex work or something like that,

  • you would do your work.

  • But I used to work at Two Potato and finish the shows,

  • and everybody would meet up,

  • the sex workers, the entertaine, and we would come up here,

  • and come to Tiffany's.

  • And have breakfast at Tiffany's.

  • EDWIN: I remember many nights I slept on these benches.

  • DOMINIQUE: Ah. Well, Central Park was my place to sl.

  • You slept here. EDWIN: I slept here. Yeah.

  • DOMINIQUE: Can you believe we survived thi?

  • MICHAEL: When she came into my life,

  • must have been like, '97, '98.

  • Dominique didn't have her green.

  • Couldn't work as much,

  • and she was living from post to,

  • pillar to pillar, sleeping on different people's couches.

  • DOMINIQUE: In my head, I could just still picture ever,

  • on the pier vogueing and readin, and it was our place.

  • You would stay down on the pier. You had community.

  • You had family.

  • As soon as you said, "I'm sleeping on the pier,"

  • someone would say, "Oh, well, I got a wealthy apar,

  • so you could come over, stay, a, you're gonna be my sister."

  • When a ballroom person calls you mother, brother,

  • sister, uncle, auntie... it's d.

  • The camaraderie and the acknowlt

  • kind of negates the fact that you're sleeping on the floor.

  • - So, it's shared. It's very co. - Yeah. It's very communal.

  • And that's the thing about-- People didn't think, like,

  • how could you be hanging out in the street

  • and homeless, and be happy?

  • And it was like, you had people

  • that went through the same thinu

  • and we were there for each othe.

  • I guess we distracted each other from the--

  • - From all the pain and sufferi. - Yeah.

  • CAROLE: I didn't hear from him for a wh.

  • We didn't know where to look fo.

  • I would get phone calls that were very, very difficult.

  • Well, it had to be resentment for her to be calling me,

  • and just ranting.

  • DOMINIQUE: The lowest point in my relationship with my mom

  • was...

  • I, I--

  • I told her I hated her.

  • And I've never, ever...

  • forgiven myself for that.

  • I never hated my mother.

  • I just...

  • I just wanted to be...

  • I, I wanted to feel acknowledge.

  • CAROLE: But I know I did say to her one,

  • "Don't you ever call me again,

  • and disrespect me."

  • [sniffles] Okay.

  • Thank you.

  • JAYE: She would call every now and then. I would call, and.

  • hearing some of the things that she did have to go through.

  • Dancing in the clubs, or...

  • you know, whatever else that, y,

  • she had to do to make ends meet.

  • DOMINIQUE: Sex work made me feel like I wa.

  • I was dirt.

  • - You caught me off guard with . I'm sorry, guys.

  • - One of the things that's verye

  • about a lot of trans women is because of trans-phobia,

  • the thing that's most viable for their economic stability is sex.

  • DOMINIQUE: The most traumatic part

  • was having to negotiate with pee

  • for my body.

  • And for any girl who has to walk the streets, people don't .

  • They think that it's a choice, or something like that. No.

  • We know what can happen to us o.

  • We're not just going out there and saying we don't care.

  • And for those of us that go oute and say we don't care,

  • it's because we don't feel we have any value,

  • so we just wanna get it over wi.

  • CARLOS: Trans women of color.

  • Is that a very different experie than being

  • a white trans woman?

  • - Hell, yeah.

  • The lighter-skinned girls and t,

  • if you had the nice long hair, you had the light skin, pretty ,

  • would work clubs like Sally's and Edelweiss.

  • And it's working in those spaces that you were the safest.

  • Usually,

  • the trans women of color would work 14th Street.

  • There were some times that I never thought

  • I was never gonna get out of th.

  • And then realized that I had to get right back into another one.

  • So, um, I'm still dealing with .

  • MICHAEL: That area was highly black

  • and brown trans women

  • whose bodies were brutalized and murdered,

  • and there was no outcry not only from the city,

  • but from the larger white LGBT .

  • The continued brutalization ands of black and Latina trans women

  • are not necessarily being experd

  • as the same as white trans folk.

  • Black and brown folk are dealing with not only HIV and AIDS,

  • but other intersections of health disparities.

  • DOMINIQUE: Between 1993 and the year 2000,

  • I thought I was HIV positive.

  • And, um-- - Were you seeking treatment?

  • - I did not seek treatment, because I didn't want them to c.

  • In 2000, I got tested,

  • and I wasn't positive.

  • And first I was like, happy and,

  • and I get downstairs and I'm walking up to the 2 tra,

  • and something hits me.

  • What if you had just gotten a positive result?

  • The things that we have been through in life

  • and to be where we are right no,

  • we can only be grateful.

  • Many of us aren't here right no.

  • Actually, this is where I met my first husband.

  • - Mm. - He was standing in that vesti.

  • And I said, "That's gonna be my"

  • And he was standing right in that vestibule smoking a cigare.

  • - Mm. - I should have left him there.

  • [Torres laughs]

  • I was married from 2011. Uh...

  • CARLOS: Wow. How did he identify?

  • DOMINIQUE: All men that I date identify as straight.

  • A male dating a trans woman

  • is not a gay male,

  • but people tend to force that o,

  • and because when straight men are made to feel like

  • they're not as masculine as society forces them to be,

  • and puts all these stereotypes ,

  • all of a sudden, if you deal wih a trans woman, you're gay.

  • So now it's like, "Oh, my gosh, all these things in my head.

  • I'm gonna just kill her."

  • A lot of the men that kill trann were in relationships with them.

  • All through the relationship,

  • he said it was really embarrassm

  • to have to be with me, and he ft I should be living stealth.

  • As time went by, I was slowly pushed into a box,

  • going according to the stereotys

  • of women in relationships,

  • which is extremely submissive. Respect your man.

  • Some black girls are taught that

  • your man has to be aggressive w.

  • Or he doesn't love you.

  • So in a sense,

  • I thought that his aggression mt

  • I wasn't being a good woman.

  • There was an argument every day about me not being obedient.

  • It was getting to the point where I believed

  • that this man was gonna hurt me.

  • For the first time,

  • the voice came back to me in ye.

  • "Run."

  • DOMINIQUE: So, I'm currently in the midst of a divorce.

  • And I was like, God, you spared my life.

  • You have a purpose for me.

  • And right then and there, I started getting into activism.

  • TONYA ASAPANDA-JOHNSON WALKER: I'm Tonya Asapanda-Johnson Walk.

  • I am the co-founder of the New k Transgender Advocacy Group.

  • And I'm also the community affairs officer.

  • And what we've gotten done this,

  • we've got a gay and trans panic defense passed,

  • we've gotten a non-discriminatin act passed this year,

  • and we've got a ban on conversi. - [all clapping]

  • DOMINIQUE: Destination Tomorrow is the plae

  • people of color can come to,

  • and actually feel like they're being serviced by

  • people who have actually lived the experiences

  • that they're going through.

  • JUNIOR LEBEIJA: I've been shut n from insurance to do my surgery.

  • When they told me that, I really wanted to commit suici.

  • If I couldn't be who the fuck I wanted to be,

  • I would kill myself, and I would jump out that windo,

  • and end my life.

  • And through the grace of God,

  • they called me and said I could get my surgery, which i.

  • [clapping and cheering]

  • DOMINIQUE: Thank you for sharing your stor.

  • Coming into my bottom surgery,

  • I felt the very same way. I thought that my life was goin.

  • I was tucked for 21 years.

  • I did not come out of that G-stg

  • except it was for a shower,

  • which I usually cried during,

  • because I had to wash parts of y that did not belong there.

  • I tried to cut it off myself...

  • a few years...

  • into my transition.

  • But then I met Dr. Rachel Bluebond-Langner.

  • And then she told me my surgery date was June 29th,

  • and like, I'd, like-- life just came right back into .

  • Like, I--

  • I really wanted to live again.

  • CARLOS: The news of this surgery

  • was life affirming for Dominiqu.

  • For the first time in her life,

  • her physical body would fully an

  • with how she'd always felt insi.

  • MAN: Oh! Oh, I love you.

  • You, too. You, too, darlin'. You, too.

  • I love you. I respect you so mu.

  • - She is much more determined.

  • She believes in herself more so.

  • You begin to see things gradualy fall in place for her.

  • From the book, to the reality TV show Strut,

  • to Pose.

  • - Before the surgery, Pose call,

  • and I did the first audition.

  • And I'm just like, oh, dear God.

  • I have to play this role, but I know I'm not gonna get it.

  • After surgery, I was not supposed to be in heels.

  • I still had stitches, and they called for the call-ba.

  • So we go into the room, and there's Mr. Murphy,

  • and I was in pain.

  • I can't even remember everything he asked me,

  • but he did ask me about my relationship with my mom.

  • And I said that I loved them ve.

  • And I understand that I can't fe

  • to understand me, to comprehend my situation,

  • so I have to love them from a d.

  • And everyone in the room was kind of moved by that.

  • Then they called me and they said I had Pose.

  • So... [sniffles]

  • Yeah. You just can't give up. Oh, God.

  • MICHAEL: When it was announced that she got the role,

  • ballroom was up in adulation fo.

  • dance music playing

  • - Ballroom, we are stepping into the Golden Globes tonight.

  • CARLOS: Through ballroom, Dominique found community,

  • and self love.

  • Now with a role on Pose, she's helped normalize the exise

  • of the very people and culture that saved her life.

  • Do you think it's getting bette? Do you think it's changing?

  • - I hope it's changing, and with a show like Pose,

  • I believe that the world is cha.

  • The late '90s, we'd walk through Times Square,

  • and I would say to them,

  • "I'm gonna be on a billboard in Times Square."

  • And they would laugh. They're l, "You're a trans woman, and you'"

  • And in 2018,

  • there we were, in Times Square, looking up,

  • and they had the billboard up.

  • MICHAEL: So, there's a piece that I wanny

  • that she's still the same humbl.

  • But it's put her under much more of a microscope,

  • so that scares her more.

  • Coming out of her house a lot of the times,

  • or walking down the street, again, she's a trans woman,

  • but now she's out in the world,

  • I think she's become more fearf.

  • DOMINIQUE: My visibility was a smack in the

  • to a lot of people.

  • So while most celebrities can rd

  • without security, without anyone with them,

  • I have to have someone with me.

  • And that's why I have Edwin.

  • Through everything, though, that I've gone through,

  • I'm grateful that

  • you are here with me.

  • - I went from security...

  • - To personal manager.

  • - To boyfriend.

  • - You said it. [laughs]

  • EDWIN: This Christmas is going to be a.

  • DOMINIQUE: It's going to be your sisters.

  • EDWIN: My sisters. DOMINIQUE: And all their kids.

  • EDWIN: My nieces and nephews. DOMINIQUE: And your nieces and .

  • But you always loved Christmas.

  • I wasn't able to really celebrate Christmas.

  • Right before Pose aired, I call.

  • And I said that, um, I needed her in my life.

  • CAROLE: One night, I got a phone call.

  • And when I answered,

  • it was my child on the other li.

  • DOMINIQUE: I said that I was going to tele,

  • and I didn't want us to be at o.

  • CAROLE: And what was said is,

  • "You are my firstborn.

  • There is nothing that will change my love for you."

  • DOMINIQUE: And that's all I needed to hear.

  • [elevator dings]

  • I haven't spent Christmas with y in, like, 20 years.

  • - Hola, hola! - Hi!

  • - What's going on? -Hi! [cooing]

  • Oh, my gosh. You look so beautiful!

  • You look ama-- - No, you're so good to-- Look .

  • Look at you. - Oh, my gosh.

  • So, the last apartment you saw,? - Yes.

  • - I know it was a disaster, and it was not...

  • Like, but it was what I could a, and where I lived.

  • - Yes. - So now, Miss Owings Mills lad.

  • [laughs] - Oh, we're here!

  • - Yes. Welcome to my home.

  • CAROLE: Oh, wow!

  • Look at here. Oh, my goodness.

  • DOMINIQUE: Come on. Come on in.

  • - Oh!

  • This is beautiful.

  • - You like it? CAROLE: I do.

  • Did you put me up there with my stomach so fat?

  • [all laughing]

  • DOMINIQUE: This is the wall I want you to .

  • This is everything that I have .

  • - That's you?

  • - This is me with Debra Shaw, the model.

  • And Gwyneth Paltrow.

  • Yes, this is Whoopi. And who's ?

  • CAROLE: That is Lauren herself. You look so much like your aunt.

  • DOMINIQUE: [laughs] This is the piece de resistance.

  • CAROLE: Oh, wow!

  • - And when it's clear, you can see that's Manhattan.

  • CAROLE: Let's go inside. Let's . DOMINIQUE: [laughs] You're cold.

  • I know you are. CAROLE: Yes.

  • JAYE: It's been so long since the family has just

  • all been together. - Been together. Yes.

  • - Like, you know, we always talk, you know.

  • But, all of us being under the same roof for the holidays,

  • oh, I'm ready. - Oh.

  • I love you. CAROLE: I love you, too.

  • [rain pouring]

  • DOMINIQUE: When I walk through the streets,

  • I can find myself cowered away.

  • I even do this a lot at times.

  • 'Cause it's kind of like, it pr.

  • But what I've discovered,

  • is I can clear a path

  • walking down the street,

  • by walking from my core,

  • no matter what's in here.

  • It feels like I accomplished

  • a lot more than anyone thought .

  • Hi!

  • WOMAN: Congratulations on all your suc.

  • You are big inspiration to a lot of people.

  • WOMAN 2: Pose!

  • MICHAEL: Her walking in her truth

  • and opening that door for others

  • that are afraid to say it,

  • yes, I'm definitely, definitely, definitely 100 percent proud of.

  • WOMAN: My dream! - [laughs] Hi!

  • - You are amazing!

  • DOMINIQUE: Oh-- WOMAN 2: How are you?

  • DOMINIQUE: I'm well. How are yo? WOMAN 2: I'm all right. I'm col-

  • - I know. - Thank you.

  • DOMINIQUE: You're welcome. Thank you, love.

  • - Yes, ballroom was created out of survival.

  • But I'm hoping she gets to a ple

  • when she understands that she has a divine right

  • to not survive,

  • but to thrive and live.

  • - My child always show

  • that extreme potential,

  • and I am sure that I don't know half of her pain and torture

  • getting to where she is today.

  • CARLOS: For some communities,

  • survival itself is often considd a success story.

  • But Dominique has surpassed even the boldest of expectation,

  • rising from her own anguish,

  • and transforming a life of strue into one of triumph.

  • DOMINIQUE: I feel like I really worked har.

  • I feel like I should celebrate

  • the fact that I didn't give up.

  • But I almost did.

  • And right now, everyone is fighting for equality and right.

  • The MeToo movement, Black Lives Matter, Trans Lives.

  • We are the majority.

  • All of us, in our little segregated corners,

  • calling ourselves minorities.

  • When we march together, we are the majority.

  • We have to stop with this judgm,

  • and tough love.

  • Right? It's not tough love.

  • There is another path. There is another way.

  • All I was trying to do was live,

  • and be the best me, and prove to my mother

  • that being trans did not mean that I was some degenerate.

  • So for parents to be able to instill in their children, ".

  • there are these types of people in the world,"

  • then you are arming your childrn with knowledge.

  • CAROLE: She's alive, and whatever was broken,

  • we can mend.

  • I'm growing daily.

  • I am growing daily.

  • DOMINIQUE: I really would love to adopt,

  • and I want my kids to be able to experience

  • what my mother did for me, which was help make me this per.

  • Not about the aesthetic, but about the mindset.

  • And that mindset is love.

- Growing up, I didn't even know what trans was.

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オージーとの瞬間を定義する:ドミニク・ジャクソン (全話) - Huluオリジナル・ドキュメンタリー (Defining Moments with OZY: Dominique Jackson (Full Episode) • A Hulu Original Documentary)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 28 日
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