Bee
Gender: Non-binary
Pronouns: they/them
Bee is 31 and non-binary. Growing up Bee says when I was younger I didn’t really have many examples of non-conformity, like where I live. They say they have never been particularly comfortable with all the labels that come with cis/hetero normativity Bee says it wasn’t until 2015 that they started to really question [um] yeah what being cis meant, and how it applied to [them] They describe feeling increasingly more uncomfortable Finding and learning the language to describe non-binary experiences was an important turning point.
Bee says being able to be seen and recognised as non-binary is a constant battle They say that having a shaved head feels like they have shed many of the stereotypes that are connected to hair which can become part of that performance of femininity
Bee’s hopes for the future of trans healthcare are for there to be an acknowledgment across the board, at all NHS care access levels that genders outside man and woman, and male and female, exist, as like a very basic thing They say if we could get those basic first steps in place, I think it would just make things a lot easier for a whole lot of people