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Kali
04-26-2007, 07:37 AM
I'm sure the story will sound very familiar to many here.

http://www.latimes.com/sports/la-sp-oldmike26apr26,0,2709943.story?coll=la-home-headlines

Old Mike, new Christine
By Mike Penner, Times Staff Writer
April 26, 2007


During my 23 years with The Times' sports department, I have held a wide variety of roles and titles. Tennis writer. Angels beat reporter. Olympics writer. Essayist. Sports media critic. NFL columnist. Recent keeper of the Morning Briefing flame.

Today I leave for a few weeks' vacation, and when I return, I will come back in yet another incarnation.

As Christine.

I am a transsexual sportswriter. It has taken more than 40 years, a million tears and hundreds of hours of soul-wrenching therapy for me to work up the courage to type those words. I realize many readers and colleagues and friends will be shocked to read them.

That's OK. I understand that I am not the only one in transition as I move from Mike to Christine. Everyone who knows me and my work will be transitioning as well. That will take time. And that's all right. To borrow a piece of well-worn sports parlance, we will take it one day at a time.

Transsexualism is a complicated and widely misunderstood medical condition. It is a natural occurrence — unusual, no question, but natural.

Recent studies have shown that such physiological factors as genetics and hormonal fluctuations during pregnancy can significantly affect how our brains are "wired" at birth.

As extensive therapy and testing have confirmed, my brain was wired female.

A transgender friend provided the best and simplest explanation I have heard: We are born with this, we fight it as long as we can, and in the end it wins.

I gave it as good a fight as I possibly could. I went more than 40 hard rounds with it. Eventually, though, you realize you are only fighting yourself and your happiness and your mental health — a no-win situation any way you look at it.

When you reach the point when one gender causes heartache and unbearable discomfort, and the other brings more joy and fulfillment than you ever imagined possible, it shouldn't take two tons of bricks to fall in order to know what to do.

It didn't with me.

With me, all it took was 1.99 tons.

For more years than I care to count, I was scared to death over the prospect of writing a story such as this one. It was the most frightening of all the towering mountains of fear I somehow had to confront and struggle to scale.

How do you go about sharing your most important truth, one you spent a lifetime trying to keep deeply buried, to a world that has grown familiar and comfortable with your façade?

To a world whose knowledge of transsexuals usually begins and ends with Jerry Springer's exploitation circus?

Painfully and reluctantly, I began the coming-out process a few months ago. To my everlasting amazement, friends and colleagues almost universally have been supportive and encouraging, often breaking the tension with good-natured doses of humor.

When I told my boss Randy Harvey, he leaned back in his chair, looked through his office window to scan the newsroom and mused, "Well, no one can ever say we don't have diversity on this staff."

When I told Robert, the soccer-loving lad from Wales who cuts my hair, why I wanted to start growing my hair out, he had to take a seat, blink hard a few times and ask, "Does this mean you don't like football anymore, Mike?"

No, I had to assure him, I still love soccer. I will continue to watch it. I hope to continue to coach it.

My days of playing in men's over-30 rec leagues, however, could be numbered.

When I told Eric, who has played sweeper behind my plodding stopper for more than a decade, he brightly suggested, "Well, you're still good for co-ed!"

I broke the news to Tim by beginning, "Are you familiar with the movie 'Transamerica'?" Tim nodded. "Well, welcome to my life," I said.

Tim seemed more perplexed than most as I nervously launched into my story.

Finally, he had to explain, "I thought you said 'Trainspotting.' I thought you were going to tell me you're a heroin addict."

People have asked if transitioning will affect my writing. And if so, how?

All I can say at this point is that I am now happier, more focused and more energized when I sit behind a keyboard. The wicked writer's block that used to reach up and torture me at some of the worst possible times imaginable has disappeared.

My therapist says this is what happens when a transsexual finally "integrates" and the ever-present white noise in the background dissipates.

That should come as good news to my editors: far fewer blown deadlines.

So now we all will take a short break between bylines. "Mike Penner" is out, "Christine Daniels" soon will be taking its place.

From here, it feels like a big improvement. I hope with time you will agree.

This could be the beginning of a beautiful relationship.

JoanFlores
04-26-2007, 08:41 AM
I believe this is a very good articule, thank you for sharing it with us.

melissaK
04-26-2007, 08:50 AM
Yeah, too familiar . . . I'd laugh at the humor parts but these damn bricks keep falling on me . . . ;^)

hugs all
'lissa

Eva Diva
04-26-2007, 10:27 AM
This was discussed on Boston sports radio this morning. The prefaced it with "I've never hear anything like this in all my life!", but they didn't make any derogatory cracks.

http://tinyurl.com/yrbcpx

Tamara Segunda
04-26-2007, 12:19 PM
Last weekend, probably about the time Christine was filing her story, the TIMES announced that it was cutting its staff by 150 people, with some 75 of those to be newsroom employees. The paper's management intends for the cuts to be among the most senior (hence, best-paid) employees. There would be early retirment packages offered, but if that didn't attract enough takers, the publisher said, there would simply be layoffs.

I applaud Christine and wish her the very best of luck, but if I were a betting person, I'd wager that Mike's transition to Christine might very well come with a pink slip. Also, I applaud the acceptance that Christine seems to have met among her colleagues, but knowing the world of professional sports as I do (it's the most sexist and homophobic segment of our society by a mile), I wouldn't give her a very good chance of keeping her job. God, I hope I'm wrong.:nailbiting:
.......Tamara Segunda.

TV Wannabe
04-26-2007, 01:48 PM
That was touching.

Deborah
04-26-2007, 04:12 PM
If you don't want to log in

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/18335086/

flatlander_48
04-26-2007, 09:24 PM
I read the story earlier this evening before I saw it here. It reminded me that everyone has a story; perhaps some more dramatic than others, but each as significant. When we cross (or think about crossing) the boundary from relatively uncomplicated lives to what can seem like an uncharted minefield, it is stories like this that show us what can be gained by joining the disparate parts of our lives. Glenn Turner said you have to dare to be great. However, for many of us, we have to dare just to be whole...

jsoto81
04-27-2007, 12:03 AM
I found this story through digg.com (http://www.digg.com) and thought I'd share it with everyone. I haven't read it yet up I'm off to read it now.

LA Times Writer... (http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/news/story?id=2850345)

oh and I'd found some other stories through digg that had to do with trans people.
Spain sees first transsexual gender change without operation. (http://www.physorg.com/news95427291.html)

unhappy as a boy, Kim becomes youngest transsexual ever at 12 (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/01/28/wkim28.xml)

Thialand "third sex" wants constitutional rights. (http://edition.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/asiapcf/04/24/thailand.gay.reut/index.html)

Hope everyone enjoys them.

bi_weird
04-27-2007, 12:51 AM
Wow fun stuff. Didn't realize Digg had so much that wasn't gadget related...that's all my friend who reads their stuff shows me.
But that's cool that the LA Times is cool with it. Didn't get her name right, but understandable, and it's neat that they'll stick with him throughout it all. The other articles were nifty too :-)

AmberTG
04-27-2007, 12:53 AM
Something he, or she, if you will, said at the end of her column really struck me as sounding so familiar.
"My therapist says this is what happens when a transsexual finally "integrates" and the ever-present white noise in the background dissipates." Quote
That "white noise" is the reason that I used to think I had attention deficit disorder, I was always distracted by the thought process in my head, like rush hour on a 6 lane highway, there was rarely any clarity. I don't think it's gone yet but it is much better than it was. I think it's fading away finally.

jsoto81
04-27-2007, 12:53 AM
oh yeah, theres cool videos that are rather funny, and they have art stuff and a whole aray of things on there other than gadgets.

Joy Carter
04-27-2007, 01:08 AM
Something he, or she, if you will, said at the end of her column really struck me as sounding so familiar.
"My therapist says this is what happens when a transsexual finally "integrates" and the ever-present white noise in the background dissipates." Quote
That "white noise" is the reason that I used to think I had attention deficit disorder, I was always distracted by the thought process in my head, like rush hour on a 6 lane highway, there was rarely any clarity. I don't think it's gone yet but it is much better than it was. I think it's fading away finally.

Amber, is this what I have been living with all my life? This white noise thing ?:straightface:

loriannetucson
04-27-2007, 01:30 AM
Hey, that's it! That white noise thing! I've had that all my life, too! And here I was thinking that I was stuck on stupid! (Well, maybe I am.) But now that I'm HRT, I'm very clear headed and it seems like the cloud has lifted from my brain fog!

I'm so happy for Christine. I certainly hope she can be an example to the trans community and maintain her career.

Sedona
04-27-2007, 08:04 AM
This may have been posted elsewhere, but: http://www.latimes.com/sports/la-sp-oldmike26apr26,0,2709943.story?track=mostviewed-homepage

Kudos to Mike for her honesty, and hope that things go well for Christine in the future.

melissaK
04-27-2007, 09:39 AM
However, for many of us, we have to dare just to be whole...

I liked that . . .

Hugs,
'lissa
_______________________________________
"life by the yard is hard, by the inch it's a cinch"

alysonatl
04-27-2007, 11:04 AM
A Big 'You Go Girl!' to Christine! Being in the public eye and making such an emotional, strong announcement took incredible courage. May you continue to reach fulfillment in all sectors of your life, but especially your journey to becoming the woman you always imagined yourself to be.

Shelly R
04-27-2007, 03:42 PM
Thanks for this thread, I only caught a little of this on the news.
Good luck to Christine, my hat's off to her for her courage to do this.

AmberTG
04-27-2007, 11:43 PM
I think the transsexual situation has just become a very public topic because of the courage of Susan Stanton and Christine Daniels. Now that it's out in the open by well respected people, it may actually be taken a bit more seriously by the public.
On the Bob and Tom radio show this morning, they were making jokes about the story in their usual way but they weren't cutting Mike/Christine down in the process, and they could have, they seemed to show at least a bit of respect in the matter. Maybe there's hope after all.

Oh, BTW Joy, I think that "white noise" is as good of a way to describe the results of the confusion and depression of GID as any that I've heard, especially if you understand the meaning of the term as it applies to sound, a constant, meaningless, distracting, background noise like the hiss from the speakers of a PA system, except it's happening to your thought process.

Siobhan Marie
04-28-2007, 11:10 AM
So thats what is, white noise. I feel so much better now.
But seriously, huge kudos to Christine Daniels. You go girl.

:hugs: Anna Marie x