Even if you don't understand it, you can still support us and take care of us. Our identities continue to be legitimate, and they exist. [Testimonies: Being non-binary] My name is Cami, I am 22 years old, I am non-binary, and I'm here to talk to you about being non-binary. "Non-binary" is an umbrella term that encompasses all gender identities that are neither exclusively masculine nor exclusively feminine. This can represent "agender", "a" meaning subtraction, without a gender or being neutral or it can represent all fluid gender identities; we can imagine gender as a spectrum with two sides, masculine and feminine, and we have a cursor that moves. So we have people who are genderfluid, demigender, pangender, etc. I never really identified with femininity. At 18 years old, I began to ask myself questions about my gender identity, and I met a transgender man who I was with for some time, and we were able to put my identity into words, which was "non-binary". I think it's because he had a lot more knowledge than me that he was able to help me find the words regarding my identity. Gender identity is what we are. Gender is what we feel, live, and experiment with, and gender expression is what we show to others. It's the way we express this identity. For example, you could have a gender identity, such as masculinity, identifying as a man, and we can have a gender expression that is feminine using markers that are considered feminine in society. For example, Bilal Hassani, who is a man with a feminine gender expression. I told my parents that I was non-binary and that I would like to change my name as well. I was 20 years old, so it's been 2 years. My mom took it very well. She was already very aware of topics surrounding gender. She had dismantled these ideas, and was a safe person. I felt secure. With my dad, it was a little more delicate. I took a little more time to talk to him about it and I didn't do it in person. I sent him a message, because it was easier for me to manage. He reacted pretty well; he didn't understand everything, but in any case, he would be there to support me, and that nothing would change for him, that he would love me the same. With my grandmother, it was a bit trickier because it was something very foreign to her. She grew up on the countryside, then she went to Paris. She lived with my grandfather for 50 years. She was in cis, heteronormative environments where she never questioned her own identity or the identities of others. When I spoke about it with her, she was a bit stunned, but she always looked after and cared about me to behave in the best way possible. She has made enormous efforts, she rarely makes mistakes with my name now. I put in a request to change my first name in 2019. I sent the request in to the city hall of the town that I was living in. I received a form that I filled out with testimonies of my friends that say they use the name Cami to refer to me. I asked my school to write a letter of support. Then, I submitted my case document. I waited a few months. This wait varies with city halls. And then I received an acceptance to change my first name. Misgendering someone is when you address someone using the incorrect pronouns, so gendering a non-binary person that has already explicitly stated that they use neutral pronouns, like "they", and you gender them as masculine or feminine. I personally use feminine pronouns when speaking, and neutral pronouns when writing. But in general, I do have the tendency to say right away that I prefer that I be referred to with feminine pronouns when speaking. If a person doesn't do that, and you would like to know for sure how to refer to them, you can ask them for their pronouns or wait for the person to refer to themselves so you can follow suit. In the videos that I have done previously, there were a lot of comments that invalidated our identities, that denied our gender expressions and our gender identities. Afterwards, I've read fewer of these comments, mainly because for the most part, they're malicious, or very insensitive, and they're just going to hurt my feelings. I already participated in a report where we heard that this was just a fashion trend; that this just appeared in the past few years in the US, 10 years ago; that this is closely related to fashion, like unisex fashion, etc. This is completely false. I think that this is a hyper-White, hyper-eurocentric point of view because in many cultures, there are many gender identities that were totally erased by colonization, simply put. Frequently, we hear that this is problematic or that it's annoying to create more and more boxes to self-identify with, to re-identify with, etc, but I think that it's super important to even be able to self-identify with something in order to unidentify with an identity that was arbitrarily assigned to us. I think it's also necessary to find a community to create a link, and knowing that you're not alone, that you have support, that there are other people like us, that understands us, and that listen to us. If I had only one thing to say, I think it would be that even if you don't understand it, you can still support us and take care of us. You can learn, you can deconstruct your current way of thinking. You can teach yourself, help your friends, even if you don't understand everything about gender identities. A second thing would be that all non-binary people have a different way of expressing their identity. There are people who are going to transition medically, take hormones, undergo operations, and others won't, and regardless of the way we transition or not, socially or medically, etc, our identities continue to be legitimate, and they exist, and we are a thriving community. [COSMOPOLITON]