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Découverte de la non-binarité : le témoignage de Cami

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    Even if you don't get it
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    you can always support and be an ally.
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    Our identity is valid, and it exists.
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    [Music]
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    My name is Cami, I'm 22,
    I'm nonbinary,
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    and let's talk about
    nonbinary identities.
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    Nonbinary is an umbrella term
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    comprising all gender identities
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    that aren't wholly masculine
    or feminine.
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    That could mean agender
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    -so "a-", without gender, neutral-
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    or it could mean any fluid identity.
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    You can imagine gender
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    as a two-sided spectrum:
    masculine and feminine,
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    with a moving slider.
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    Including people who are
    genderfluid,
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    demigender, pangender, whatever.
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    I never really identified with femininity.
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    At 18, I had already started
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    to question my gender identity
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    and I met a trans man
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    who I dated for a while,
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    and together, we tried
    to put my identity into words
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    which was nonbinary.
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    I think, because he knew more than me,
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    he knew how to help me find the words
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    to describe my identity.
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    Gender identity is what we are.
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    It's the gender we feel
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    that we live, that we experiment with.
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    And gender expression,
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    that's what we show others.
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    It's the way we express that identity.
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    You could have a masculine gender identity
    for example:
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    you're a man, and you could have
    a gender expression that is feminine,
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    with many markers society deems feminine.
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    Like, for example, Bilal Hassani,
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    who is a man (*now genderqueer)
    with a feminine gender expression.
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    I came out to my parents as nonbinary
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    and said I wanted to change my name
    all at once.
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    I was 20, so...two years ago.
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    My mum took it well.
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    She was already well-versed
    on the topic of gender.
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    She had deconstructed
    her preconceptions, was very safe.
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    I felt safe.
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    My father was a bit more complicated.
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    I took my time talking to him
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    and I didn't do it uhm...IRL.
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    I sent him a message because
    it was easier that way.
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    He reacted pretty well.
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    He said he didn't get it at all, but,
    as always,
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    he would be there for me
    and this didn't change anything,
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    he loved me the same.
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    For my grandma,
    it was a little trickier,
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    because this was a totally new
    new thing for her.
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    She grew up in the countryside.
    Then she moved to Paris.
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    She lived with my grandpa for 50 years.
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    She was wound up in a very
    cisheteronormative world,
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    where she had never had to
    question her identity
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    or the identities of others.
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    When I told her about it,
    she was bewildered,
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    but she's always tried
    to do the best she can with me.
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    She makes a huge effort,
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    almost never messes up my new pronouns.
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    I applied for a name change in 2019.
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    I applied at city hall in the city
    I lived in.
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    I took out a file, filled it in
    with testimony from my relatives
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    saying they used the name Cami
    to refer to me.
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    I asked my school to give me
    a letter of support and stuff.
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    Then I submitted my file.
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    I waited a few months.
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    -it varies between locations-
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    and I was approved for a name change.
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    Misgendering means referring to
    someone using the wrong pronouns.
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    Like gendering a nonbinary person
    who has explicitly stated
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    "use neutral pronouns like '(s)he'",
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    and gendering them with masculine
    or feminine pronouns.
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    Me, personally, I use feminine pronouns
    in speech and neutral in writing.
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    And in general, I tend to tell people
    right away
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    that I prefer to be addressed
    with feminine pronouns in speech.
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    Then, if they don't tell you themself,
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    and you want to be sure to
    gender them correctly,
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    you can just ask for their pronouns
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    or wait for them to mention their gender
    around you to follow their example.
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    In other videos I've done previously,
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    there were a lot of hate comments
    invalidating our identities
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    denying our gender expressions and
    our gender identities.
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    I don't read those comments much,
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    just 'cause I know, overall,
    they're malicious,
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    or very very insensitive,
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    and they would only hurt me.
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    I once participated in a report
    that tried to frame it as a trend,
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    to say it started just recently in the US,
    about 10 years ago,
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    that it was really about fashion,
    about unisex fashion trends or something.
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    That's totally false.
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    I also think that's a really white view,
    super eurocentric,
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    because in so many cultures,
    we actually see many gender identities
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    that were completely erased
    during colonization, to be frank.
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    So often, we hear that its problematic,
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    that is a pain to create labels
    and more labels
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    to identify and reidentify, etc,
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    but I think it's super important
    to be able to just identify as something
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    to distance ourselves from an identity
    that was assigned arbitrarily.
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    I think we need to find community,
    and build bonds,
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    to know we're not alone,
    that there is support,
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    and other people who are like us,
    who understand us,
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    who hear us.
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    If I could say one thing,
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    I think it would be that,
    even if you don't get it,
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    you can always support and be an ally.
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    You can learn,
    you can deconstruct thought patterns.
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    You can relearn,
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    you can help your loved ones,
    even if you don't understand
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    all the nuances of their gender identity.
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    Another thing is that all nonbinary people
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    have a different way of expressing
    their gender identity,
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    that there are people who will
    transition medically,
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    who will take hormones,
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    some have operations, others won't,
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    and no matter how
    we do or don't transition,
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    socially, medically, anything,
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    Our identity is always valid. It's real.
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    And we are everywhere.
Title:
Découverte de la non-binarité : le témoignage de Cami
Description:

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Video Language:
French
Duration:
05:55

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