If you’re transgender, transitioning while maintaining a full-time job can be challenging at the best of times. But if you’re a guard at one of America’s most infamous prisons, it can be a bit more precarious.
Mandi Camille Hauwert, a U.S. Navy veteran who has worked as a corrections officer at San Quentin State Prison, located in San Quentin, California, since 2007, started to transition on the job more than two years ago.
“I was planning on actually leaving San Quentin to transition. I didn’t think it would be possible to do it inside the prison,” she told HuffPost Live’s Josh Zepps in a recent interview.
“I ended wearing makeup to work every once in a while, very light makeup, just to see if I could get away with it... I was just going to start transitioning and seeing if anyone said anything.”
Eventually, someone did say something. Hauwert was pulled into an office where she was asked to explain her new look.
“I basically told them I was transgender, and they said ‘you can’t cross dress,’ and I told them I’m not a cross dresser, but I had to sit there and explain to them what it actually meant to be transgender.”
When asked how the inmates have reacted to her transition, Hauwert said while she was afraid at first, things have turned out to be just fine.
“I’ve been getting mostly just respect from the other inmates. They don’t refer to me as sir, and they refer to me as a female. I’m typically only misgendered by my fellow coworkers.”
Hauwert said she thinks her peers are less tolerant than the inmates because “inmates on some level understand a little bit more what it’s like to be me, in that you’re kind of an outcast.” Both inmates and transgender people, she added, have to deal with others making “a lot of assumptions” about them that are not necessarily true.
For more from Mandi, check out the video above and read an op-ed she wrote by heading here. Check out some photos of Mandi and San Quentin below.
Read More http://ift.tt/1Gr51Zh
Mandi Camille Hauwert, a U.S. Navy veteran who has worked as a corrections officer at San Quentin State Prison, located in San Quentin, California, since 2007, started to transition on the job more than two years ago.
“I was planning on actually leaving San Quentin to transition. I didn’t think it would be possible to do it inside the prison,” she told HuffPost Live’s Josh Zepps in a recent interview.
“I ended wearing makeup to work every once in a while, very light makeup, just to see if I could get away with it... I was just going to start transitioning and seeing if anyone said anything.”
Eventually, someone did say something. Hauwert was pulled into an office where she was asked to explain her new look.
“I basically told them I was transgender, and they said ‘you can’t cross dress,’ and I told them I’m not a cross dresser, but I had to sit there and explain to them what it actually meant to be transgender.”
When asked how the inmates have reacted to her transition, Hauwert said while she was afraid at first, things have turned out to be just fine.
“I’ve been getting mostly just respect from the other inmates. They don’t refer to me as sir, and they refer to me as a female. I’m typically only misgendered by my fellow coworkers.”
Hauwert said she thinks her peers are less tolerant than the inmates because “inmates on some level understand a little bit more what it’s like to be me, in that you’re kind of an outcast.” Both inmates and transgender people, she added, have to deal with others making “a lot of assumptions” about them that are not necessarily true.
For more from Mandi, check out the video above and read an op-ed she wrote by heading here. Check out some photos of Mandi and San Quentin below.
Read More http://ift.tt/1Gr51Zh
Bagikan Berita Ini
0 Response to "Meet San Quentin's First Openly Transgender Prison Guard"
Post a Comment