Are You OK? The Lives of Young, Trans Teens in Texas

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RIO NOT SO GRANDE

since 1954 NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2022
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ARE YOU OK?

In 2021, Jesse Freidin began traveling across the country to photograph transgender youth for a photo project called “Are You OK?” He’s been to more than half the states in the country, meeting with dozens of trans kids.

In August, Freidin made his second visit to Texas. In the intervening year, legal and policy-based attacks on LGBTQ+ people in the United States have reached feverish heights. Governor Greg Abbott even launched child abuse investigations into parents who seek gender-affrming healthcare for their kids. Though nonprofts like Lambda Legal and the American Civil Liberties Union have responded with multiple lawsuits against the policy, which has been partially blocked in court, it still left many families fearing for their safety. Kai Shappley, a trans girl known for her outspoken activism, fed the state with her family a month before Friedin planned to photograph her.

“I want to tell those stories before they disappear, before these families leave the country or state, before these families have to go underground,” Freidin said.

Despite this growing moral panic around young trans lives, a few brave kids still feel safe enough to defantly present their faces to the world.

“The ones who are so at risk but still want to speak out, still want to be in the fght and be public, they’re doing their own kind of activism,” Freidin said.

As a trans man, Freidin feels he can relate to the issue on a deeper level than the mainstream media; “I was so tired of seeing the same image of a trans kid we see in journalism all the time, which is typically by themselves looking sad, playing with toys on the foor.”

Before he takes any photos, Freidin leads his subjects in a breathing exercise designed to help “come into ourselves and hold space for each other.”

Each portrait follows a similar formula: the young trans person in focus, seated and looking right at the camera. Behind them stand family members, photographed below their shoulders so that their faces are unseen, but exuding support with a touch.

“I want to make a portrait that’s solely about strength and power and joy and, you know, the authenticity and self-knowledge of these kids—because they know who they are,” Freidin said.

The photos, a selection from Freidin’s 2022 trip to Texas, are accompanied by quotes from the interviews he conducted with each trans kid and their family.

36 | TEXAS OBSERVER TEXASOBSERVER.ORG 37 PHOTO ESSAY
B y KIT O’CONNELL P hotography B y JESSE FREIDIN In Jesse Freidin’s photos, viewers glimpse the bravery of transgender youth and the power of unconditional family support.
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