四虎影院

NPR for North Texas
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

North Texas LGBTQ+ advocates highlight joy and community for Trans Day of Visibility

March 31 is International Transgender Day of Visibility, a time to honor the experiences and achievements of trans people. It鈥檚 being celebrated all over the world, including in North Texas.
Andy Lusk
/
四虎影院
March 31 is International Transgender Day of Visibility, a time to honor the experiences and achievements of trans people. It鈥檚 being celebrated all over the world, including in North Texas.

Max Alexander, musician, former educator and community activist, recently spoke at a panel event celebrating Transgender Day of Visibility, or TDOV.

鈥淧eople see trans people as this big enigma, and when they see that we鈥檙e real people, it helps them to understand and to be in our corner,鈥 Alexander said.

March 31 is International Transgender Day of Visibility, a time chosen to honor the experiences and achievements of trans people.

The panel, hosted by the , or DSQO (pronounced "disco"), took place recently at the Irving Archives and Museum.

In an interview with 四虎影院, Alexander contextualized the moment by pointing to larger forces at play.

鈥淭hese laws have directly impacted my life," he said. "I had to give up my career that I've worked for since I was a kid because of the bathroom law that passed, not because of anything that I did.鈥

Transgender activist and psychotherapist Rachel Crandall-Crocker to celebrate the lives and contributions of trans people, pushing back on broader narratives centering violence against them. It鈥檚 not uncommon to see trans people posting selfies and making public remarks on TDOV.

Three panelists from the Metroplex and a moderator from Southern Methodist University offered their thoughts on fostering community against a backdrop of new state and federal policies that, they said, have made life harder for many trans people.

From left, panelists Aubrey Campos, Max Alexander and Nomi Imon offered thoughts on transgender life in North Texas during a conversation with moderator Emma Bluestein.
Andy Lusk
/
四虎影院
From left, panelists Aubrey Campos, Max Alexander and Nomi Imon offered thoughts on transgender life in North Texas during a conversation with moderator Emma Bluestein.

Rapid have profoundly impacted many trans people鈥檚 day-to-day lives. On the first day of the second Trump administration, the president targeting trans, nonbinary and intersex people, making sweeping changes to how the government recognizes and serves these individuals.

Nomi Imon grew up in Dallas and was recently crowned Miss Gay Dallas USofA. When asked for her advice to other trans people, she recommended taking time to learn and grow as individuals, and to push forward 鈥渆verything that鈥檚 authentic.鈥

鈥淚 feel like self-love is kind of cliche, but we cannot be there for other individuals if we don't find things that we love about ourselves," Imon said.

During the panel, Imon told the audience she stays visible intentionally, using her platform as Miss Gay Dallas USofA to take what鈥檚 in her mind and put it onstage.

鈥淲e all should be visible, you know? But to be visible we have to be outside," she said.

In Texas, trans people are currently prohibited from that align with their gender identity and from on state documents. As recently as last year, the state had who sought to change the gender marker listed on their driver鈥檚 licenses. According to The Texas Newsroom, it wasn鈥檛 clear what authorities were doing with that information.

Fort Worth community organizer Aubrey Campos to .

Flyers for the Dallas Social Queer Organization at a panel event in Irving, March 25, 2026.
Andy Lusk
/
四虎影院
Flyers for the Dallas Social Queer Organization at a panel event in Irving, March 25, 2026.

鈥淢ake a change," Campos said. "Show up in November, go vote. I think that is very important if we want to go in the right direction.鈥

But Campos told the audience there's more to it than just voting. There鈥檚 an economic angle, too.

鈥淲e have to know where our queer dollars are going," she said. "Like, I will advocate for you all day long, especially if it's a queer-owned business.鈥

The event was moderated by Emma Bluestein, coordinator for the at SMU. Bluestein said trans joy means having space to be 鈥渁uthentically yourself.鈥

鈥淲e鈥檙e often told to minimize ourselves, and that's hard, and that鈥檚 painful," Bluestein said. "Joy, to me, is really being able to bloom in a supportive environment and find those people who are your community -- who are your trellis, to use a gardening metaphor."

One of the panel鈥檚 organizers, DSQO director Javier Enriquez, said the panel presented a space for people, whether part of the LGBTQ+ community or not, to hear directly from trans leaders, organizers and artists in the DFW area.

鈥淚 think because of everything that is going on, this event is even more important. It's about visibility, and to prove that visibility is invincibility," Enriquez said.

Got a tip? Email Andy Lusk at alusk@kera.org.

四虎影院 is made possible through the generosity of our members. If you find this reporting valuable, consider . Thank you!

Andy Lusk is 四虎影院's mid-cities communities reporter. He is a returning Report for America corps member, having spent two years with KUCB, the NPR member station serving Alaska鈥檚 Aleutian and Pribilof Islands. While in Alaska, Andy was an award-winning general assignment reporter with a focus on local and tribal government. When he's not reporting, he's usually out hiking. Andy is an alumnus of New York University.