Current:Home > ContactA gender-swapping photo app helped Lucy Sante come out as trans at age 67 -ProgressCapital
A gender-swapping photo app helped Lucy Sante come out as trans at age 67
View
Date:2025-04-14 10:41:50
Writer Lucy Sante has been asking herself "Who am I?" for the better part of her life.
Sante, who was assigned male at birth, says changing genders was a strange and electric idea that lived in the recesses of her mind for years. Then, in 2021, she was playing around with a gender-swapping feature on a face-altering app and she had a breakthrough.
"It was uncanny, ... irrefutable," she says of seeing herself as a woman on the app. "I had no choice — I came out to my shrink 10 days later."
Sante is known for her incisive criticism and cultural commentary for The New York Review of Books. In her new memoir, I Heard Her Call My Name, she writes about coming out as a transgender woman at the age of 67.
Sante says her transition came after decades of avoidance. In the 1980s and 1990s, she worked a block away from Tompkins Square Park, a hub of the New York City trans scene and host of Wigstock, an annual drag festival.
"I could hear the [Wigstock] festivities from my office, but I'd wait until everybody had gone home before I'd slink back up the side of the park to my apartment," she says.
Sante says she yearned for somebody to come along and pull her into the Tompkins Square Park scene — but she was also "terrified" at the possibility: "This was the kind of internal war that raged in me for decades."
When she did finally come out to her friends in 2021, Sante says some were taken aback, but "generally everybody was cool." Since her transition, Sante says she can feel the tensions in some of her friendships relax.
"I'm just better at talking to people now because I'm not hiding anything," she says. "I was inhibited from real intimacy with really anybody because at any moment I could blab the wrong thing. ... It just haunted me for all these decades. So I think I'm probably a better friend with all of my friends than I was here before this."
Interview highlights
On coming out to her wife and son
I knew that my romantic relationship would not survive this. We're still best friends, but I knew that the romance part was not going to survive. ...
[My son] was totally chill. Because he's Gen Z. My son is now 24. He is, as I'm fond of saying, straight as a highway in Texas. But he's known trans kids since he was 11. ... He did LARPing — live action role playing — which really brings out the trans kids. He didn't bat an eyelash.
On worrying about changing her name
Why would I think that this would present any kind of difference in my career? ... My last name is rare and I'm only changing one letter. But the fact is that that was a kind of cover for a deeper existential reckoning with myself. ... I guess there's always been a kind of unstable relation between my inner self and what I show the world. Rather than changing my gender, per se, was changing my name that set off this weird kind of existential freefall. Like, who am I? This bizarre uncertainty that manifested as this completely ridiculous fear.
On her 1998 memoir, The Factory of Facts, in which she avoided personal reflection
I was dodging self depiction. And it's clear to me now, and it's a weakness of the book. And the fact is that I've recently realized, from writing this book, in which most of my close friends make appearances, I'd never really been able to write about people before because somehow there was a chain of constraints, beginning with the fact that I was trying to hide the secret. ... So everything I wrote was nicely written, deeply researched ... but it lacked that personal quality because I was unready to face who I was. I told myself regularly how I was being a hypocrite. ... The interesting thing is that since I've transitioned, I become brutally honest. I can't lie anymore. And I tend to speak my mind sometimes a little too loudly, and indecorously. I was painfully aware of that that gap, the between intention and actual result, and it's really set me free as a writer as well now.
On loneliness and happiness existing simultaneously
Transitioning has shown me whole new landscapes of loneliness that I didn't even know existed. I'm a love junkie. Always have been, and I suffer from withdrawal when I don't have it. But also, I don't know very many trans women. ... Sometimes when the mood is wrong, I can feel like I'm living on my own separate planet or far away from anyone else. There's a whole series of paradoxes here, and one of them is the fact that while I'm extremely lonely much of the time, I'm also much happier than I've ever been.
Sam Briger and Seth Kelley produced and edited this interview for broadcast. Bridget Bentz, Molly Seavy-Nesper and Meghan Sullivan adapted it for the web.
veryGood! (266)
Related
- 'Kraven the Hunter' spoilers! Let's dig into that twisty ending, supervillain reveal
- Analysis: North Korea’s rejection of the South is both a shock, and inevitable
- Shutting down the International Space Station: NASA's bold plans to land outpost in ocean
- Blake Lively Proves Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants Bond Lives on With America Ferrera Tribute
- Louisiana high court temporarily removes Judge Eboni Johnson Rose from Baton Rouge bench amid probe
- Here are 10 memorable moments from the 2024 Primetime Emmy Awards
- More transgender candidates face challenges running for office in Ohio for omitting their deadname
- Utah Legislature to revise social media limits for youth as it navigates multiple lawsuits
- New Orleans mayor’s former bodyguard making first court appearance after July indictment
- Alabama execution using nitrogen gas could amount to torture and violate human rights treaties, U.N. warns
Ranking
- Jay Kanter, veteran Hollywood producer and Marlon Brando agent, dies at 97: Reports
- U.S. says Houthi missiles fired at cargo ship, U.S. warship in Red Sea amid strikes against Iran-backed rebels
- Wisconsin Republicans fire utility regulator in latest strike at Evers
- The Baltimore Sun is returning to local ownership — with a buyer who has made his politics clear
- John Galliano out at Maison Margiela, capping year of fashion designer musical chairs
- Mississippi lawmakers to weigh incentives for an EV battery plant that could employ 2,000
- Emmy Awards get record low ratings with audience of 4.3 million people
- Cocaine residue was found on Hunter Biden’s gun pouch in 2018 case, prosecutors say
Recommendation
NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
Britain’s unexpected inflation increase in December is unlikely to worry the Bank of England
The Supreme Court takes up major challenges to the power of federal regulators
Hose kink in smoky darkness disoriented firefighter in ship blaze that killed 2 colleagues
What to watch: O Jolie night
At 40, the Sundance Film Festival celebrates its past and looks to the future
Why Friends Cast Didn’t Host Matthew Perry Tribute at Emmys
Nigerian leader says ‘massive education’ of youth will help end kidnappings threatening the capital