Subtitles section Play video Print subtitles I remember people asking me when I was younger, "Are you a girl or a boy?" and wanting to say, "Neither," or wanting to say, "Both." If you are genderqueer, if you're non-binary, if you're transgender, you're a freak. Growing up, that message was definitely something I heard every day. I learned that if I wanted to get along, or if I wanted to pass, I had to dress like a girl, even though I didn't feel like a girl. I remember googling, "Are you an alcoholic?" and not thinking, people who drink normally don't wonder that? [laughs] That's not a normal people question. I liked drinking and I liked using because it was like, all of a sudden, all of the anxiety and the discomfort I felt in my body, and my shame, all of it, my circumstances, my surroundings, all of it was gone. I struggled from between 18 and 23. I really struggled. At that point. I was using speed every day, and cocaine when I could get it and opioids when I could get them. I finally stopped drinking in 2007, a couple of months after my 23rd birthday. [music] It's been an adventure, truly an adventure. I have found in myself, resources and creativity and passion that I didn't think were in there at all. I'm finally discovering who I am. All I had to do is not drink and use and also be open to changing a lot of things about myself. For me, that means understanding that my gender is not what I thought it was. This is who I am. I heard every day that there was something wrong with me and I believed it, and I used alcohol to medicate my pain. When I look at myself now I see not only someone who has survived but I see a success. [music]
A2 Google struggled girl adventure wanting opioids Voices for recovery: Foster, award-winning author 4 0 林宜悉 posted on 2020/03/27 More Share Save Report Video vocabulary