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MELBOURNE FRINGE FESTIVAL 2023 Holly and Sasja came together to discuss Holly's event at the Melbourne Fringe Festival: MY QUEER SPIRITUAL ENTROP HOLLY ROWAN - MY QUEER SPIRITUAL ENTROPY TICKETDates 05 - 13 OctTime 7:30pm, 6:30pm (60 minutes)Venue TIC: SwanstonA spiritual antidote to dogma; for people who just want to be themselves.Sick of people telling you there's one way to live your life? Yeah, Holly too. Come and heal your soul and reclaim your right to be whoever you want to be with My Queer Spiritual Entropy. Full of originality, chaos and colour, this fresh-out-the-womb solo show from British non-binary performer Holly Rowan is a vibrant and daring mash-up of clown, Butoh, spoken word, physical theatre, dance and song... available as an in-person performance.About the artist: Instagram- @hollyrowanarts Holly is an emerging non-binary, multidisciplinary artist and performer whose work sits on the bridge of comedy and personal tragedy. Through a quirky combination of movement and voice, they share vulnerable and personal stories as a means to create conversation about difficult topics and connect people with the core of their humanity. This is their first Melbourne Fringe and debut performance in Australia. They have previously co-directed and performed in London Butoh Dance Company's ‘IRREVERSE' for Wandsworth Arts Fringe in 2022 and was Stage manager and Choreographer for Lancaster Offshoots productions at Edinburgh Fringe ‘Peter Rabbit & Other Tales' 2015 & ‘Hunchback' 2016. Holly is also a facilitator for Queer Space Youth at Drummond Street Services. ------------------------------- Sasja joined by Sophie Strykowski & Haz Lugsdin, another artists from the Melbourne Fringe Festival, who shared a discussion of their live performance titled "TWIN FLAME/ DEAD SPIT". TWIN FLAME/ DEAD SPIT TICKETDates 05 - 13 OctTime 7:00pm (60 minutes)Venue Mycelium StudiosTWIN FLAME/ DEAD SPIT is a live performance work investigating the ways in which we look at another to look at ourselves. With ten years of deep friendship and chosen kinship, performance makers Haz Lugsdin and Sophie Strykowski embark on an intergalactic voyage to understand their interlocking selves.We all have a gravitational pull. The sun, a chair, and you. I felt that tug. Who put me here? And why are you here too?Haz Lugsdin (They/He) is a trans performer who relishes in gusto, ego and innuendo. Sophie Strykowski (She/They) is an actor and performance maker whose work sparkles fearlessly with a joyous curiosity. Together, they pastiche comedy, performance art, and unbridled joy to glimpse the life practice of world-building together. About the Artists: Haz Lugsdin / Sophie Strykowski Instagram - @sp0repunk_ Haz Lugsdin (they/he) is a trans performer making on the unceded lands of the Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung people. Haz's experience is in devised and collaborative work, rooted in comedy, pastiched with drag, performance art, movement, wordplay and absolute buggery. Haz is invested in developing non-binary ways of making that refuse rigid performance structures; as explored in their three latest 45 minute works; Rising Damp: A Sporepunk unearthing of a queer utopia at La Mama HQ (2022), The (Sour Glitch) Two-Step Refusal at The Flying Nun by Brand X (2021) and 101101001: Dude Where's My Gender at The Giant Dwarf (2020). As a writer, Haz has received mentorship with ATYP as part of National Studio (2020) and Fresh Ink (2021). Haz's work relishes in the illegible and incoherent; centering play and pleasure. He uses performance to make sense of himself and non-sense of the rest. They have a distinct modus operandi of gusto, ego, and innuendo. Sophie Strykowski (she/they) is a performance maker and actor from Gadigal, currently living on the unceded lands of the Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung people. Their devised work reflects their positionality as a queer person, with the intention to dismantle and reimagine perceived truths with earnestness and delight. Sophie has worked across a range of independent and professional stages in Gadigal, including Griffin Theatre and ATYP in Intersection: Arrival (2019), Q Theatre in Originate (2020), Kings Cross Theatre [KXT] in Natives (2022) and Rogue Projects in Taz v. The Pleb (2023). Her work plays with form, combining elements of movement, comedy and experimental theater to ask big questions about the self, love, sexuality and connection. Sophie brings these questions to an audience with sparkling fearlessness and joyful curiosity. ------------------------------- Charaf Tartoussi joined Queering The Air as our third and final guest artist for the Melbourne Fringe Festival. A discussion between Sasja and Charaf about their captivating live performance titled “Aza” Aza: Stories of Grief in Diaspora TICKET Dates 18 - 22 OctTime 6:00pm, 5:00pm (50 minutes)Venue Festival Hub: Trades Hall - Old Council ChambersA vulnerable exploration of migrant and diasporic grief through storytelling.Aza (Arabic colloq: wake) is a powerful, nuanced portrait of migrant loss. Spoken word theater meets mourning ritual, it takes us on the grieving journeys of four artists as they grapple with what it means to lose a loved one back home.Meet Charaf, Parminder, Thabani and Farah. They all live in Naarm, all write poetry and all have had to grieve a family member from a homeland someplace else. Together, they embark on an honest voyage through a grief as ancestral as it is foreign. From longing and guilt, to curiosity and pride, they will venture into the breadth of emotion in their migrant and diasporic mourning.Aza is where they come together to be witnessed in the diversity in their grief. It is where they come together to heal, and to be healed.In 50 minutes of vulnerable and sincere storytelling, they will move through the motions of their loss and attempt to answer the question: how does grief change when it is experienced in the immigrant diaspora, and how does it stay the same? Music:Rehab by RihannaMusic by MadonnaYAMA LAYALI by David Vendetta feat Haifa Wehbe National Coming Out Day Event by Queerspace - Drummond Street Services(All LGBTQIA+ People Are Welcome)100 Drummond Street, Carlton, Victoria 3053Wednesday 11 October4pm - 7pm
Headlines // Australia being urged to donate vaccines //Aus signs UN statement to stop invasive surgeries on intersex children //COVID spreads to refugees in hotels //Women escaping domestic violence to get access to $5,000 payments from this week //Picturing Footscray entries open until 25 Oct! //Clinical psychologist Laura joined Thursday Breakfast to talk about the impacts of Covid-19 on eating disorders and services. CONTENT WARNING: discussions around disordered eating and body image. Listeners can contact Butterfly Foundation: 1800 33 4673. // Queer youth worker Randall Egan from Youth Support + Advocacy Service talks to Phuong about an LGBTQI+ pop-up clinic 19-22 October at 100 Drummond St. This clinic has been established by cohealth, Transgender Victoria, Drummond Street Services and Youth Support + Advocacy Service. // Anya Saravanan from It's Not A Compliment talks to Kannagi about their new campaign called Our Public Spaces, highlighting people's right to move freely through public spaces. // Hana Assafiri who runs the Moroccan Soup Bar in Fitzroy talks to Gen about Sistahub, a campaign to tackle faith-based misinformation and boost immunisation rates in the community. Follow them on Instagram: @moroccan_soup_bar // Songs //Passion - PinkPantheress //Done - Gen Bello //Dancing Water - White Noise //
In this episode, Allison and I discuss the importance of gender-inclusive health care. We discuss ways individual practitioners can show support, be a safe person to talk to and other ways to be a more inclusive practitioner. Allison shares with listeners how she recognised a need for inclusive health care and applied for an innovation challenge , to create a gender clinic in Melbourne's West, and won! About our guest Allison Parker has a wide range of experience in health care, as a nurse and paramedic. Currently Allison is Innovation Lead of the Transgender, Gender Diverse & non binary innovation challenge at IPC Health. Some resources Allisons shared Wyndham City council run Q group, a group for ages 12-25 years of the LGBTIQA+ community- a youth led space to provide support and recreational activities. youthinwyndham@wyndham.vic.gov.au For parents to seek support and information about their child's gender identity Parents of Gender diverse children: www.pgdc.org.au Drummond Street Services has Queerspace for folks who identify as LGBTIQA+ they provide counselling, case management, advocacy and also training and professional development www.queerspace.org.au Transgender Victoria TGV is Victoria's leading body for trans and gender diveradvocacy. TGV is Victoria's leading body for trans and gender diverse advocacy. www.tgv.org.au For resources and support Minus 18- a youth organisation , amazing service to support the young people who are part of the LGBTIQA+ community www.minus18.org.au NWPHN- for resources and training for professionals www.nwmphn.org.au Thorne harbour Health ( formally the Victorian AIDS council): for resources and support for the LGBTIQA+ community and professionals for PD and resources www.thorneharbour.org https://www.lgbtiqhealth.org.au/ https://nwmphn.org.au/for-primary-care/trans-gp-module/ Join the Inside Social Work Facebook Group Join the Inside Social Work Podcast mailing list to get your free social work career guide Visit the website for the latest info and show notes https://insidesocialwork.com/ Support the show by making a contribution https://www.paypal.me/Insidesocialwork Subscribe to the podcast wherever you get your podcasts!
We're continuing our conversations about the findings of the Royal Commission into Victoria's Mental Health System. These findings will reshape mental health services, not just in Victoria but potentially across Australia. The focus of this episode is on the recommendations for reform specific to LGBTQ+ mental health services. For the LGBTQ+ community, there's “diversity within diversity” – also called intersectionality – for example First Nations queer people, queer people with a disability, and those from culturally diverse backgrounds. To provide genuine help, services need to understand and support this diversity. Reform is even more pressing with the COVID-19 pandemic further highlighting the urgent need for a redesign of Victoria's mental health system that is co-designed by the people who use it. We invited Karen Field, CEO Drummond Street Services, which also incorporates Stepfamilies Australia and Queerspace and Carolyn Gillespie, Director of Clinical Services at Thorne Harbour Health (formerly the Victorian AIDS Council) to talk about what reform means for mental health care for the LGBTIQ+ community. Services like Drummond Street Services and Thorne Harbour Health see firsthand that LGBTIQ+ people experience higher rates than the general population of mental health issues like anxiety, depression and suicidal ideation, and that the mental health service system currently in place is not always a system that's safe for them. In fact, Karen Field says that during the past 12 months there was a trebling of the acute mental health and suicidal ideation presentations at Drummond Street Services compared to the previous financial year – an experience that has been seen across LGBTQ+ health care providers. The co-host for this episode is Karenza Louis-Smith, CEO of ermha365. CONTENT NOTE: If you've been affected by anything you've heard in this episode you can phone Qlife on 1800184 527 (3pm to midnight 7 days) or Lifeline on 13 11 14. For more info on LGBTQ+ services: Queerspace - supports focused on relationships, families, parenting and young people Thorne Harbour Health - a community-controlled organisation, governed by its members, and working for sex, sexuality and gender diverse communities.Rainbow Door - a free service for the LGBTQ+ community, you do not need a referral to use this service. ermha365 provides a range of mental health services designed to help people experiencing mental health challenges to thrive in the community.
Melissa Williams, who is President of Positive Attitude Inc., and Ali Hogg, Digital Communications Project Officer at Drummond Street Services Inc. chat with us about their services and support mechanisms, AND what they are doing for breakfast and lunch on the 25th. It's at Mollie's Bar and Diner for Brekky and EdinburghGardens for lunch. https://www.facebook.com/positiveattitude13/ Drummond Street Services Inc. Are you in crisis? Call Lifeline on 13 11 14. Kids Helpline 1800 551 800, Parent Line 1300 301 300 or QLife 1800 184 527.
This week Shaun is joined by registered Phycologist Mark Camilleri to discuss how to look after your mental health over the holiday season. Mark is a senior child and family practitioner at the Drummond Street Services in Victoria where he is also a part of their Queerspace team.This episode delves into some thought-provoking areas of mental health, some of which are specific to LGBTQIA+ individuals that some may find sensitive or triggering. Below useful links that have been provided by Mark for anyone who might be struggling with their own mental health this holiday season. please don't be afraid to seek professional adviceDrummond Street Services100 Drummond Street Carlton Victoria 3053Phone:03 9663 6733Email:enquiries@ds.org.auhttps://ds.org.au/https://headtohelp.org.au/how-we-can-help/Head to HealthHeadtoHelp services is available across Victoria. Victorians of all ages, as well as GPs or other health professionals on behalf of their patients or clients, can call HeadtoHelp on 1800 595 212 from 8.30 am to 5 pm Monday to Friday and a trained mental health professional will help find the most suitable service or support for you or your client. Please note, this is not a crisis service.Q LifeTelephone and online counselling and support for LGBTIQ+ community Available 3:00 pm – Midnight 1800 184 527https://qlife.org.au/QLife also have a fantastic resource directoryhttps://qlife.org.au/resources/directoryRainbow DoorRainbow Door is a free specialist LGBTIQA+ (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Gender Diverse, Intersex, Queer, Asexual, BrotherBoys, SisterGirls) helpline providing information, support, and referral to all LGBTIQA+ Victorians, their friends and family during the COVID-19 crisis and beyond.10am-6pm 7 days a week 1800 729 367 or SMS 0480 017 246support@rainbowdoor.org.auParentline 132 289Parentline is a confidential and anonymous phone counselling service for parents and carers of children and teenagers in Victoria. It offers counselling, information and support around a range of parenting issues. It is available 7 days a week from 8-12pm.Ca12 pmn Mind Counselling, support and referrals 24/7 phone counselling: 1300 096 269Beyond Blue Counselling, support and referrals 24/7 phone counselling: 1300 22 4636Online chat available 3 pm-12am 7 days a week https://www.beyondblue.org.au/get-support/get-immediate-supportLifeline 131 114 24/7 phone counsellingThorne Harbour Health 9865 6700Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/excuse-me-i-have-something-to-say. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Image attributed to Youssef Naddam via Unsplash Michael checks in with Thorne Harbour Health's Family Violence team worker Jesse to talk about how our community responds to intimate partner and family violence. 2020 has been a particularly stressful year for many and forced many of us into close quarters - not always in safe settings. We discuss what resources are available to support people experiencing or using family violence, and what techniques to utilise if you need to chat to a friend or family member. For support you can reach out to Rainbow Door 1800 729 367 Phone: 1800 729 367 Text: 0480 017 246 Email: support@rainbowdoor.org.au Switchboard/ QLife – 1800 184 527. Switchboard also offer Webchat 3PM-12AM everyday www.switchboard.org.au, Switchboard is staffed by volunteer counsellors and peers who can direct you to the right supports. Thorne Harbour Health – (03) 9865 6700 We provide counselling services to LGBTI communities and we also run the ReVisioning Men’s Behaviour Change Program that offers a group-based program to same-sex and same-gender attracted men who use violence. Referrals into ReVisioning can also be made via revisioning@thorneharbour.org. Drummond Street Services - (03) 9663 6733 9AM-5PM, this service provides a variety of counselling services options to the LGBTIQ community. ds.org.au Men’s Referral Service –1300 766 491 From 9.00am -9.00pm, for men who are using relationship or family violence. Men’s Referral Service also provides ‘Live chat.' The Police - Call 000 The LGBTIQ Gay and Lesbian Liaison Officers (GLLO) are also a valuable resource to aid in supporting you to interact with mainstream police support should you feel uncertain about having direct contact with police; if you contact police ask to speak to a GLLO if possible. Contact your MP to help end conversion practices in Victoria https://equalityaustralia.org.au/endconversionvic/
Content warning: Please be aware that this episode contains descriptions and discussions of intimate partner violence, psychological abuse, family violence, domestic violence, physical violence, queerphobia, and mental health issues. If this is a trigger for you, please contact Lifeline (13 11 14), Switchboard Victoria (1800 184 527), or contact your state-based service. In this episode, we discuss intimate partner violence in queer relationships from professional and lived experience perspectives. Michele speaks with Karen Field, CEO of Drummond Street Services and Queerspace, and a partner of WithRespect. We discuss intimate partner violence in the context of queer relationships, why it occurs, and what resources people can access, especially during a global pandemic. Niveen speaks with queer performance artist *Anonymous, about her personal account of experiencing intimate partner violence in her relationship and its continuing effects and impact on her life.*Anonymous has requested that she remains unidentified for this conversation. Resources:Intimate relationships: Signs of respect, Archer online article, where Karen Field discusses intimate partner violence. Undercurrent Victoria, a non-profit organisation focused on community education, building healthy relationships, and challenging the attitudes, beliefs, and actions that enable violence, with an emphasis on intimate partner/family violence, violence in LGBTIQ+ relationships, and gendered violence. Queerspace - iHeal - a program that provides support and services to survivors of intimate partner and family violence who are no longer in crisis. WithRespect, a specialist LGBTIQ+ family violence service in partnership between Queerspace/Drummond Street Services, Transgender Victoria, Thorne Harbour Health, and Switchboard Victoria.
Hosted by Rob, Jess and Lois [segment times in brackets][7:05] Alternative news: COP25 Climate Change Conference in Madrid, updates on Australian bushfires, President of Iraq steps down amid violent protests and drought continues in Indonesia. [7:30] Melinda Liszewski from Sydney-based grassroots movement, Collective Shout, chats about an international campaign against the sexual exploitation of young women on Instagram called #Wakeupinstagram. [7:45] Interview with geographer Helen Jarvis about genocide in Sri Lanka. Helen was a judge at the Permanent Peoples’ Tribunal on Sri Lanka held in Germany 2013 and describes her involvement in this prerecorded conversation. [8:00] Disability and queer rights activist, Jax Jacki Brown, from Drummond Street Services speaks about a new collaboration between Drummond Street Services and the Disability Resources Centre. Jax discusses new developments in their advocacy work that crosses LGBTIQ+ and disability communities. [8:15] Artist and co-director of Aphids, Eugenia Lim, chats about her latest work Easy Riders. This week, Easy Riders is in residency at MPavilion and is open to the public. Eugenia tells us about how the performance piece explores the experiences of workers in the gig economy by featuring direct input from fast food delivery and Uber drivers.
Activist Roz Ward discusses Melbourne's Climate Rally, the Australian Government's proposed Religious Discrimination legislation, and reflects on Safe Schools. Britt Baillie from Queerspace at Drummond Street Services discusses their Futures Free From Violence programme. Jason and Em from Adelaide duo Girl chat in the studio with James about their Melbourne Fringe show Masc In Progress. Content warning: this episode discusses intimate partner violence in the LGBTIQ community and may trigger some listeners. Switchboard: 1800 184 52. https://www.queerspace.org.au/our-programs/futures-free-from-violence/ 3CR broadcasts from the lands of the Kulin Nation. Sovreignty was never ceded in this country.
Creatrix Tiara talks about touring with Sister Spit in the United States in 2020 and Mama Alto's surprise birthday party at Hares and Hyenas.Jacob Thomas discusses Stop Deportations To Danger, a campaign to stop QANTAS being a carrier for the deportation of refugees and asylum seekers.Katie Cullen and Kate Foord from Queerspace at Drummond Street Services talk about Renegade Pub Footy and inclusion in sport and its impacts on mental health.3CR broadcasts from the stolen lands of the Kulin Nation. Sovreignty was never ceded in this country.Language warning: this episode includes music by Sonic Youth with coarse lyrics.
We acknowledge Indigenous elders, past, present and emerging. 3CR broadcasts on the stolen lands of the Kulin Nation. Sovreignty was never ceded in this country.Writer and Trainer Jac Tomlins discusses their new Trans and Gender Diverse Parents' Guide. It's a ground-breaking resource, written in an Australian context. Launch is Thursday, 25 July in Melbourne. Details: https://www.facebook.com/events/hares-hyenas/launch-trans-and-gender-diverse-parents-guide/2382032182079576/Gabriel Aleksandrs discusses the submission by Queerspace at Drummond Street Services to Victoria's Mental Health System Royal Commission.Human Rights lawyer Lee Carnie discusses the Joint Statement signed by 50 LGBTIQ community organisations in Australia about Religious Discrimination.This episode includes discussion around mental health trauma and issues that may be distressing to some listeners. QLife: 1800 184 527. Lifeline: 13 11 14.
Around two-thirds of same-sex attracted guys have experienced abuse in a relationship. But most of them aren't reporting it, or even talking about it. That's what the Sorting It Out report, released by ACON and Western Sydney University, has found. Nat examines a culture of silence, a lack of resources and looks at what needs to change.
In our federal election eve episode to celebrate International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia, Intersexism, and Transphobia [IDAHOBIT], our guests shine the light on LGBTIQ+ socio-political issues. Karen Parker of Queerspace, Drummond Street Services, and the LGBTIQ+ Safe Housing Network, discusses LGBTIQ+ homelessness, its causes, and her insights and accounts of life for queer people without homes. Tristan Meecham of All The Queens Men discusses Dance Club: a monthly event in Melbourne, open to all members of the community, that focusses on social connections with LGBTIQ+ Elders. To volunteer at the dance, visit allthequeensmen.net
Guest Robin talks about the We Deserve program run by Transgender Victoria and Drummond Street Services) for prevention of Family Violence in TGD relationships; (presenter declares interest in TGV); asserting against right-wing hate; climate action rocking it and more
3CR broadcasts from stolen lands of the Kulin Nation. We acknowledge elders past, present, and emerging, and that sovereignty was never ceded. James speaks with LGBTIQ policy advocate Alastair Lawrie about the recently released Senate Committee Report into whether the federal Sex Discrimination Act should be amended to prevent religious schools from being lawfully able to discriminate against LGBTIQ students and staff. Report and Senate Committee details here. James speaks with queer artist Klari Agar and Indigenous drag performer Tre Turner, about the one-day Let’s Take Over Festival that showcases young, queer artists in Melbourne. The event is happening at Northcote Town Hall on Saturday, 4 March. Details. James speaks with Mo Musil and Bobuq Sayed from Queerspace at Drummond Street Services about their Individual and Family Mentoring services for young LGBTIQ people. The programs assist queer young people and their families navigate the intersections and complexities they may experience with the support of mentors. Register your interest via mo.musil@ds.org.au or 0436 820 805.Content/ trigger warning: Please be aware this interview contains descriptions and discussions suicide and mental health, that may be distressing to some listeners. If this interview raises questions or causes distress to you, contact Lifeline (13 11 14) or Switchboard Victoria (1800 184 527).
A recording of a fundraiser organised by Warriors of the Aboriginal Resistance. The panel, Decolonising Solidarity - what can i do, was part of WAR's 7 days of resistance campaign.Proceeds from the fundraiser will go to Tanya Day's family in the lead up to the Deaths in Custody trial in March. PanelistsCaroline Martin is a descendant of the Briggs family and Custodian of Boonwurrung Country, and the 2019 Creative Director of the Yirramboi Festival. Crystal Mckinnon is Yamatji woman and research fellow.Clare Land, is the author of Decolonizing solidarity: Dilemmas and Directions for Supporters of Indigenous Struggles.Idil Ali is a Youth Practitioner at Drummond Street Services, and supervises VoiceFest. Charandev Singh is a human rights advocate and paralegal and educator.
Tuesday Breakfast - 25 September 2018with Ayan, Lauren and Anya (we miss you George!) 7.00 am Acknowledgement of Country7:02 am News Headlines7.10 am China Aleisse (Ah- lease) is a producer, director, writer and experience facilitator from Detroit Michigan, who settled here a few years ago. She is the founder of Floating Key - a curatorial platform that centers Black elevation and PoC Solidarity in Naarm. China returns to Tuesday Breakfast to discuss her exciting collaborative show, Reclaiming the Name: A Journey to our Unsung Stories.7.20 am Community Announcements7.30 am Raquel Willis is a powerful black transgender activist and writer from the U.S. who was recognised this year as one of America's most influential African Americans on The Root 100, alongside Solange Knowles, Tamika D. Mallory and Patrisse Khan-Cullors. She has also been named in ESSENCE's Woke 100 Women, which honors the women who are blazing trails for equal rights and inclusion for Black people in America.7.45 am Alternative News8.00 am Meena Singh is the Director Legal and Client Services of the Victorian Aboriginal Legal Service and a proud Yorta Yorta woman. Meena joins us in the studio to discuss the recent Victorian Supreme Court decision that an Aboriginal man’s request to be sentenced by a Koori Court shouldn't have been denied. 8.15 am Idil Ali is a Senior Youth Practitioner at Drummond Street Services. A writer, performing artist, moderator and community organiser her work is centred in community autonomy, resistance and freedom. Idil alongside Meriki Onus of Warriors of the Aboriginal Resistance - WAR, created the Idil Ali is the co-founder of the fundraiser, Naarm Imagining Abolition. Idil joins Tuesday to share more information about the fundraiser. Songsartist: Satyameva Jayate, Neha Kakkar, Dhvani Bhanushali, Ikkasong: DILBARartist: Seinabo Setsong: I owe you nothingartist: Kaiitsong: Natural Womanartist: Sampa The Greatsong: FEMALEartist: Solange song: Cranes in the Sky
Terry Jaensch joins us on the line from Castlemaine to talk about the Insert Self Here Festival this weekend. Lucy Foley from Queerspace at Drummond Street Services chats with James about IDAHOBIT.
Grace Lee is a counsellor and psychotherapist working at Equinox Trans Health Clinic in Fitzroy and at Drummond Street Services in Carlton and a Committee Member at Transgender Victoria We spoke about Grace's masters... LEARN MORE The post Coming out as transgender in adulthood – Interview with Grace Lee appeared first on Family Matters.