All about Chaz
by Rev. Irene MonroeThe long-awaited film “Becoming Chaz,” a documentary about Chaz Bon’s female-to-male (FTM) gender reassignment aired this week on OWN: Oprah Winfrey Network. And it captures not only the arduous trek of coming out as transgender, but it also captures the universal experience we all face of coming out as our true selves.
As the only child of the world renowned pop duo Cher and Sonny Bono, many of us remember Chaz as their cherub-faced daughter Chastity, blowing kisses to the audience of her parents top-rated variety television show “Sonny & Cher.”
In 1995 Chaz was outed as a lesbian. But this time Chaz is in control, and on his own volition announcing he’s now legally a man.
But our trans men and women who have the courage to come out sadly and too often receive more criticism, sarcasm, and ridicule than praise.
For example, in “New York Times” reporter Cintra Wilson’s article “The Reluctant Transgender Role Model,” she attempts to comprehend the enormity of Chaz’s courage, and perhaps applaud his perseverance to undergo surgery. As a cisgendered person (one whose gender matches his or her biological sex) Wilson’s remark is, at best, insensitive and, at worst, insulting.
“You come away with a palpable understanding of how unendurably he must be suffering in his body to want to have his own sex characteristics amputated,” Wilson wrote.
And with the heterosexist assumption that the reason any child who is lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender (LGBT) might have something to do with inept parenting, Wilson ask these naggingly insulting questions in her article:
“Could it be possible that the fact that Chaz is now a man is somehow Cher’s fault? Did the toxic culture of celebrity damage Chastity/Chaz’s gender identity? Did Cher’s almost drag queen-like hyper-female persona somehow devour Chastity’s emerging femininity? Could Chaz’s transition have been motivated by gender-bent Oedipal revenge? Is he reclaiming the childhood attention his superstar mother always diverted? It is remotely possible that he needed to make the transition because his mom is Cher?”
More below the fold.
“I don’t think the way I grew up had any effect on this issue,” Chaz told Wilson. “There’s a gender in your brain and a gender in your body. For 99 percent of people, those things are in alignment. For transgender people, they’re mismatched. That’s all it is. It’s not complicated, it’s not a neurosis. It’s a mix-up. It’s a birth defect, like a cleft palate.”To no one’s surprise, social critic and self-described dissident feminist Camille Paglia, in a 54-second video by “Xtraonline” that went viral, had to volunteer her scurrilous viewpoint on Chaz’s choice to undergo gender reassignment as a form of bodily mutilation. Pagilia opines that Chaz’s unhappy and confusing childhood had nothing to do with him wanting a sex change, but she never states what Chaz’s unhappy and confusing childhood was about. Instead, Pagilia voices her worries. Pagilia’s biggest worry is that such an outrageous act of changing one’s gender would gravely influence children who feel born in the wrong body — an adolescent phase she disdainfully states she once experienced but overcame.
And when we see in the documentary Cher — gay icon nonpareil — not celebratory about Chaz’s transition as her close friends and girlfriend Jenny are, it’s unnerving. But Cher, in my opinion, comes across more as a frightened parent than as an insensitive transphobic. Worried about the toil it will take — physically and mentally — on Chaz to endure ongoing male hormone shots for the rest of his life, Cher, still using the female pronoun, states “I’m afraid she’s not going to be healthy, I’m afraid it’s too much for her.”
During the documentary, Cher is heard pining about what she perceives as the lost of her daughter forever when she stated she should have saved the familiar sound of Chaz’s voice on an answering machine before he began male hormone therapy.
But Cher understands Chaz’s courageous act to transition. “If I woke up tomorrow in the body of a man, I couldn’t get to the surgeon fast enough,” she stated in the documentary.
Chaz doesn’t walk away from the documentary without disturbingly turning a few heads in what many would agree are both sexists and misogynist remarks.
“Jenny and I had to relearn how to be together,” Chaz states in the film. “I never really understood women before, to be honest, but I had a tolerance for women that I don’t have now. …There is something in testosterone that makes talking and gossiping really grating. I’ve stopped talking as much. I’ve noticed that Jen can talk endlessly. …I just kind of zone out. I just don’t care!” Chaz laughs.
Unthinkingly, Chaz’s buys into the fallacious notion of “biology is destiny,” meaning we are slaves to our genes, and in his case hormones; he, also, is buying into the gender binary of male and female, which would categorically be dismissive of trans males and females.
“I’ve learned that the differences between men and women are so biological. I think if people realized that, it would be easier. I would be a great relationship counselor. I know the difference that hormones really make.”
Chaz isn’t realizing that espousing biological essentialist rhetoric, he’s categorizing people by a few fixed characteristics and not allowing for change or variation within God’s human tapestry. And I am by these remarks.
However, I have to realize as a cisgendered lesbian, this is not my experience, and this is not my story. But rather I am reminded that the documentary “Becoming Chaz” is all about Chaz.



All about Chaz
“You come away with a palpable understanding of how unendurably he must be suffering in his body to want to have his own sex characteristics amputated,” Wilson wrote.
11 Comments



It’s both true and false.It’s true that being on hormones changes a person rather rapidly.
I like to compare it to seeing color (because it’s a metaphor people understand easily, personally I would prefer compare it more toward feeling textures but that’s a metaphor we don’t have in English). When I was testosterone-primary, I was, in terms of emotions, red-green colorblind, and the intensity and saturation of the rest of the colors was turned way down. When I got estrogen and spironolactone, red and green started coming in and the intensity was turned way, way up. My partner can see it in my eyes; a close friend of mine commented that when I giggle (which I do often, these days), it sounds not vapid but like I am plotting something.
All differences between men and women are not biological. Some are, and some are not – I think that the categorization of people receiving male or female socialization based solely on genitally-assigned gender at birth is extremely problematic, and devalues or completely ignores the idea that children can be attentive to more lessons than just the ones explicitly being given.
Chaz is going through the “adolescent boy phase,”as I call it.
I was like this too at the beginning of my transition. For me, it was less like a second puberty and more like a continuation of the first puberty that was, in many ways, arrested due to a lack of the proper hormonal concoction.
Hopefully, as Chaz matures, he’ll feel less threatened by his feminine side (everyone has a masculine and feminine side) and let go of the sexist notions. Personally, I believe that’s an important part of becoming a man.
I agree with Kittyburger and Wolfgang.People are so tempted to judge people who are in transition. For some reason many times we are held to a much higher standard of behavior than anyone else simply because we are transsexual. Everything is not as simple as it seems, transition is a time of rapid person growth and change. And all that change and growth is a very positive thing. It’s hard to explain how profound an experience starting HRT is. For example, I once told my parents that HRT saved my life, and that was not an exaggeration.
Life is good.
Very informative and thought-provoking column by Irene Monroe and comments here.As a cisgender lesbian, I knew barely anything at all about transgender people and issues before I started reading here. This site is unique in presenting information, opinions, and first-person accounts of what it means to be transgender in the U.S. Thank you.
I found the documentary…really enlightening and I would encourage others unfamiliar with trans issues to take a look. As a side note…there have been quite a few trans related docs on TV lately…a quite a few about FtM transexuals.
I think that one of the more interesting components of the doc and subsequent audience discussion with Rosie that followed…was not so much Chaz, but looking at how is transition impacted those around him, espeicially Jen. Here was a woman that entered into a relationship with another woman only to have her gradually change into a man. Whatching her evolution was in someways far more gripping if only because she had less control over the situation. I got the impression that it takes alot of strength and will to endure that journey with someone. Not everyone could do that…Rosie admitted that she would not have be able to continue the relationship had she been in a simialr situation.
The worst comments I’ve heardAre from other trans girls. Most said he was courageous, but a “jerk.” I haven’t seen it.
Lack of a Feminine Role Model?I have not seen the documentary, but did watch a video of Chaz’ appearance on Letterman the other night. It was amazing, and I can’t imagine a greater spokesperson for the trans experience (it doesn’t hurt, in a paternalistic society, that Chaz made the transition to male). I had to laugh, though, when Chaz and Letterman started talking about biology and nuture in terms of why Chaz is trans. If there is one girl who had an appropriately feminine role model growing up it was Chastity Bono (and Cher’s personal life was not that crazy when her kids were young – she doesn’t party and sticks to one man at a time). Yet somehow Chaz is still trans. I will chalk that up to biology – or a really sick sense of humor on God’s part (let’s give the girliest girl in America a transgender child). Watching old Sonny and Cher shows, it is clear that as a child Chaz was uncomfortable as a girl. She would be dressed in some mini-version of Cher’s outfit, and would look as uncomfortable as possible.
You!Ms. Monroe, I always find your posts intelligent, insightful, compassionate, and frankly, they make my day!
I agree.We rarely give our partners on the transition journey, whether they ultimately remain or leave, near enough credit for their courage and willingness to deal with the wrenching social changes. To say nothing of the personal and interpersonal issues that exist in any intimate relationship.
MehI’m glad there’s finally a popular trans guy who is well-known for non-sensationalistic reasons. But I swear, there must be more trans documentaries than there are trans people. It’s like our version of going to Disney World for Superbowl victors…
This is a good sitebut it certainly is not unique. There are some very good trans specific sites that present information, opinions, and first-person accounts of what it means to be transgender in the U.S. and in other places internationally. PHB is very good in showing the interactions and intersections between the cis LBG and trans communities though, which is why I’m a regular reader.
I am biased by my involvement there but I think http://www.susans.org/forums/i… – Susan’s Place is one of the better trans specific support and information sites among those on the internet.