Elliot Page opens up about stepping out as transgender male

By ANI | Published: April 29, 2021 12:49 PM2021-04-29T12:49:07+5:302021-04-29T13:00:02+5:30

Months after Canadian actor-producer Elliot Page revealed publicly that he is a transgender man, Page, in a recent interview, explained how he's always known his true gender.

Elliot Page opens up about stepping out as transgender male | Elliot Page opens up about stepping out as transgender male

Elliot Page opens up about stepping out as transgender male

Months after Canadian actor-producer Elliot Page revealed publicly that he is a transgender man, Page, in a recent interview, explained how he's always known his true gender.

According to People magazine, the 34-year-old actor has slowly opened up in interviews about his life up until that freeing moment when she announced about her gender. In a new feature with Vty Fair, Page said, "All trans people are so different, and my story's absolutely just my story. But yes, when I was a little kid, absolutely, 100%, I was a boy."

"I knew I was a boy when I was a toddler. I was writing fake love letters and signing them 'Jason.' Every little aspect of my life, that is who I was, who I am, and who I knew myself to be,"

"I just couldn't understand when I'd be told, 'No, you're not. No, you can't be that when you're older. You feel it. Now I'm finally getting myself back to feeling like who I am, and it's so beautiful and extraordinary, and there's a grief to it in a way," he recalled.

When interviewer Thomas Page McBee, also a trans man, described his life's work as "trying to reconnect with that self that I was as a child," Page admitted to feeling the same.

"I think that's really sweet. I get waves of myself at specific ages, and I just want to cling to that person and hold them close," he replied.

People magazine reported that Page also talked about his mixed feelings after coming out. While he received overwhelming support, he's also deeply affected by ongoing efforts in some states to strip transgender people of their health care rights.

He said, "My feelings aren't really linear. I feel emerging joy and excitement one moment, and then in the next, profound sadness reading about people wanting to take gender-affirming health care away from children. I feel so grateful to be at this place in my life, and I want to use the strength I have to help in all the ways that I can. The reason you and I have the privileges we have is because people have sacrificed so much for so, so, so long and put everything on the line."

"I think it's about: How can I feel grateful for my joy, and embrace my joy, and allow myself to have that joy--but then put that joy and that love into action? How do I figure out a way to integrate those two feelings, in terms of being a public person?" Page questioned.

( With inputs from ANI )

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