10 trans people on how their lives changed after transition


Transgender people overwhelmingly describe their lives after transitioning as “happier,” “authentic” and “comforting” despite a deluge of state legislation in recent years that seeks to restrict their access to health care and other aspects of life.

Over the last three years, nearly half of states have passed restrictions on transition-related medical care — such as puberty blockers, hormone therapy and surgery — for minors. Supporters of the legislation have argued that many transgender people later regret their transitions, though studies have found that only about 1%-2% of people who transition experience regret.

Earlier this year, the 2022 U.S. Transgender Survey — the largest nationwide survey of the community, with more than 90,000 trans respondents — found that 94% of respondents reported that they were “a lot more satisfied” or “a little more satisfied” with their lives.

Transgender Day of Visibility, observed on March 31, is an annual awareness day dedicated to celebrating the accomplishments of trans people and acknowledging the violence and discrimination the community faces. NBC News asked transgender people from across the country to share how their life satisfaction has changed after transition. Out of two dozen respondents, all but one said they feel more joy in their lives. Here are some of their stories.

Ash Orr, 33

Morgantown, West Virginia

Orr, who is the press relations manager for the National Center for Transgender Equality, the trans rights advocacy group that conducted the nationwide survey, began socially transitioning in his mid-20s, and at 33, he received gender-affirming top surgery.

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Ash Orr said gender-affirming top surgery has made him feel more at home in his body.Courtesy Ash Orr

“The impact of this surgery … has been life-changing,” Orr said. “My body now feels like a comforting and familiar home, a place I had yearned for and have finally returned to.”

When Orr isn’t working, he loves immersing himself in nature, whether that’s through gardening or playing pickleball with friends. He also chases tornadoes in the Midwest — “Yes, like the movie ‘Twister’!” he said.

“My transition journey has been a profound lesson in self-discovery,” Orr said. “It has shown me that there are countless versions of myself waiting to be unearthed.”

Criss Smith, 63

New York

After transitioning, Smith said he felt a sense of congruence between his internal sense of self and his external presentation.

Criss Smith
Criss Smith worked in financial services for 30 years and now works as a substitute teacher. Courtesy Criss Smith

“I was so broken and uncertain, and now I have a profound sense of relief, empowerment and alignment with how I feel and being the best human possible,” he said. Smith said he worked on Wall Street in financial services for more than 30 years for major companies including Merrill Lynch and JPMorgan Chase. He now works as a substitute teacher for the New York City Department of Education.

“My mind is more at rest and I am at ease with every moment,” Smith said of life after his transition. “A joy fills my soul that I never thought possible before. I am truly living a full human experience presenting all of my authenticity. I live in a liberation garden.”

Gavin Grimm, 24

Hampton Roads, Virginia

Grimm was the plaintiff in a landmark 2020 court case in which the 4th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals upheld the rights of transgender students to use the school bathrooms that aligned with their gender identities. In 2021, the Supreme Court declined to hear the case and allowed the circuit court’s decision in Grimm’s favor to stand.

Gavin Grimm
Gavin Grimm, who was the plaintiff in a landmark trans rights case, and his cat, Rascal.Courtesy Gavin Grimm

Now, nearly three years later, Grimm plans to go back to college to become a middle or high school teacher. He came out and began his transition in 2013, and “to date, I have absolutely zero regrets,” he said.

“While I do still struggle with unrelated strife in my personal life, the ability to be myself fully and completely for the last decade has given me the strength and joy that I have needed to carry on,” Grimm said. “Despite these challenges, I remain very, fundamentally happy. Exquisitely happy, even, in just finding small joy each day in a world where I had the ability to access myself.”

Dani Stewart, 57

Springfield, Missouri

Stewart said transitioning was “a life saver” for her and that she feels more confident than she ever has before.

Dani Stewart
Dani Stewart would like to see better representation of trans people in media.Courtesy Dani Stewart

“I feel like I belong in society,” said Stewart, who said she was formerly a news desk producer at CNN and worked for various TV stations. “However, dark clouds remain for all trans people. We need better and more representation in media. We need to see more of ourselves integrated with the world around us.”

Andrea Montañez, 58

Orlando, Florida

Montañez said her son and her co-workers both observed the same change in her after she transitioned in 2018: They said they noticed her smile.

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Andrea Montañez said those around her said she smiled more after her transition.Courtesy Andrea Montañez

“You always were a nice person, but we didn’t know you could smile,” Montañez recalled her co-workers telling her. “I lost a lot, but I won freedom and happiness.”

Montañez is the director of advocacy and immigration at the Hope CommUnity Center in Orlando and is involved in advocating against legislation targeting LGBTQ people in Florida — work that she said has helped her build community, find happiness and “bring the magic” to her and others’ lives.

“We are a gift,” she said. “Trans people are a gift.”

Elizabeth ‘Lizzy’ Graham, 34

Silver Spring, Maryland

In 2015, Graham said she kept a bag of women’s clothes in her car so that when she finished her shift at work as a tech support professional, she could drive to a Starbucks and change in the bathroom. She was also driving for Uber at the time, and one day she decided to dress as herself so she could practice coming out to her passengers before she came out to her family.

Lizzy Graham
Lizzy Graham practiced coming out to her Uber passengers before she came out to her family in 2015.Courtesy Lizzy Graham

She came out fully in the summer of 2015, and said her gender dysphoria, or the distress caused by a misalignment between one’s sex assigned at birth and gender identity, went away with time.

“Once I began my transition journey and began living full time, my focus and productivity improved,” she said. “Many friends and people I know who knew me prior to transitioning said that they could tell I was happier now that I came out and was living my authentic life.”

Now, Graham is a service coordinator who helps autistic children who receive Medicaid-funded services, and she leads a support group for transgender people in her area.

Jordan Reid, 27

Harper Woods, Michigan

Reid said her coming out as a transgender woman in 2022 happened alongside a number of other life changes. She had just gotten divorced, and then she dropped out of medical school, or, as she says, “exploded” all of her career aspirations.

Jordan Reid
Jordan Reid said transition helped her love her singing voice.Courtesy Jordan Reid

But the last two years have been much happier, she said. Reid is back in school studying computer science and data science, and has rekindled her love for music. She has played guitar since she was 10, but said she stopped because she didn’t like her singing voice. Now, she sings in the shower every day.

“On paper, it may look like I have taken quite a few steps back in life,” Reid said. “In reality, what’s on paper doesn’t matter one bit if, instead of sacrificing my joy, I get to spend the majority of my time not only smiling, but truly feeling a reason to smile.”

Tiffany Jones, 35

Newark, New Jersey

Jones, who works in an Amazon warehouse, said transitioning has helped reduce her suicidal ideation.

Tiffany Jones
Tiffany Jones cosplaying as Sailor Saturn from “Sailor Moon.”Courtesy Tiffany Jones

“I am happy that I am living as my unapologetically authentic self,” Jones said, adding that her transition “helped me improve my self-confidence” and allowed her to be more creative. She now writes poetry, cosplays as anime characters and has a stronger support network, she said.

She said she worries about her personal safety as a Black trans woman, but “I just think about the positive things in life, and that there’s so much out there in the world, so much inspiration.”

Kylie Blackmon, 26

Azle, Texas

Blackmon said her life changed dramatically when she came out in 2021.

Kylie Blackmon
Kylie Blackmon said “everything clicked mentally” after she came out as trans.Courtesy Kylie Blackmon

“It seemed like everything clicked mentally with me. No longer was I burdened with living a lie and having that weigh on me constantly,” she said. However, she said things are harder socially in her small Texas town of about 15,000 people, northwest of Fort Worth. She said she faces transphobia from her co-workers, and that some of her family members don’t understand her identity.

She’s currently training to be a phlebotomy technician, which is someone who collects and tests blood samples, and in her free time she enjoys doing makeup, shopping and spending time with her friends.

Cristina Angelica Piña, 23

Central Valley, California

Piña, a consultant, said that being trans can be difficult, but that “underneath this pain, there is an unfettered joy, power and beauty.”

Cristina Piña
Cristina Piña said being trans can be difficult, but that her “existence reminds people of choice.” Courtesy Cristina Piña

“My existence reminds people of choice,” said Piña, who enjoys fashion, poetry, rap, cooking and spending time with her friends and her dog, Bella. “We have the autonomy to decide how we exist in the world. We have the freedom to present ourselves in a way we see fit — not what others have placed upon us.”

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Family attacked in Illinois stabbing spree praises son, dog for saving their lives



ROCKFORD, Ill. — A mother who was injured in an Illinois stabbing spree Wednesday said that if it wasn’t for her son, who was also attacked, she and her daughter might not have survived after the attacker entered their home.

Darlene Weber and her children, Jacob Vollman, 21, and Cathy Gilfillan, 23, described the assault. Christian Soto is accused of going on a rampage Wednesday afternoon, ultimately killing four people and injuring seven others, including Weber and her kids.

“I mean, this is, like, my knight in shining armor, and he’s my son. It was like God sent him to me and sent me a gift in a small package and I was blessed with that,” Weber, 46, said in an interview Thursday.

“I’m not even kidding. If it wasn’t for him, I don’t think I’d be standing here talking to you right now,” she said of her son. “I really don’t. It was frightening.”

Soto was arrested on charges of murder, attempted murder and home invasion.

Winnebago County State’s Attorney J. Hanley said Soto admitted to the crimes and said he had taken marijuana he believed was “laced with an unknown narcotic” before the attacks at multiple locations in Rockford and an area of Winnebago County shortly after 1 p.m. Wednesday, officials said.

The attack

Weber said she and her two kids — all of whom have visible injuries — were home Wednesday afternoon when she took her pit bull, Brandy. out the back door and heard a man say “hey” to her before he stabbed her in the face.

As she crawled through the house screaming for Vollman to help her, she said, Brandy jumped on and bit the man, giving her enough time to escape.

“It all happened like such a blink of an eye,” Weber said. “Remembering back, it was almost like he literally tried to kill me.”

She said Vollman then approached the man as she scrambled to find her phone and call 911.

Vollman said he went to find his mom, who was screaming for help, “and I just turn my head, and he’s standing, like, right there. And he literally looks at me and says, ‘Come here,’ and starts charging at me, and then he swings on me a couple of times.” He added that he fought the man “head on.”

He said he was hit with a metal ring around the bottom of the knife but was not stabbed with the blade.

After a couple of minutes of fighting with Vollman, the attacker turned his attention to Gilfillan, who had just awakened at 1 p.m. to screams of “help, help” and “get out of my house, you shouldn’t be here,” she said.

She said she ran upstairs, where she found her brother “boxing” with the man. At first she thought it might have been one of her brother’s friends; then, she said, the man turned toward her, charged at her and “clocked me one” before she fell into the fetal position.

She said he was about to hit her again when her brother began “waling on him” with a syrup bottle.

Gilfillan said the attacker then “dipped” out the back door, at which point police arrived.

“If it wasn’t for him,” she said, referring to Vollman, “me and mom would not be here.”

‘The devil incarnate’

Vollman said the attacker “had the world’s biggest smile on his face” when he approached him in the home, and Gilfillan said his eyes looked totally black.

“He had no brown in his eyes. It was straight pupil, like he was on drugs or something,” Gilfillan said.

Weber said, “He looked like the devil incarnate.”

The three survivors said the man was covered in blood when he arrived at their home, including his hands, sweater and pants.

“It’s like a horror movie,” Weber said.

The family, who just moved to the neighborhood in October, said they no longer feel safe there. But Weber said she is “not going to let somebody like that scare me from … having a tranquil life with my family.”

Weber said she “broke down” in the aftermath of the assault, because “I felt kind of guilty that we were survivors and … you had these innocent people that were taken from their families.”

The rampage also claimed the lives of Soto’s friend Jacob Schupbach, 23; his friend’s mother, Ramona Schupbach, 63; a mailman doing his job, Jay Larson; and Jenna Newcomb, 15, who died saving her sister.

Soto told police that he went to Jacob Schupbach’s house Wednesday afternoon to smoke marijuana and that he thinks it was laced, causing him to become paranoid, Hanley, the state’s attorney, told reporters.

Soto “said he retrieved a knife from the kitchen at Jacob’s house and proceeded to stab Jacob and Ramona to death,” Hanley said.

Weber said: “I can’t even wrap my head around what happened yesterday. It’s so hard to just sit here and just talk about it or to even replay it. I just can’t get that picture of him standing there and saying ‘hey’ to me and then the reach. I can only imagine what everyone else went through.”



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Baltimore bridge collapse victims’ family members reflect on their loved ones’ lives



Two of the six men presumed dead in the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore were remembered by loved ones as devoted husbands, fathers and workers who were simply trying to improve their lot in life.

“He gave us strength for everything,” said Norma Suazo, sister of Maynor Suazo, a member of the construction crew that had been repairing potholes on the bridge when it was struck by a container ship early Tuesday. 

“He fought day after day for our family to get ahead. He looked for a way to make a living,” Norma told Noticias Telemundo on Wednesday in a Spanish-language interview.

Suazo’s brother Fredy described him as good-natured, “smiley, the type of person that always fought for the well being of the family.”

“You come to this country to accomplish your dreams, and sometimes that dream doesn’t get fulfilled,” Fredy Suazo added. “And for a tragedy like this to happen to us, can you imagine?”

Maynor, who was from Honduras, leaves behind an 18-year-old son and a 6-year-old daughter, according to his brother Carlos Alexis Suazo Sandoval.

Authorities confirmed Tuesday night that six workers are presumed dead in the bridge collapse. Col. Ronald L. Butler Jr., a superintendent with the Maryland State Police, said the search-and-rescue mission had become one of search and recovery. Officials said divers returned to the frigid waters to scour for bodies on Wednesday morning.

María del Carmen Castellón told Telemundo that her husband, Miguel Luna, was one of the workers on the Key Bridge when it tumbled into the Patapsco River. Castellón, also interviewed in Spanish, said she was desperate for news.

“They only tell us that we have to wait, that for now, they can’t give us information,” she said, referring to officials, adding that she and her family were “devastated, devastated because our heart is broken, because we don’t know if they’ve rescued them yet. We’re just waiting to hear any news.”

CASA, a nonprofit organization that provides services to immigrants in the Baltimore area, confirmed that Luna was from El Salvador and had been living in Maryland for more than 19 years. Gustavo Torres, CASA’s executive director, described Luna as “a longtime member of our CASA family, adding an even deeper layer of sorrow to this already grievous situation.”

At least two of the men presumed dead were from Mexico. In a statement, Mexico’s secretary of foreign affairs said his government plans to provide assistance to their family members, as well as that of a Mexican national who was rescued alive from the wreckage.

In a tweet on Wednesday morning, Maryland Gov. Wes Moore said: “We have spoken to the families, prayed with them, and assured them that our state will mobilize every resource to bring them closure.

Suazo’s brother-in-law told Telemundo that Suazo “leaves a very great legacy.”

“He has been a great example for many people,” he said.



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Former Austrian FM now lives in a Russian village


In 2018, the dance of Vladimir Putin and Karin Kneissl was discussed by all the world's media

In 2018, the dance of Vladimir Putin and Karin Kneissl was discussed by all the world’s media

Former head of the Austrian Foreign Ministry, Karin Kneissl, who danced with Russian dictator Vladimir Putin at her wedding in 2018, has moved to the Russian village of Petrushovo, Ryazan Oblast.

This was reported by Russian media outlet Vid Sboku on Aug. 8. Journalists claim to have met Kneissl at a local event. The former minister told them that acquaintances helped her rent a place in Petrushovo.

Read also: Hungary, Austria, Greece added to the Economist’s list of Putin’s ‘useful idiots’ in Europe

“I paid for another month, and then we’ll see; I don’t know anything about my future, nothing,” Kneissl said.

Read also: ICC may issue another arrest warrant for Putin – Ukrainian intelligence

She claims to have last seen Putin in 2019. Kneissl added that in September 2020, she supposedly had to leave Austria due to constant death threats and an effective ban on work. After that, she settled in France and then moved to Lebanon. Kneissl did not specify when she moved to Russia.

The former minister added that in Petrushovo she continues to write books, teach, and has been invited to work at the G.O.R.K.I. Center at St. Petersburg State University. Karin Kneissl is listed as the head of the center on the university’s website.

Read also: Over six million Ukrainians leave country since Russian invasion, says official

In August 2018, Putin was present at Kneissl’s wedding. At the event, he greeted the newlyweds with a bouquet of flowers and danced with the bride.

In early March 2021, Kneissl was nominated to the Rosneft Board of Directors. In May 2022, after the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine, Kneissl stepped down from the board.

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Read the original article on The New Voice of Ukraine



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Lost Death Valley visitors trek across salt flat after car gets stuck: “It could have cost their lives”


Two men who got lost in Death Valley National Park and walked for miles to find help could be facing charges and fines for allegedly driving across a salt flat, officials said Tuesday.

Though using GPS, the two got lost on July 4 after taking a wrong turn onto a gravel road, officials said. There is no cell service in most of the park, and the men spent three hours driving back and forth on the road. Worried about running out of gas, they decided to drive directly across the salt flat to reach Badwater Road, the main paved road in the southern end of the park, according to the park service.

The car got stuck in the mud after less than a mile, officials said.   

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A car stuck in the mud in Death Valley National Park.

National Park Service


There is no cell service in most of the park, so, unable to call for help, the men walked about a mile across the salt flat to Badwater Road, then another 12 miles north. Around 3 a.m., the men split up, with one of them walking another 6 miles north. 

He was picked up by other visitors around 8 a.m. and taken to Furnace Creek, where he was able to call for help. 

The good Samaritans who picked up the first man drove back to get the second man, who was suffering from heat illness. The man was taken to a hospital for treatment. 

The lowest temperature that evening was 90 degrees Fahrenheit, the park service said.

“Driving off-road is illegal in Death Valley National Park,” the National Park Service said. “In this case, it could have cost their lives.”    

The car remained stuck in the salt flat for three weeks until a towing company was able to remove it on July 27, according to the National Park Service. The skid steer used to remove the car was carefully driven in the same tracks the car had created to minimize additional damage to the park, as off-roading can harm plants and animals. Driving on the salt flats often leaves tracks that can scar the desert for decades.

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A skid steer was used to carefully extract the car after it got stuck in the mud in Death Valley while traveling across the salt flat.

National Park Service


“Death Valley is an awe-inspiring place that demands our utmost respect and preparedness,” Death Valley Superintendent Mike Reynolds said. “We urge visitors to exercise caution and adhere to park rules. Don’t drive off established roads; this damages the environment and can turn deadly.”

The park visitors who got lost were issued a mandatory court appearance for illegal off-road driving and the resulting damage to the park.

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The dual tracks of the car that had gotten stuck and the skid steer used to remove it from a salt flat in Death Valley National Park.

National Park Service


The National Park Service urged visitors to prepare before visiting Death Valley National Park. Officials noted that GPS navigation in the area can be unreliable. Visitors should be sure to bring an up-to-date road map.

Heat-related deaths have been reported at Death Valley this summer. Tourists have flocked to the park this summer to experience the extreme heat.



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Vegas man killed roommate and lives with her corpse for “extended period of time,” police say


A man has been arrested and charged with murder in connection with the death of a woman, whose body the suspect seemingly kept inside their shared residence “for an extended period of time,” Las Vegas police said.

Police have identified the suspect as 31-year-old George Anthony Bone, who is listed in Nevada’s sex offender registry and who was arrested about a decade ago on charges of sexual assault and lewdness with a child, court records show. In addition to open murder, Bone was charged following his arrest on Wednesday with failing to register as a sex offender, as his name appears in Nevada’s registry alongside a different address than the one where he allegedly lived with the deceased roommate, CBS affiliate KLAS reported.

Officers responded to the residence just before 2:30 p.m. on Wednesday, after receiving a report that a woman had been found dead inside, the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department said in a news release. The victim “appeared to have been deceased for an extended period of time,” the department said, noting “the suspicious nature of the death.” 

Although the manner and cause of death will be determined by the Clark County Coroner’s Office, detectives with the Las Vegas police department have characterized the death as a homicide and identified Bone as the suspect. He was booked into the Clark County Detention Center and is being held without bail, KLAS reported.

The victim was reportedly identified as Beverly Ma, a friend of Bone’s since high school who had moved in with him last summer, according to KLAS. She may have died some time in May, Bone told police. After her death, the suspect allegedly kept the corpse in a closet at their residence, and told police that he placed a cooler near the door so that he would be alerted if Ma rose from the dead, KLAS reported, citing court documents and Las Vegas police.

“Bone went about living at the house with Beverly deceased in the upstairs closet for the next two months and began ordering several items on Beverly’s Amazon account using her funds for his own gain,” police said, according to KLAS. “When asked why he didn’t call for help, Bone’s response was ‘I was afraid of going back to jail… for being found with a dead body.'”

In a jaillhouse interview with KLAS, Bone said that he “made so many bad decisions.”

“I’m not trying to say my actions were right,” Bone said, speaking from the Clark County Detention Center. “I’m not trying to say my actions were logical.”

CBS News contacted the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department and the Clark County Coroner’s Office for more information but did not receive immediate replies.

Las Vegas police have asked anyone with information about the incident to report what they know to the department’s homicide section by calling 702-828-3521 or emailing homicide@lvmpd.com. Tips can also be reported anonymously, over the phone and by email, by contacting Crime Stoppers.





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New film honors “angel” who saved over 200 lives during Russian occupation of Bucha


The city of Bucha became synonymous with massacre after Russia’s army killed more than 1,000 civilians in the city during a one-month occupation after capturing the region in the first weeks of the war in Ukraine. 

Amid the horror, one man’s heroism saved hundreds. As the war rages on, his heroism is being memorialized with a film. 

Konstantin Gudauskas has been called an angel of salvation. Thanks to a random stroke of luck, Gudauskas was a citizen of Kazakhstan who had been granted political asylum in Ukraine years ago. That meant that he kept his freedom of movement, even during the war. 

He used that good fortune and freedom to drive 203 Ukrainians out of Russian-occupied territory. 

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Konstantin Gudauskas.

CBS Mornings


The film shows his travails, which included navigating Russian checkpoints and witnessing atrocities while delivering people from evil. 

“For me it was hell,” Gudauskas said. “I saw a lot of death. There were times I’d come to evacuate a family and they would be dead. I would scream to God: ‘Why did you send me here? If my life is needed, I have to save lives.'” 

Gudauskas said he buried more than 70 bodies himself, but is thankful he saved more, including famed Ukrainian composer Ihor Poklad and his wife, Svetlana Poklad. The couple hid in their cellar for two weeks as Russian troops passed outside. 

“We didn’t have any water, no lights, no gas, but we adapted. The only thing that was hard to adapt to were the shellings, the missiles,” said Svetlana Poklad. 


Inside one of Ukraine’s worst-hit towns

02:33

When Gudauskas arrived, Svetlana Poklad said she felt “unreal happiness.” 

“I called him an angel,” she said. “He’s an angel to everyone he saved.” 

Gudauskas’ has now celebrated holidays and birthdays that might have been impossible without his bravery, forging a family with those he rescued. One pregnant woman he saved even named her son after him. 

“I have no children of my own,” Gudauskas said. “But I have got a lot of children that I gained during the war.” 



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