That’s why I’ve started hosting what my friends call
It was a gimmick. A reversal. But for a young trans femme trying to navigate a world that didn’t have a map for me, the metaphor stuck. In the early days of my transition, the fear of rejection was a physical weight. The expectation was always that I had to wait—wait to be approached, wait to be “chosen,” wait to see if a potential partner was okay with who I was . I spent a lot of energy being passive, terrified that if I made the first move, I’d be met with violence or disgust. sadie hawkins tgirl
It’s not about running through a field in a burlap sack. It’s about claiming space. That’s why I’ve started hosting what my friends
— Jamie is a writer and DJ living in Chicago. She believes every t-girl deserves to feel like the leading lady of her own rom-com. In the early days of my transition, the
The first time I walked up to a cis-het guy at a concert and said, “Hey, I think you’re cute. Buy me a taco?”—his jaw dropped. Not because I was trans, but because a woman had dared to take the lead. We dated for six months.
There’s a specific kind of magic in vintage traditions. As a trans girl who grew up glued to old black-and-white movies and comic strips, the concept of “Sadie Hawkins Day” always felt like a delicious plot twist in the otherwise rigid script of heteronormative dating.