I often quote the last several lines of David Whyte’s poem, Sweet Darkness. Since last week I’ve been at the front of the poem, quoting its first few lines:
When your eyes are tired the world is tired also
When your vision has gone, no part of the world can find you
Time to go into the dark, where the night has eyes to recognize its own
I’ve been lost for the last week with no map or working compass. I was blindsided in 2016 and I immediately determined to fight back. This time I’m not yet ready to fight back. I am weary. While I am greatly concerned for our democracy as a whole, much of my current weariness is self-referential, related to transgender rights.
The focused attack on transgender rights is about eight years old, with many victories celebrated by the right in state legislatures over the last three years. Almost 600 bills were introduced and 90 signed into law in 2023 alone. Now I fear there will not just be state laws, but federal laws or executive orders eliminating medical care for transgender people. The anti-trans rhetoric is on the increase and it is frightening.
Republicans made transgender rights a major issue in this campaign. Focus groups showed the anti-trans commercials that aired in swing states were more effective than others at getting out the Republican vote.
It is also concerning that the extreme left has played a part in creating such a perilous environment for transgender people. My greatest fears are for the very small percentage of children who are transgender, children no longer able to get the medical care they so desperately need. These children knew they were trans at a very early age and made it known at an early age. There was no mistaking their gender identity.
With the exception of these children, who are fairly easily identified, I question the appropriateness of medical treatment of teenagers who do not present with gender dysphoria before their teen years. An inordinate number of them were identified female at birth, and a significant number are no longer identifying as transgender once they are in their twenties. We should be looking at the data, as European nations have been doing. Many of those nations have become more cautious about providing teen medical treatment of gender dysphoria until we understand the trends.
I also understand why many feel that a transgender woman whose body developed as a male should not be playing women’s sports. Anti-androgens and estrogen do diminish one’s physical strength, but if your body developed as a male, not all sports advantages have been lost. I have felt that in my own body.
For having those opinions I have been castigated by the left, sometimes with the same level of vitriol with which I have been castigated by the right. I am nervous about publishing this post because of the power of cancel culture. Strategic essentialism and standpoint theory have created an environment that threatens freedom of speech. Just look at how easy it has become to lose your status as a tenured professor at a university, or how Jewish students are being treated on many campuses. Put that together with the newly empowered right and no wonder I do not know how to proceed. I want to be involved in the birth of something new, but I cannot find purchase. I do not see where to take the first step.
At the moment I will serve where I am comfortable, working within the church and writing about its effect on American culture. I have a sixty-five page book proposal with my agent tentatively titled, Can Religion Be Good – Creating Change and Finding Hope in a Polarized World. I’m eager to see which publishing company picks it up.
These are trying times, but life goes on. I will live with more caution, because I must. I will also live fully, because as I say so often, the call toward authenticity is sacred, and holy, and for the greater good.
And so it goes.

Thank you for your vulnerable thoughts and feelings. I love reading your posts. Sorry I don’t respond enough. I appreciate your wise balance. And it does seem like “balance” of any kind in this world today is the new outlier and sometime the enemy. And you speak for many. This season (I try to remind myself it is just a season) brings genuine concern over many different issues. I ache over what could be a huge loss and possibly the destruction of a country I love – Ukraine. I have so many friends who suffer daily under the threat of drones, bombs, missiles, and artillery. Everything (like in Palestine) is being destroyed. I too am looking into a dark world. Your words speak for many…
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Thanks Paula. Th
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I am disappointed in your comments for failing to mention the instrumental role that evangelical Christians have played in the destruction of transgender rights
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Dear Paula,I’ve replied to you before, if you’re interested you can search for it for a more complete story. I’m a mom of a Genderqueer 23 yr old and a 20 yr old transgender daughter. I’m curious about the studies you refer. My oldest came out a lesbian
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Thank you for keeping the dialogue open. I find myself wanting to engage more in what I call compassionate reason. I find that both sides lose their way. I do not have the fortitude to fight until I am retired and cannot lose my job.
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Paula, first i empathize and stand with you as you seek possible new ways to serve and support. I’m already doing some things, but am considering what else.
My current main involvement is within CompassionateCitizens.us (fiscally sponsored non-profit), pushing dialogs-across-difference as one aspect of community and Interfaith building of thriving communities. Longer range goal is deep electoral reform toward a truly representative democracy, not beholden to the current two-party plutocracy.
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Dear Paula, Thank you for your insight. I don’t have to agree with you on everything and I still love your writing and wisdom. I hope we move towards more acceptance of each other rather than policing what we believe on the left. I believe you will find where to do good and hope you take your time to do so. You are a powerhouse. But, still, vulnerable and capable of weariness. As I am.
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Hi Paula, I appreciate the balance in what you have to say. And as you say, too many are cancelled for having a balanced opinion that does not take one of the extreme positions. I think the executive summary of The Cass Review commissioned by the UK NHS is another balanced read in line with the studies to which you refer. I also agree that some extreme positions are a threat to liberal democratic values and so again, thank you for speaking up.
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But oh my, how the American trans community has attacked the Cass Review! I also think it was balanced.
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I discovered you today and I’m very glad! It’s so good to read and hear your opinions (I also found one of your TED Talks in YouTube). Stay strong and beautiful! Let us stay optimistic no matter what! Thanks for inspiring us ALL!
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Thank you so much, Karoline
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