Lambda Legal client Jessica Hicklin is a transgender woman incarcerated at the Potosi Correctional Center, a facility for male inmates, in Mineral Point, Missouri. Lambda Legal represents Jessica in a case challenging a Missouri Department of Corrections “freeze-frame” policy that bars access to hormone therapy for inmates and others in custody if they were not receiving treatment prior to incarceration.
The irony of the butterfly is that it arrives from such a grubby, ugly little thing… ugly like Wednesday morning, the morning I woke to the oppressive defeat in the previous night’s election.
Hours of Shakespearean soliloquy later, certain only of the nobility of death over the indignity of life in this body that is not mine, with the whole of my intellect, I could not comprehend what I was feeling. It wasn’t just the bitterness of defeat, it was something else entirely, something much heavier.
I knew that the heaviness in my heart wasn’t the result of disillusionment. After all, as an incarcerated trans woman facing bigotry and misogyny on a daily basis, and with the murders in Orlando and Ferguson still fresh, I live under no illusion that the battle has been won. If anything, this election simply confirmed the fight that remains. But I still couldn’t put a finger on what this heaviness was or why.
Three days passed feeling this uncertainty. I thought of my friends’ fearful voices of despair and rage, and I imagined their faces, tear-streaked with agony for what had just happened, tearing at a long-ago scabbed wound. And then, wound laid bare once again, an epiphany drove from my mind the veil of uncertainty.
With stark, numbing realization, I discerned the precise source of this heaviness. Only once in my life have I heard the voice of submissive defeat. Twenty years ago, as I sat in the courtroom an accused murderer, I also witnessed incredible tragedy. That day I realized how a single act – an irretrievable moment in time— can lead to monumental destruction.