“I am not a ‘third gender,’” she insists. “I am not a ‘ladyboy.’ I am a woman. A woman who was assigned male at birth, yes. But a woman who wants to grow old, get married, and be someone’s grandmother. Asia has room for the third gender, but it has less room for a trans woman who wants to be boring and normal. I want to be boring. I want to be invisible in the best way possible.” As night falls over Manila, Alice logs off from work and walks to the market to buy vegetables for dinner. No one stares. No one calls her names. In the quiet rhythm of daily life, she finds victory.
“In Asia, family is everything,” she says. “When I told my mother I wanted to be a girl, she cried not because she hated me, but because she feared I would go to hell. She feared what the neighbors would say.” asian ladyboy alice
In many Asian cultures, however, a third space exists. In Thailand, kathoeys have long been recognized as a distinct social category. In India, the Hijra community has historical precedent. “I am not a ‘third gender,’” she insists
But to understand Alice, you have to throw away the stereotype and listen to the person. The term "ladyboy" (or the Thai kathoey ) is a linguistic minefield. In the West, it is often considered derogatory, a word that reduces a human being to a sexual category or a punchline. In parts of Southeast Asia, particularly Thailand, the term is used more casually to describe a person assigned male at birth who lives as a woman or a third gender. But a woman who wants to grow old,
Alice, a 28-year-old software engineer from Manila, has a complicated relationship with that label.
Unlike the sensationalized documentaries that focus on sex work or violence, Alice’s transition was painfully bureaucratic. She saved money from freelance coding jobs to afford hormone replacement therapy (HRT). She navigated a legal system that makes changing one’s name and gender marker nearly impossible without surgical procedures she didn't necessarily want.