Well, glad to know that the $150 fee is about normal, I guess... Thanks for the heads up on the waiver Renate. I don't think I'd feel right using it, though; I do have enough money to pay for rent and food, so I'm not truly destitute. It's just that money is tight and, well, y'know how expensive transition can get. It just hurts doubly 'cuz college is another big expense.
Quote from: tekla on January 22, 2009, 11:34:48 AM
He's talking about doing it in college town in Michigan, like in modern America.
Actually, neither my home town (population 400) nor my college town (pop. 6,000--permanent residents only) can be rightly called 'modern America.' Both are in a very closed-off geographic region of Michigan that is analogous to the deep South in terms of the tolerance of the locals and how deeply religion plays into their everyday lives & politics. In my home town, if you are not white, Catholic, and straight, you are regarded very suspiciously. Anything out of their 'ordinary' will be ostracized (know this one from experience); outright harassment and violence also occur. I'd like to think my college town is better than this simply because it is larger and, because of the university and its students/professors, has more ethnic & religious diversity. Unfortunately, non-white students are still stared at and talked down to by some locals; African American students report having had garbage & the 'n-word' thrown at them; GLBT students have received death threats. When I said college town in Michigan, I unfortunately did not mean Ann Arbor or any of the other larger 'modern' college towns downstate. (Not complaining, I'm the one who chose to go to school here--just letting off some steam.)
Quote from: lisagurl on January 22, 2009, 11:27:13 AM
You do not know small town politics. Especially when judges are elected. Non want to accused of granting an immoral act.
Sounds like familiar behavior. Actually, funny anecdote: when I was in elementary school and it was time to learn about the dinosaurs in science class, every student had to get a permission slip signed by their parents. Apparently some parents got very, very mad at the administration when the school tried to teach their children about dinosaurs without their permission. Yes, there still are people in our town who vehemently and religiously deny the existence of dinosaurs. When we finally got to learn about good 'ol T-Rex, it felt like a very taboo subject. The same permission-slip policy was in place when it came time to learn about Darwin and evolution, too.
I really hope I'm worrying for nothing about this name change, but... like I said, I know the people I grew up around. I'll try to find out if I can do the name change through the court in my college town; if nothing else, it will save my family some (inevitable) trouble.