Ladyboy Pam -

I was born in a body that the world looked at and immediately wrote a script for. A script about trucks and toughness, about short hair and silence. But by the time I was five, I was already backstage, rewriting my lines in crayon, using my mother’s lipstick as a prop.

I have danced in the go-go bars of Pattaya. I have held the hands of lonely Swedish pensioners who cried because they missed their granddaughters. I have stood under the buzzing pink neon lights and smiled so wide that my cheeks ached, all while feeling the ghost of my father’s belt on my back.

When you are born wrong according to every map, you learn to draw your own. You learn that beauty is not symmetry. Beauty is the bravery to walk into a market at noon, in full makeup, knowing that every single eye is a weapon, and choosing to walk straight anyway. ladyboy pam

I am Ladyboy Pam.

I do not ask for your tolerance. Tolerance is a cold word. It implies you are enduring a nuisance. I was born in a body that the

Then a neighbor’s truck rumbled by. The driver honked. He didn't see a girl. He saw a "thing." He laughed.

My mother still cooks for me. She still ties my phra khon (monk’s string) on my wrist for luck. But she has never once said the words: "I see you, daughter." She says, "My son is very artistic." She says, "Pam is just... playful." I have danced in the go-go bars of Pattaya

Let me take you to the first crack in the mask. I was twelve, looking at my reflection in the brown water of a roadside ditch after a monsoon rain. My shoulders were already broadening, betraying me. My voice was starting to drop, a slow earthquake rumbling in my throat. I took my sister’s old sabai —a silk shawl—and wrapped it around my waist. For ten seconds, I saw her . Not the boy the monks said I should be, not the son my father needed to carry the rice baskets. Her.