Hi everyone! (Applause) (Cheers) Hi. Ready for some drag story time? (Audience) Yes! Kris Barz Mendonça: All right. Hello. My name is Kris Barz Mendonça, or at least the person who is underneath all of this. I'm a comics writer and artist. Today, I would like to talk to you about a few themes, and with the help of my comics, I would love you to join me in this little journey of mine growing up in Brazil. I was born in 1985. I'm a kid from the early 90s. My family moved around the country quite a lot because of my father's work in the military. But at that time, we lived in a small city in the countryside of Southern Brazil. I never behaved like my parents and other kids expected a regular boy to behave. I was sensitive, not at all aggressive, and for that, I was considered effeminate. For being how I was, I was first called "viado," which is the bad word people use for gay people in Brazil, the f-word here, and also a sissy, "mulherzinha," even before I knew what those meant. So, with that, I learned that if I didn't behave like the other boys, I was not part of them. Every once in a while, my father went skydiving with his friends. He used to say that heights were his biggest fear, and by doing that, he was facing them. So I learned that boys had to do dangerous things. I don't think that was his biggest fear, though. I think his biggest fear was that I would actually become "viado." But he never said that. So I learned that boys not only couldn't be afraid, but most importantly, they couldn't let others know about their fears. He was very strict with me because of that. I spent my childhood afraid of not behaving how he expected me to, and also afraid of becoming a "gay," whatever that was. At that time, I just knew it was bad. I also feared other boys. They were all up in my grill for every little thing I did or said that was not manly. So I learned that if I didn't behave in a masculine way, I was automatically considered feminine. I lived in a constant state of vigilance, coming mostly from boys and men. Eventually, I became my own vigilante. I grew up in this tiny little box that was so tight, so not my shape, that it made my childhood miserable. I was a miserable kid and teenager because I couldn't be myself. I couldn't even discover what myself actually was, that myself was not only gay, which I finally accepted at the age of 19, but also queer. I did enjoy soccer and cars at first, but I also wanted to play house and dolls. Like any other child, I was curious, and I wanted to explore everything. Initially, there were no boundaries in my mind. I was told about them gradually. I stayed away from cars, guns and soccer because playing with boys involved physical and verbal aggressions. Being isolated was safer, so I isolated myself, started drawing and writing. So I've told you my name is Kris, but my whole first name is Krisagon - not common in Brazil at all, by the way. I grew up in a country that speaks a Latin-based language, Portuguese. We have gendered nouns and adjectives. In order to make words masculine or feminine, we add to the end of the word an "o" for masculine or an "a" for feminine. Because I was considered effeminate by other kids, one thing they did with my name to bully me was to add an "a" to the end of it. So "Krisagon" would become "Krisagona." So I learned that in order to offend another boy, all I had to do was call him anything that resembled a girl, and whenever it happened to me, I should be as offended as possible because nothing could be worse than being compared to or to be called a girl. Boys' stuff had to be rude, aggressive, uncaring. That was not me, so I stayed playing with the girls or with "girly things." And the girls were very welcoming to me, but whenever they wanted to push me away for some reason, they just said, "This is a girls' thing." So I learned that I wasn't part of the girls either. I had a cousin the same age as me. He lived an hour away, and every once in a while, his family came to visit to spend the weekend. Like me, he was also called "viado" and "mulherzinha," a sissy, by other kids. Like mine, his family was conservative, but he had some liberties that I didn't. He could role-play as our favorite children's TV show host, Xuxa. He had her official bike and microphone, both pink, with tassels. When I was with him, I was granted some of those liberties too. He could play with dolls. I envied him so much because he must have had so much fun, and I could never dream to be that close to such girly things on my own. The dolls were not his, of course. They belonged to his female cousins. He had some liberties, but still, not one doll of his own. So I learned that boys couldn't like pink, like dolls, or role-play like a parent. Only girls could do that. All of these rules were there somehow. It was like there was this guidebook for being a boy. A lot of those rules were spoken - many times forced upon. Another whole lot of them were unspoken, but you could feel that they were still there. I had less and less and less identity, the more and more rules were being added to that book, such as ... The no-crying rule was of course one of the first ones: boys don't cry. Boys could not sit or stand crossing their legs, rest their hands on their waist; wrists had to be always stiff, never too loose; because those were girly things. I could not have my hair long. I also learned that I should avoid anything with the number 24 in my life because that was a gay number in Brazil. Yes, a gay number. (Laughter) It still is. In Brazilian senate, offices go from number 23 to 25. Soccer players avoid having that number on the back of their shirts. And I also learned that even though girls could wear pants, boys could never, ever, wear skirts or earrings. As a teenager, I learned that in every new school that I was transferred to, I had to kiss a girl as soon as possible, before people started calling me gay. I also learned that if I didn't speak aggressively, I was not feared by the other boys, and if I spoke softly, which meant girly, I was not respected. You probably also had your own book. Was it any similar to mine? Do you still keep it? I remember a summer weekend my cousin and family came to visit. My father and other men were planning on skydiving that Sunday afternoon. The families had picnics while watching those brave, macho men up in the sky. That afternoon, I saw the perfect opportunity to play with dolls. The mothers prepared the sandwiches. My sister was probably realizing by then that, as a girl, that was her job too. Because we were men, my cousin, his father and his older brother and myself had to do the chores that were expected from us: none. (Laughter) So, because of that, we just went playing. And with that, I learned that, because I was a boy, I didn't have to do any cooking or any cleaning. My father was thousands of feet up in the sky, being macho, facing his fear in order to be praised by his family for his courage. Today I know that all he needed was love. Being admired was his way of getting it because he didn't know how to express his feelings. My cousin and I went straight to the cornfields. We were on a mission, and for that, we would have to use our creativity and imagination. There, the corncobs, still a little green, became dolls with beautiful purple hair and amazing green and yellow outfits. From afar, we were just playing with corncobs. They could just as well be airplanes, guns, swords. We were above any suspicion, even under my father's eyes, who ironically could see everything from above. That was a happy afternoon. Oppression can keep us from discovering who we are. Gender stereotypes and sexism condition our minds, how we treat others, the biases we have for or against someone. It dictates the way we have sex, regardless of our sexualities. It influences our choices during elections. It shapes our identities, whether you want it or not. And I'm not talking about being gay or being straight. I'm talking about not being free. In the end of the afternoon, my father was back. His time to play was over, and so was mine. Nothing could incriminate us of having played with dolls and being sissies. They were just corncobs left behind on the ground. My cousin and I grew apart over the years. I live in Colorado now; he lives in Estonia. Now in our 30s, we are both out and proud. Thanks to the internet, I called him two years ago in order to reconnect. I visited him in Estonia, and we shared our memories and struggles, finally being ourselves together as queer cousins, unapologetically. And we had a lot of fun at the karaoke, breaking one of those endless rules in that damn book. We sang and danced to the Spice Girls. (Laughter) (Applause) And ... I was Baby Spice, by the way. (Laughter) Even though we progress as a society, bullying, because of sexuality and gay shaming, still exists in the US, in Brazil and many other countries where it is not illegal to be gay anymore. Bullying can be one of the causes of trauma, and it can intersect with many things. Homophobia is one of them. At the same time, people who grew up facing oppression like this one are often told that in the end of the day, those awful experiences were actually good to build character. I've heard that. That feels like a little pat on the shoulder that says, "Hey, you went through this awful thing, but you're well and you're alive." Well, a lot of queer people are not alive. A lot of queer people are alive, but are they well? At what expense? Their self-esteem? Their mental health? Am I and are you really well? There should be no shame in saying "No." How can you heal from trauma then? I can't give you solutions, I'm sorry. All I can do is share my own experience and my story. Healing, for me, has been certainly not easy and definitely not a straight, smooth path. And most of all, healing from trauma based on homophobic bullying is not final. It is a process. Some days, you feel like you've done it. Some other days, you just feel like you're just starting all over again. It is frustrating, it's tiring, but you've got to keep trying. Art and therapy have been helping me a lot. Writing my stories and drawing them makes me more powerful than what happened to me as a kid. Therapy, which I only started at the age of 29, helps me understand, decompartmentalize and deal with what happened to me. Those bad experiences get smaller and weaker every time I create a new thing out of them, and that includes drag. Do you remember my name, Krisagon, and that bad nickname I got? So, as an adult, I decided to take something that had been painful and traumatic for me for most of my life, and turn it into something beautiful and creative. Me doing drag is that little boy in me finally being able to play with dolls. More than that, I get to be that doll. I get to bend the rules, or even throw that damn book out of the window. So the persona who is talking to you right now is Krisa Gonna. Nice to meet you. (Applause) I am not ashamed of that nickname anymore. I own it, and I get to make my own rules, in or out of drag. I hope my bullies from 1st grade to college have found their freedom by now. Because, you know, bullies, they hate other people's freedom. That's why they bully. It actually depends on them - you know, it's not my duty to teach them. and they have to realize that that behavior also hurts them, but I hope they watch this. Art and psychological therapy should be accessible resources to everyone because everyone needs them. We all have work to do on ourselves. I know I do. After all, I was socialized as a boy. My family was the traditional family. It was also so fractured by what we call toxic masculinity. Maybe that's what traditional family actually means. I only had compulsory, heterosexual, supermasculine examples to follow. It goes beyond my father, beyond his father. A lot of men go through different but still conditionings of what it means to be a man. No wonder today we have, statistically speaking and backed by research, less men going to therapy because they don't talk about their feelings, and they don't seek help. We have less men feeling they are naturally equipped to be a good parent because that is supposed to be a woman's role. Do you remember who got to play house and dolls as a kid? We have more men dealing with suicide - do you remember who was taught to be tough and not share emotions? - inconsequently dealing more with substance abuse as a way to anesthetize their feelings of fear, anger and sadness. Now, I'm not a psychologist, neither a sociologist nor a social worker. I'm just a queer person socialized as a boy, out as gay and queer, who trusts scientists and researchers who study all these things I told you about. We should all trust them. Remember, in our society, shame comes for free. But also remember you don't have to feel shame in order to know what it's like to be proud of yourself. Changing how you raise boys will not make them heterosexual or homosexual. Being allowed and incentivized to play with multiple kinds of toys will only make kids more creative, better prepared for the social challenges in life and more accepting of people, including themselves. They will be free. Thank you. (Applause) (Cheers) ["Let ME speak, not my scars. They are supporting roles; no, better yet, sidekicks that didn't even have to be here." - Emicida]