Author: Lavender Phoenix

Image description: A Zoom screenshot of 8 smiling APIENC staff and summer organizers. Some are making hearts and peace signs.

We Are Worthy of Support: Reflections from the Summer Organizer Program (part 2)

I haven’t always felt comfortable asking for help. Previously, I thought asking for help meant I was not “good enough,” and I thought that struggling on my own was a reflection of true strength. I learned this mindset from my family, who are Brown working class immigrants always battling to survive. I experienced this individualistic culture in my own Indo-Caribbean communities, where asking for support was never seen as an option. I witnessed systems of power silencing the needs of marginalized communities. Different internalized oppressions fueled this mindset, and I never had a space to unlearn these ideas and invite in new values.

Image description: Zoom screenshot of 25 smiling faces. Some are holding up peace signs and heart signs.

Self-Determination & Queer Power: Reflections from the Summer Organizer Program (part 1!)

To me, APIENC is love — love that the world desperately needs.

As a chronically ill, Việt, queer, nonbinary person, I felt unheard, othered, and silenced for far too long, by nearly everyone in my life in some way. I don’t blame them for that, but it hurt compartmentalizing myself. In that process, it began to be hard to see myself. The self became selves. I was often confused, constantly wondering why my relationship to love and vulnerability was missing something. I felt broken. I struggled to build support systems that held me.

Image description: Zoom screenshot of 25 smiling faces. Some are holding up peace signs and heart signs.

Vulnerability is Power: Reflections from LEX 2020

There I was, on a zoom call with over 30 people who I had just met the weekend before, having a vulnerable one-on-one conversation with Sammie for everyone to watch.

This was during the third session of APIENC’s annual Leadership Exchange, or LEX for short. Usually, LEX is an in-person, 2 weekend-long training for trans and queer API organizers, but this was no usual year. Since meeting in person wasn’t an option, APIENC held LEX over 6 weekends, over zoom. I had just started as one of APIENC’s Summer Organizers when I signed up for LEX, not knowing what to expect.

Image description: Two gradient "clouds" with the words "#QTAPIClimateStories: A Writing and Haiku Party for Queer and Trans Asian & Pacific Islanders", "Sat. 9/19/20, 5-8pm PDT, Zoom", and "RSVP & Access Info: bit.ly/QTAPIClimateStories" over them. On the side is a laptop, a cup of boba, and sunglasses. The background is a 3D perspective of a square grid on top of tall trees.

#QTAPIClimateStories

APIENC’s Ecological Justice League (fka TTAC, Think and Take Action Cohort for Climate Justice) Presents: #QTAPIClimateStories Writing and Haiku Party for Queer and Trans Asian & Pacific Islander People A Climate Justice Storytelling Project Register here!👉 bit.ly/QTAPIClimateStories 👈 Co-sponsored by Asian Pacific Environmental Network (APEN), Asian and Pacific Islander Queer Women and Transgender Community (APIQWTC),

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Image description: Gem stands outdoors amongst trees holding a fluffy gray dog in their arm while slyly smiling at the camera.

Gem Datuin

Jul 2020 | Gem Datuin Gem Datuin (they/them) identifies as a queer, non-binary, pilipinx feminist & abolitionist and has been a member of APIENC since 2016. For the past year, they have been part of APIENC’s Leadership Development (aka SKATE Crew) Committee. Gem is also part of the Oakland-based band Coraza and for their paid

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Image description: Zoe is sitting and smiling outdoors on some steps with an amphitheatre and some buildings in back of her.

Zoe Chen

May 2020 | Zoe Chen Zoe marched with us at 2019 Trans March and is now part of APIENC’s Trans Justice Committee! Her pronouns are she/her/hers and identifies as a transgender woman. When Zoe is not with community at APIENC, she is a MFA student in acting at the American Conservatory Theater, but in the

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