Not a ‘girly girl’

“I remember building up the courage to go bra shopping. I was asked to come back at closing time to avoid offending other customers” - Bea, winner of Miss Transgender UK 2017/18.

“When I left school, I thought, OK, I’ll teach myself how to be a man,” says Bea, 31, from Scunthorpe, UK. “I’ve been a mechanic, a security guard, a bouncer, a private investigator, a bailiff and a high court sheriff.”

Fast-forward to November 2017 and Bea is accepting the crown for Miss Transgender UK in Brighton. Taking centre-stage she says: “Growing up I didn’t know ‘trans’ was a thing, so I carried on being a boy. I gave up the fight four years ago.”

As a pageant queen, a model, a transgender woman and a woman full stop, Bea frequently finds herself under scrutiny from others, whether from close family or complete strangers. The project title came from this frustration of Bea ‘having’ to deal with other people’s expectations.

A week after the pageant Bea described wanting to “fly”, i.e. to die. “It looked like I was on a high, but I was very much on the edge. At the end of it all I was still sat on my own at night, back in Scunthorpe.”

84% of transgender people in the UK have considered ending their lives at some point, with half attempting to do so at least once.

In Her Words

“When I see the work,” says Bea. “I don’t see a story from someone that has followed me, I see a story created by someone who knows me. It’s so genuine and honest. I can say, that’s me, that’s my life’”

Not a 'Girly Girl' has been featured by:

Amber Magazine
Fable and Folk
Fleur and Arbor
Glasgow Gallery of Photography
Photomonitor
Shutter Hub exhibitions

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