By Justine Griffin for the Tampa Bay Times
Kasey Fraize wasn’t afraid any more.
One day early in his freshman year at Florida Gulf Coast University, he entered the campus wellness center intent on finding ways to fit in.
“I walked right up to the desk and asked what kind of resources they had for the transgender community,” Fraize, now 20, recalls. “She handed me a dusty old pamphlet that was so bad.”
It used the scientific but sometimes negatively charged term “hermaphrodite” to describe transgender people.
The moment propelled Fraize to get involved, and to prod his new school toward a better understanding of students like him. But he says it never would have been possible without help from an unexpected source.
Planned Parenthood, best known for reproductive health services including abortions, had just started a program to offer hormone therapy at many of its Florida health centers. Fraize discovered the program, and got a prescription for testosterone from a Planned Parenthood doctor not far from campus.
After struggling to find acceptance back home in Pasco County, where some still call him “Cassandra,” the therapy brought welcome changes to his body and helped him feel more like himself.
He got a job at FGCU’s wellness center and began to host forums about the transgender community and other issues. This year, he ran for a seat in student government.
“Maybe it was the hormones,” Fraize says, “but I was on a mission.”