Look at these two! We can’t wait for you to follow their journeys with their families on True Life: I’m Genderqueer, tonight at 11pm ET/PT on MTV.

Watch and learn. 🌈 LGBTQ students, what do you wish people knew? Share your school experiences: glsen.org/survey
#GLSENproud to see these words added to Merriam-Webster!
Big news for LGBTQ folks: On Wednesday, Merriam-Webster announced that it added the words “cisgender” and “genderqueer” to its unabridged dictionary.
What do those words mean? Here are Merriam-Webster’s definitions:
Cisgender: of, relating to, or being a person whose gender identity corresponds with the sex the person had or was identified as having at birth.
Genderqueer: of, relating to, or being a person whose gender identity cannot be categorized as solely male or female.
The additions reflect how society is expanding its discussions over gender identity, gender expression, and transgender issues: As conversations about gender broaden, the vocabulary used in these conversations is set to change, too.
Look at these two! We can’t wait for you to follow their journeys with their families on True Life: I’m Genderqueer, tonight at 11pm ET/PT on MTV.

We can’t wait to tune in tonight at 11pm to True Life: I’m Genderqueer!
All of us are helping tear down notions of what gender looks like, what gender should be, what gender really is. Some genderqueer people may just be having a good time, being the cool kids for once; or, they may not yet fully understand their gender identity — trans or not — and the freedom to explore gender outwardly is a critical step towards that discovery.
Writing about genderqueer-identified people can seem grammatically challenging; it is much more challenging to live as a genderqueer-identified person and try to fit into a world that does not seem to make room for you.