When I transitioned, I looked to Dax

Jadzia and Ezri DaxIt was late last year. I was re-watching one of my favourite TV shows, curled up on the couch, coping with uncomfortable hormonal issues and just generally wanting some escapism. Then a certain episode involving my favourite character came on, and I burst into tears.

I’m a trans woman, and I love Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. The reason? Far beyond simply being the best and most nuanced Trek story yet told… it’s because of Dax.

Dax, the symbiont who has lived numerous lives in various humanoid bodies… is trans. She may not be explicitly trans, but in terms of the stories that get told through her – about gender, personal change, social discomfort and assumptions based on appearances… she is very much trans.

When I was a kid, I remember thinking, in the phrasing of pre-teen me, “I don’t want to be a boy.” I had no concept of what being ‘trans’ or gender dysphoria was. I just knew that increasingly, as the absolute horror-show of a puberty I didn’t want continued, life became hell. Girlfriends refused to include me in things I wanted to do, and boys told me terrible things about girls when I was alone with them. Everything felt wrong.

So I escaped into Star Trek. At the time it was TNG, which was running at the time, but once I hit my depressing teenaged years, DS9 began and I vanished into that show.

Dax and Sisko in "Emissary"

I remember the first time Sisko called Jadzia Dax “Old Man” and I realized, “She used to be a man! I wish I could just move my symbiont into another body. A proper body. A female body.”

I relished Dax stories – especially ones relating to her past lives. Both because it helped me escape even further into the then-fantasy that I could just move bodies and everything would feel right. I imagined what life would be like if I did that.

How would people I know treat me if I woke up one morning as a girl – Elissa, the girl I wished I was?

But as time went on I lost that fantasy as it seemed to be just that. Even when I became aware of trans people, thanks to horrific media representation, all I knew was that trans people were the punchline of jokes – people who’d had surgery I’d never be able to afford, and who’d never live normal lives. They were murdered sex-workers and depressed people who lived their lives in shame and fear.

So by my 20s this had vanished, and I slipped into the most intense denial of my inherent gender dissonance. I over-played being masculine, performing a male “character” whenever I got uncomfortable.

Until it all became too much. I had met other trans people by this time and while they faced difficulties, I realized that they were normal people, with jobs, passions, relationships and lives that were almost universally better than mine.

So I began the complicated process of seeing doctors and coming out to my friends. I was lucky and so much of the hard work by people transitioning earlier in life had been done – I still suffered some gatekeeping and, of course, the physical and social discomfort of going through a second puberty, but… I did it.

My body changed faster than I’d imagined, and I suddenly found myself realizing something:

I’d been primed for this.

It was Dax. Both some of the earlier stories, and more or less the entire final season.

In the story, Jadzia dies and the Dax host (and therefore all her memories – in story times, *her*) is transferred to another host, Ezri. In this case, a slightly younger woman. Her friends had no idea how to treat her; her partner broke up with her. When she entered a room and he was there; she watched him leave, clearly uncomfortable.

Ezri Dax struggles when she first arrives on DS9.

It hit me like a ton of bricks, re-watching this, how much of Ezri’s experience had been about being trans.

When I had strange moments of looking at myself in a mirror having almost forgotten that my entire body had changed in the preceding eight months or so, I thought of Dax.

When a partner or a friend looked me with a strange disassociation, unable to see me because they saw a totally different person… I thought of Dax.

When I had to process that what might have been a heterosexual relationship in years past now made me a lesbian, I thought of Jadzia’s kiss with her ex.

Jadzia Dax and Lenara Kahn kiss

When I felt hurt or uncomfortable that a friend or family member couldn’t seem to effortlessly cope with me transitioning, I thought back to Ezri as she learned that her friends were, in a sense, both mourning a lost friend and having to welcome a new one.

When I saw Dax as a kid, I saw someone who had done what I wished I could do, and to my absolute shock when I finally did it myself, I discovered that Star Trek had, without me even realizing, given me a basis for at least beginning to understand what this might be like.

It laid the groundwork for the emotional complexity of your physical body changing, and now when I think of Deep Space Nine, I smile more than ever.

Whether or not they intended to, the writers and performers on that show made my life better and easier in a very specific way.

And so, a year into transitioning, I did something which felt only right: I cosplayed as a trill. I put on the distinctive Trill dots and a Star Trek science uniform – a nod to the TV show that helped me cope with transitioning.

  20 comments for “When I transitioned, I looked to Dax

  1. Hey, i can really relate on this Story. Jadzia was always one of my loved Characters on DS9 and was sad when she was gone and replaced with Ezri. As a Child i had tendencies to being Transgender but also didnt know what that all meaned. I liked wearing woman clothings and all that. Now about 6 Years later i finally outed myself to my family and most of them accepted it openly.
    Since Jadzia is kind of a idol since Childhood for me i choose to use “Jadzia” as my new real name in Germany.
    I love this story and i can feel the interviewed person!

  2. This is a smile story on so many levels. Peace dear Trill, you are beautiful in every form.

  3. As an old, straight, white guy, I was especially fond of Dax and partly for the same reasons. The episode when Jadzia came face to face with an old female lover of male Kurzon Dax was especially moving and bittersweet. I liked all of Star Trek’s explorations of race, gender, interspecies relations, and other kinds of duality (cf. good but weak vs. brave but evil Kirk, and the alternate-universe character personalities. As I’ve gotten older (now mid-70s), I’ve begun to notice, most likely due to hormones, that I’ve been feeling more and more bisexual. It doesn’t bother or concern me in the least; I just find it most interesting. I’ve long recognized that sex/gender and sexual/gender identity are spectra not binary.

    • It wasn’t a lover of Curzon’s. One of Lenara’s prior hosts was married to Torias Dax, the host who died young after crashing his shuttle during a test flight. They mention it explicitly in the episode when Jadzia laments having made Lenara’s past host a widow. Curzon however was NEVER married, preferring to be a Kirkish ladies man his whole life.

      • Jadzia meets an old lover of Curzon’s at the end of the season 1 episode “Dax” (and another lover of Curzon’s in the season 5 episode “Let He Who Is Without Sin”, but I doubt that’s the one Martin was referring to.)

    • Martin, the older I get, the more I understand and realize I don’t understand, which…I’m sure you understand. We are squidgy biological beings made out of squidgy beings hoping for the best. Sometimes it doesn’t get it sorted out right away. I thought I was straight for years, and then I slept with a woman, and that changed everything, but it made me think about when I wanted to be a boy when I was little. (I was a six year old girl wanting to run around with my shirt off, and the women in my family were adamant that I could do no such thing, even though we looked the same.) There’s no shame in looking at another human being and going, “Damn, you’re sexy,” and there’s no shame in looking at a friend of a long time and going, “I’m totally fine with spending the rest of my life with you.” Whether you realize it or not, Martin, you are an ally. Glory to you and your house and may you live long and prosper!

  4. As the series was getting ready to debut, there was a TV Guide article describing the new characters. The Dax symbiotic relationship was briefly described, ending with, “…which makes the character simultaneously old and young, male and female.” With that, Dax INSTANTLY became my favorite character! I hadn’t thought about the character relating to trans folks, but it makes perfect sense.

    This also underscores what I love so much about not just entertainment, but specifically, scifi-fantasy. Shows can get wildly creative with exploring human, cultural, political, and social issues through the lenses of other worlds.

    <3

  5. Star Trek was great for exploring these issues.

    There was also the TNG issue where everybody was genderless, but some of them started feeling like they had a gender. The elders of their society frowned upon it and they ended up brainwashing them to conform… It’s so tragic because that’s a real thing that people go through because some people don’t accept that maybe people feel differently than what some other person expects them to be.

    I’m glad that you found something to help you understand yourself over time. I’m glad others who posted here did, too.

  6. Even though I’m not a trans woman (my own gender is complicated), this really resonated with me. Thanks for sharing this

  7. This aspect of Dax had not occurred to me though s/he was my favorite character. I’m happy to see this and how helpful Dax has been. I always appreciated Star Trek from the beginning with how it dealt with social and political issues, especially the so-called dualities of gender, good and evil, black and white,human and alien. The new movies are sadly lacking in these,being mainly high tech glitz.

  8. I’m starting to realize how many trans folks (myself included) relate to certain characters within the Star Trek Universe and I’m so happy these characters exist, whether intentionally or not.

  9. Thank you for this! I love DS9 and I always loved what Dax represented. I’m glad to hear you gained courage and comfort from their story.

  10. Very similar for me (except non-binary and more toward the masculine end of the spectrum). I even had my middle name legally changed to Dax. 🙂

  11. Such a great piece thank you so much for sharing your story. I love Dax and it’s son exciting to see the parallels of her story with that of a trans person. DS9, and trek as a whole, often ahead of its time in social commentary. If you haven’t read The Lives of Dax I HIGHLY recommend it!!!

  12. That was beautiful. For me Spock was a source of comfort and help coping, for the commenter above it was Seven of Nine, for the author Dax. What each of us gets from these characters and shows can be very different in details but I think the underlying message is always the same. The way you are is okay. Who you are has value. This is why I will love Trek until the day I die.

  13. For me it was Seven on Nine on Voyager — who has her entire body violently reshaped against her will (twice!) and then has to learn from scratch how to be an adult human woman in her late 20’s — but yeah, this, every word of this. <3

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