Current:Home > InvestJohnathan Walker:The pool was safety to transgender swimmer Schuyler Bailar. He wants it that way for others -Excel Wealth Summit
Johnathan Walker:The pool was safety to transgender swimmer Schuyler Bailar. He wants it that way for others
TrendPulse View
Date:2025-04-06 22:01:35
For Schuyler Bailar,Johnathan Walker the pool represented something more than fun. It was a place of safety and comfort. It was where Bailar could be himself.
The problem was outside of it.
"I was often bullied for not being gender-conforming," Bailar said in an interview with USA TODAY. "In high school I decided I was sick of being bullied."
Bailar would go on to swim for Harvard. While there, he used that prominent platform to bring attention to the attacks on the transgender community. He'd continue that fight after school, becoming a humanitarian and persistent advocate. That fight is needed as trans athletes are under attack on a number of different fronts.
In fact, recently, more than a dozen cisgender female athletes sued the National Collegiate Athletic Association over its transgender participation policy, which the athletes claim violates their rights under Title IX, the law that prohibits discrimination based on sex at any institution that receives federal funding.
Bailar's story (his first name is pronounced "SKY-lar"), like the previous ones in this four-part series, is important to tell because we must see and listen to these trailblazing athletes in all of their humanness and, truly, in their own words.
How impressive has Bailar's journey been? In 2015, while swimming for Harvard, he became the first transgender athlete to compete on an NCAA Division 1 men's team. He's also become one of the most vocal and powerful athletes fighting for the rights of the trans community. Bailar's efforts became so nationally recognized that in 2016 he was profiled on 60 Minutes.
Since then, his efforts to bring awareness, and fight discrimination, have only become more pronounced. Bailar's book, He/She/They: How We Talk About Gender and Why It Matters, was published by Hachette in October of 2023. Bailar says the book helps bring common sense to the ongoing conversation about the trans community.
"Everybody is debating trans rights," Bailar said, "and where trans people belong, and if we belong, and yet most Americans claim they've never met a trans person. Most can't accurately define the word 'transgender...'"
Bailar is trying to change all of that. It's his mission.
veryGood! (11)
Related
- Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
- Britney Spears explains shaving her head after years of being eyeballed
- Former Florida lawmaker who penned Don't Say Gay bill sentenced to prison over COVID loan fraud
- School crossing guard fatally struck by truck in New York City
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- SAG-AFTRA asks striking actors to avoid certain popular characters as Halloween costumes
- Russian foreign minister dismisses US claims of North Korea supplying munitions to Moscow as rumors
- AI chatbots are supposed to improve health care. But research says some are perpetuating racism
- New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
- State Department issues worldwide caution alert for U.S. citizens due to Israel-Hamas war
Ranking
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- Spain’s royals honor Asturias prize winners, including Meryl Streep and Haruki Murakami
- Russian foreign minister dismisses US claims of North Korea supplying munitions to Moscow as rumors
- 5 Things podcast: Orthodox church in Gaza City bombed; Biden urges support for Israel
- Average rate on 30
- New York woman comes forward to claim $12 million prize from a 1991 jackpot, largest in state history
- Britney Spears' abortion comments spark talk about men's role in reproductive health care
- Birmingham-Southern sues Alabama state treasurer, says college was wrongfully denied loan
Recommendation
'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
Police on the hunt for man after Maryland judge killed in his driveway
Affordable Care Act provisions codified under Michigan law by Gov. Whitmer as a hedge against repeal
Deputies find 5-year-old twins dead after recovering body of mother who had jumped from bridge
Trump's 'stop
Dutch king and queen are confronted by angry protesters on visit to a slavery museum in South Africa
Paris Hilton’s New Photos of Baby Boy Phoenix Are Fire
Australia decides against canceling Chinese company’s lease of strategically important port