Scholarship on the transitioning experiences of Filipina trans women, or trans Pinays, has largely been framed through medicalized and pathological lenses, emphasizing gaps in the Philippine healthcare system that render trans lives invisible, precarious, or unintelligible within state programs and services (Alegre 2022; Abesamis 2022). While this body of work is crucial in documenting structural exclusions, it often narrows the analytic scope of transitioning to biomedical interventions such as hormone therapy and surgical procedures. Consequently, less attention has been given to how trans Pinays conceptualize, inhabit, and politicize their bodies beyond medical frameworks.
This paper examines how trans Pinays understand their bodies in relation to space, environment, kinship, and everyday social life in the Philippines. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork conducted between 2021 and 2024, it employs Emmanuel David’s (2018) concept of transgender archipelagos to argue that the trans Pinay body—much like the Philippine archipelago itself—is fragmented, relational, and constituted through movement rather than fixed identity. This framework resists monolithic understandings of transness and challenges colonial and cisnormative Filipino ideals that privilege “passing,” legibility, and respectability while marginalizing bodies that remain visibly trans, nonconforming, or incomplete according to dominant standards.
The paper further theorizes transitioning as an embodied practice of resistance that exceeds linear narratives of progress or arrival. Transitioning is understood not simply as becoming but as a continual negotiation with familial expectations, economic precarity, religious moralities, and spatial exclusions. In this sense, everyday acts of self-fashioning, bodily modification, and refusal to conform function as forms of quiet resistance that unsettle cisheteropatriarchal norms embedded in the household, community, and nation.
Central to this argument is the framing of transitioning as a “going home”—a return to precolonial Filipino notions of gendered being and belonging that were historically fluid, communal, and inclusive (Jacobo 2011). Rather than an escape from the home, transitioning becomes a reworking of home itself, reclaiming it as a space of care, survival, and recognition. The trans* body thus operates as both metaphor and material site of home, revealing how domestic and nationalist imaginaries regulate whose bodies are allowed to belong.
By positioning the trans Pinay body as an alternative cartography of home, this paper argues that trans embodiments and transitions enact decolonial critiques of the Philippine nation-state and its colonial inheritances. Ultimately, trans Pinay lives illuminate how resistance is lived through the body—archipelagic, unfinished, and insistently present—offering new ways of imagining gender, citizenship, and belonging in the Philippines.