"Long ago, Mama was Papa" is a six-episode television drama airing in Japan as we speak. The first two raw episodes were uploaded tonight to D-Addicts by one of their forum administrators. I am over halfway through the first of these episodes and I gotta say, this is a touching in-your-face drama if you sympathize with transgendered people.
Seven years ago, "Hitomi" divorced her wife of several years and underwent sex reassignment surgery. All her life, she had felt like she was trapped inside the wrong body. She had even tried to end her life once after she witnessed her wife's joy in breastfeeding their child, tormented by the fact that she would never be able to experience this wonder for herself. But no more: from this day forward, Hitomi was a whole new woman.
Hitomi's mother disowns her, while Hitomi's father tries to maintain tremulous alliances with his own wife and his son (now reborn as a daughter). Hitomi's wife files for divorce. The courts grant the couple their divorce, and Hitomi's ex-wife abandons the children, seeking a fresh start in life.
Fast forward to the present day. The boys' biological mother has regretted her decision to abandon them and, after seven long years of torment, has finally decided to petition for legal custody (or joint custody) of her boys. This presents a problem for Hitomi: the elder son, Shun, while roughly age 9 or 10, has only very faint memories of his real mother; and the younger son, Ryu, roughly age 7 or 6, has no memories of his real mother. Both boys have been raised to consider Hitomi as their mother. And they do. And now the boys' real mother is about to bring down the house.
Catching up to where I am in the episode right now, Shun is kicked off of his Little League team because several of the other boys' parents have filed complaints to the coach demanding that Shun be removed from the team -- not because of a problem they have with him, but because of the problem they have with his so-called "mother." Hitomi begs them to reconsider but the fathers are disgusted by him/her, the mothers are disgusted as well, and the coach's hands are tied -- not that he was all that likely to be very sympathetic in the first place.
Here, the home audience witnesses what could be the first occurrence or what could be the newest in a long history of occurrences where Hitomi's decision to have sex reassignment surgery has impacted not only her own life but also that of her two precious sons. The gravity of this brings her to tears, and she crumples down onto the pitcher's mound, sobbing.
*unpause*
If you're interested, I'd suggest checking it out. There are no subs yet, but I feel like I can understand 75% or so of the base dialogue and 25-50% of the technical dialogue (like when they talk about sex reassignment or legal custody stuff). I'd benefit from having subs, but then again, it's kind of fun challenging myself to watch this raw and try to hone my listening skills. If you speak Japanese fluently, what are you waiting for? Check it out! And if you don't speak a lick of Japanese, you could always show interest in this series on the D-Addicts webforum. If you don't, nobody is likely to pick this up, I fear: it's a very niche show for a very niche audience.
Seven years ago, "Hitomi" divorced her wife of several years and underwent sex reassignment surgery. All her life, she had felt like she was trapped inside the wrong body. She had even tried to end her life once after she witnessed her wife's joy in breastfeeding their child, tormented by the fact that she would never be able to experience this wonder for herself. But no more: from this day forward, Hitomi was a whole new woman.
Hitomi's mother disowns her, while Hitomi's father tries to maintain tremulous alliances with his own wife and his son (now reborn as a daughter). Hitomi's wife files for divorce. The courts grant the couple their divorce, and Hitomi's ex-wife abandons the children, seeking a fresh start in life.
Fast forward to the present day. The boys' biological mother has regretted her decision to abandon them and, after seven long years of torment, has finally decided to petition for legal custody (or joint custody) of her boys. This presents a problem for Hitomi: the elder son, Shun, while roughly age 9 or 10, has only very faint memories of his real mother; and the younger son, Ryu, roughly age 7 or 6, has no memories of his real mother. Both boys have been raised to consider Hitomi as their mother. And they do. And now the boys' real mother is about to bring down the house.
Catching up to where I am in the episode right now, Shun is kicked off of his Little League team because several of the other boys' parents have filed complaints to the coach demanding that Shun be removed from the team -- not because of a problem they have with him, but because of the problem they have with his so-called "mother." Hitomi begs them to reconsider but the fathers are disgusted by him/her, the mothers are disgusted as well, and the coach's hands are tied -- not that he was all that likely to be very sympathetic in the first place.
Here, the home audience witnesses what could be the first occurrence or what could be the newest in a long history of occurrences where Hitomi's decision to have sex reassignment surgery has impacted not only her own life but also that of her two precious sons. The gravity of this brings her to tears, and she crumples down onto the pitcher's mound, sobbing.
*unpause*
If you're interested, I'd suggest checking it out. There are no subs yet, but I feel like I can understand 75% or so of the base dialogue and 25-50% of the technical dialogue (like when they talk about sex reassignment or legal custody stuff). I'd benefit from having subs, but then again, it's kind of fun challenging myself to watch this raw and try to hone my listening skills. If you speak Japanese fluently, what are you waiting for? Check it out! And if you don't speak a lick of Japanese, you could always show interest in this series on the D-Addicts webforum. If you don't, nobody is likely to pick this up, I fear: it's a very niche show for a very niche audience.