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At the point when Bhumika Shrestha was little she wanted to spruce up in her mom's garments and wear her sister's lipstick. Her folks did not see an issue in their child needing to spruce up. He was only a little child all things considered. However, Bhumika, then called Kailash, didn't become out of it. When she turned into a youngster she knew for beyond any doubt that she would not like to be a kid any longer, yet a woman. 


"My family gave me a kid's name, Kailash. I didn't care for it since when I grew up my sentiments and my mindset was absolutely a lady. I didn't know why, yet I felt like a young lady," says Bhumika Shrestha. 


Personality 


A year ago the Nepalese government declared it would be the primary nation to incorporate a third sex in its national statistics. It was a milestone declaration that nationals no longer needed to adjust to either the male or female box on the survey. Be that as it may, tragically, to date this enumeration has not brought about an unmistakable include of transgender individuals Nepal. 


The Blue Diamond Society (BDS), an association for the LGBT people group, has almost 400,000 formally enrolled individuals. 


Since the association was established in 2001 by Sunil Pant, it has been to a great degree fruitful in pushing the privileges of the group. 


Bhumika Shrestha is a case of this achievement. From being provoked by her group when she was more youthful, she is currently an ardent representative for the BDS, and the nation's first transgender lawmaker. 


"In Nepali society, particularly in my town, individuals don't get it. When I stroll around, individuals take a gander at me and begin snickering," Bhumika clarifies how it was difficult for her to experience childhood in a little town.

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