Sure, I can go first. I'll just speak from my own teachings and ideas around what two-spirit means for me, also recognizing that it's very different in different nations and depending on communities and what their knowledge is about two-spirit.
For me, it's really rooted in indigeneity and having both masculine and feminine energy or medicine that I carry in the community and also realizing that there are responsibilities. In some communities, when we've done our indigenous engagement work, we visited rural, on-reserve communities where we ask folks what they know about two-spirit, what their language is around two-spirit. We hear some really amazing stories about how two-spirit folks have been lifted up in their communities and seen as folks with opportunity to support the community in different ways.
Then we hear other stories in communities, which are more heartbreaking, around the loss of language or a lack of safety around talking about two-spirit, like the example Lorraine shared earlier about the elder trying to access a workshop and then getting pushed back from that.
For me, two-spirit is all about having an experience of both of those energies, also matched with responsibilities in my own community around that.