Chris Beck (Navy SEAL)

Birthday June 21, 1966

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Long Island, New York, U.S.

Age 57 years old

Nationality United States

#22369 Most Popular

1966

Christopher Todd Beck (born June 21, 1966) is a retired United States Navy SEAL who gained public attention in 2013 after coming out as a trans woman, and in 2022, when he announced his detransition.

During the time of his transition, he went by the name Kristin Beck.

1984

Before enlisting in the United States Navy, Beck attended Virginia Military Institute from 1984 through 1987.

Beck served for 20 years in the U.S. Navy SEALs, taking part in 13 deployments, including seven combat deployments.

1991

Beck completed Basic Underwater Demolition/SEAL (BUD/S) training with class 179 in 1991 and subsequently served with SEAL Team One.

Following SEAL Tactical Training (STT) and completion of six month probationary period, Beck received the Navy Enlisted Classification (NEC) 5326 as a Combatant Swimmer (SEAL), entitled to wear the Special Warfare Insignia.

Beck eventually served as a member of the United States Naval Special Warfare Development Group (also known as DEVGRU), a special counter-terrorism unit popularly called SEAL Team Six, and received multiple military awards and decorations, including a Bronze Star and a Purple Heart.

He told Anderson Cooper he wanted to be a SEAL because they were the "toughest of the tough".

2010

While restrictions on sexual orientation were lifted in 2010–2011, restrictions on gender identity remained in place due to Department of Defense regulations until 2016, when the Obama administration ended the ban on transgender Americans serving in the military.

2011

Beck retired from the Navy in 2011 with final rating as Senior Chief Special Warfare Operator when he began transitioning by dressing as a woman.

The Huffington Post noted that while the "don't ask, don't tell" policy was repealed in 2011, the ban on openly transgender people serving in the U.S. armed forces still remained.

Days before the release of Warrior Princess, Metro Weekly's Poliglot column reported that the Pentagon had celebrated LGBT Pride Month in a memo while avoiding mention of transgender military personnel; the Pentagon memo read in part: "We recognize gay, lesbian and bisexual service members and LGBT civilians for their dedicated service to our country."

The Atlantic Wire said that the book could "lay the groundwork for even greater inclusion in the armed forces" and Salon stated that Beck's military credentials may "lead the Pentagon to revisit its policy against trans service members".

2013

A memoir detailing his experience was published in June 2013, Warrior Princess: A U.S. Navy SEAL's Journey to Coming out Transgender. He served in the U.S. Navy for twenty years.

In December 2022, Beck announced that he had detransitioned because "it ruined my life".

Beck grew up on a farm.

As early as the age of five, he was drawn to feminine clothes and toys, but was encouraged to adopt masculine roles by his parents.

Before transitioning, he married twice and has two sons from his first marriage.

He recounts in his memoir how his gender dysphoria contributed to his inability to emotionally mature while being in a male body, adding conflict to his sexual identity, although he never really felt gay.

Additionally, his duties as a U.S. Navy SEAL kept him on missions away from home, which distanced him from family members.

In 2013, he began hormone therapy, preparing himself for sex reassignment surgery.

During an interview with Anderson Cooper in early June 2013, he stated that he never came out during his military career and that "No one ever met the real me".

After coming out publicly in 2013 by posting a photo of himself as a woman on LinkedIn, he received a number of messages of support from his former military colleagues.

Beck said that his private therapy sessions were exploited by this therapist.

Beck co-wrote Warrior Princess with Anne Speckhard, a psychologist at the Georgetown University School of Medicine.

Speckhard was doing a study on resilience of the U.S. Navy SEALs, that is, the coping mechanisms employed by SEALs to deal with their intense job demands.

Speckhard first met Beck at a counter-terrorism conference.

After Beck agreed to discuss coping mechanisms, a follow-up meeting took place in a gay bar, with Beck now dressed in feminine attire, to Speckhard's surprise.

A five-hour meeting led to Speckhard agreeing to help Beck write his life story.

In the book, Speckhard notes that Beck had a desire to die honorably "so that he wouldn't have to wrestle anymore with the emotional pain that stemmed from the lack of congruency between his gender identity and body".

In his introduction to the book, Beck writes:

"I do not believe a soul has a gender, but my new path is making my soul complete and happy... I hope my journey sheds some light on the human experience and most importantly helps heal the 'socio-religious dogma' of a purely binary gender."

OutServe Magazine praised the book, calling it "one of the smartest and most important books of the year".

2014

Lady Valor: The Kristin Beck Story, a documentary, aired on CNN on September 4, 2014.

Earlier during LGBT Pride Month on June 18, 2014, at the Defense Intelligence Agency, Beck received a plaque from retired Lieutenant General Michael T. Flynn when he led the DIA as its Director.

2015

In August 2015, CNN said that Beck was running for Congress to represent Maryland's 5th congressional district.

Beck appeared on the Dr. Phil Show in 2015.

He has also been interviewed by Anderson Cooper on CNN.

On June 1, 2022, he appeared on an episode of The Joe Rogan Experience podcast.

2016

Beck finished second behind Representative Steny Hoyer in the Democratic primary election on April 26, 2016.