[1] In 2020's ACT for Gender Identity: The Comprehensive Guide, Alex Stitt suggested that mental health specialists listen to "Erase Me" to better understand FTM transitions, claiming Christopherson's "beautifully visceral voice captures how strangling social erasure and newfound male privilege can be.
[8][7] He recalled moments with his grandmother in multiple interviews, including visiting each day to sing to her while she played solitaire.
His submission, "Erase Me," explores his experience as a transgender man, specifically his relationship with male privilege following his transition.
He describes decades of low self-esteem caused by dysphoria as well as sexism, such as others interrupting him, second-guessing his opinions, and disbelieving his ambitions; these events stopped occurring after Christopherson's transition to male.
"[7] In 2019, he recorded a live music video for "Erase Me" accompanied by his bandmate, Nick Carpenter, at the Anchorage Museum in front of a painting of Denali.