Learning To STFU … Or, Not
The historic way women of transsexed-histories have been told we must deal with our lives after transition has been that we must hide ourselves. Go to ground like a pursued animal and hide. That advice once took care of most problems of who knows and how. Under pain of death, (ok maybe not death, but the results would be terrible anyhow) we were told, we must never reveal ourselves. Sadly, such dicta were prescribed by “mental health professionals.” Of course, those mental health professionals weren’t hiding themselves forever from the world. They knew too well the adjustment problems such fear can cause. They’d have never told their children to do what they told others’ children to do.
Alienation is a very real danger for human beings. If even a small number of the “sad, lonely and regretful” transitioners that Dr. Paul McHugh claimed to have found in post-op interviews and evaluations at the Johns Hopkins Gender Clinic were “sad, lonely and regretful,” is there really any wonder? These women were told very basically that they were to remove themselves from their pasts and make brand-new lives from the ground up. For those who did, it was a feat that begged for adulation and recognition. I suspect though that most who did were running from vilification and dismissal by their families and friends and were overwhelmingly young. Afterall, back then they were required to be evaluated much as horse-flesh might be valued at a sale of thoroughbred colts.
Historically, women of transsexed history started with “the importance of never being known.” The tradition made it certain there will be such arguments. I should hide myself, else all will flee in revulsion. The trope’s an old one meant to invoke fear. It’s succeeded more than it should have, more than has been healthy for my sisters. Now our fears have reached such a fever-pitch that we divide ourselves consistently over whether or not someone should own that she ever transsexed. Huge portions of life and experience are consistently denied. At least they are as much as they can be: the body and the mind remember.
The ability to argue insightfully, to weigh ideas and actions within the experience of an individual and judge or at least evaluate them, the shibboleths one has attached to herself in the course of a life remain. They are used by everyone, regardless our histories until the brain atrophies from age or ill-use.
The appeal of not telling is huge. I mean think about it. If you walk through your life post-transition and no one ever even suspects … how much further should I go with this? How much further must I go? I think I’ll stop there.
For you cis-sexuals try to get your mind around it this way if you haven’t already: you’ve made the move of the century in whatever area you pride yourself most and feel most connected with. You’ve given birth to six children in ten years and are almost forty and everyone seems truly amazed that you’ve ever given birth and that you’re not twenty-five!! O hell, forget twenty-five: they think you’re nineteen!! How great a feeling would that be? How often would you smile and go on about your business without telling?
Well, the same strokes are available for many women and men with transsexing histories. They feel good. It’s wonderful to be so well-acculturated that people don’t recoil with revulsion or keep you at a convenient arm’s length for something you had no control over whatsoever. People accept you as you! What more, when it comes to interior lives, could any of us want?
Beginning to get the flavor? That would feel really good, no? It sure as heck would for me! It has and does. So, why might I risk that feeling for writing essays like this and publishing them here? Because sometimes, there are aspects of my life that make my life seem smallish and best used for the benefit of others, even if they cost me something I glory in.
There’s no doubt that our guys, those who’ve transsexed, often have an easier time with the “looks” aspects of things. Testosterone, while not the default hormone for humans, surely seems able to make changes like cleft chins, body and facial hair and muscularity quite well. I suppose, though, that at thirty not even the powerful effects of T are gonna make someone who stopped growing at fourteen when they were 5’3″ into a six-footer. Yeah, that’s far too high an expectation.
My friend Marlene has pointed out to me a few times that bone growth is set pretty much so very early that the likelihood of a woman “spreading” her hips after she’s ten or twelve is zero. The likelihood of one of the guys becoming as tall as the average male is also low, exponentially recedingly likely in fact. But, all things considered, it seems easier in some ways for the guys to look like guys than for the effects of testosterone to recede so completely in a female that it will be as though it had never been there. For that there are places like the offices in Chicago, Boston and San Francisco of The Big Three. They can rearrange faces and various other body-parts in those clinics quite well.
Anyhow, that’s not the biggest point I want to make. Instead I’d thought I’d write today about fitting in and how that often plays out for those of us who have and do transsex, especially how it plays out amongst ourselves. We, after all, appear better able to notice, or at least think we can, who’s like us. We make great fusses amongst ourselves, all too often, about how everyone should lead her, or his, life so that they will do “best by the community.”
Of course, what’s often not looked at is who the community is, or rather, who the community is becoming. For the moment there are a lot of us “old girls” and a right few “old boys” who manage to speak our minds “in the community.” As ever, you’ll find people strung along a continuum from very old to downright young who are part of the so-called community. In some places the community is quite strong amongst ourselves. In others, the community may well be a single individual.
Demographically we seem skewed by place here in the USA: New York, Boston, San Francisco (of course,) LA, Chicago, Houston, Seattle, Portland, Philadelphia, Atlanta, Denver and Phoenix appear, in my unscientific and random sample, to be hubs where people with transsexing histories are likely to be located. In Canada as well, and I would imagine this would hold true across the world, metropolitan areas will draw transsexing people more so than will small towns. Thus, one is more likely to meet another transsexed individual in Toronto, Vancouver, Montreal, Edmonton or Calgary than in Thunder Bay I should think. Although I do recall, I think, one member of a forum I attended long ago who listed Thunder Bay, ON, as home.
Again, I have gotten away from the focus in this piece. Please forgive, I’ll get there, at least I hope I will.
Back in the old days of transsexing as the periods between, say, 1974 and 1989 might be known, there was the rather openly held and enforced as much as possible “rule” that post-surgery transsexed people were to “blend seamlessly into the milieu they live in.” In other words, unless you were hell-bent on having people know, or you were unfortunate in having your tennis professionalism questioned, or you happened to be in acting or modeling and were “outed” as a result, or you wrote a book about yourself (think Renee Richards, Caroline Crossley, April Ashley, and Jan Morris) you got your surgery and disappeared into the background noise of everyday life.
It’s just a presumption, but I imagine a lot of that prescription had a lot to do with how comfortable universities, psychiatrists, and surgeons who worked with transsexers back then wre in wanting to stir as few pots as possible. There were other “rules” that judged things like height, weight, probable outcome of facial and body changes due to hormone replacement and overall “comportment” that could and did make or break transitions. The system was crushingly binary. Ideas like “comportment” were most often the ideas that the providers, usually male, had about “how women should behave and appear.”
To be honest, a lot of the arguments and rancor that arise today among transsexed people (let me say it again, mainly among women) about the value of stealth, out, gatekeeping and exclusion often appear to be vestiges of that old process. One learns from one’s mentors. For very many years trans-support assigned an “older” transitioner (they may have been either younger or older in fact in relation to whom they mentored) to “guide” the just transitioning individual in the arcana of transition. Some “older” transitioners still mentor younger transitioners.
One learned from those who had gone before and those who had gone before learned from those who had gone before them who learned from those very earliest women who had had surgeries and had moved silently and, one hopes, seamlessly, into the massive “binary” world we tend to live in. Somewhere, probably before the 1980s, but certainly after the 1980s, this pattern began to change. With the changes have come the tensions and the witheringly nasty arguments and movements that have become a source of hatred, dissension and downright abhorrence for so many of us.
Had a venue for a blog such as this existed in 1980 I would guarantee that the vast majority of transsexed women would have refused to have written it. It wasn’t good form. You found your mentorship in those metropolitan centers and in the clubs and groups that were focused primarily in such areas. If you were “out-in-the-country” you either remained ignorant and despairing or you moved yourself to a larger and more anonymous venue where you could contact and live among other transsexuals. Contact with others is a good thing, not a poor one. (Go skim these essays, I am, in totality, a “relational” proponent. We are social creatures and we don’t any of us do well in isolation.)
Yet, the pleas and demands of “the professionals” made it almost a certainty that when women transitioned we left the community and disappeared for the most part: married or remained single and never, ever, let on that our bodies and social roles had ever been anything other than what they were afterwards. It simply wasn’t done. And what must be admitted is that that is still a goal for many of us, hell, maybe most. I honestly have difficulty with the idea that I should walk about telling all and sundry, “I was once designated male.” I mean … would that make me happy? Not at the moment. Give the society a decade or two to wrap it’s collective mind around the idea.
The argument now often goes that in the 1970s exactly that was being done. The general population is claimed to have been reconciled with transsexing. There’s a smidgen of truth in that as a couple of states, Minnesota comes to mind and a few other states wrote into law back then that birth certificates would be changed and quarantined after “sex-changes.” So, there’s some reason for the argument that sex-changing was more accepted and that transsexing was better understood among the general population who have today been “prejudiced” against transsexing men and women by the great and terrible transgender peril.
However, the late-1970s in the USA was also the time when the gender clinics came under fierce fire from within and without them. By 1979 Paul McHugh and Kurt Freund were already dismantling Johns Hopkins and within a few years every university gender clinic would be closed for the purposes of full transitions. Hopkins, for instance, still has “gender specialists” on staff. But, they haven’t surgeons any longer who perform Gender Confirmation Surgeries.
So, the argument that the rise of the “transgender” movement in the 1990s was the “cause” for the general public’s distaste for “transsexuality” is more than forced: it ignores the realities of the late 1970s and the reality that the clinics and the legal changes were being made before most anyone had heard the word “transgender.” When one removes the impossible, much as it might be distatsteful to me, one is left with something a bit more like the truth than a specious-causality will give her.
I mean, let’s get real here could events in 1978 and 1979 actually be affected by events that didn’t occur until 1983 or 1984? We have, in truth, no means of effecting the past from the future, the alleged Philadelphia Experiment notwithstanding. So let’s consign that argument to the waste basket it should long ago have been consigned to and simply regard confused memory as the reason there are the current arguments that “transgender” rights have and will cause revocation of the rights of “true transsexuals.”
Instead lets take a look at a more likely reason for the revocation of rights and for the general disrepute that “true” transsexuals and other gender-variant folk have experienced since that so-called “golden age of the 1970s. Let’s consider for just a second the almost insignificant rise of religious rightism and the political sense that the USA was tired of “liberal experiementation” which resulted in Reaganism and the overwhelming acceptance of things like The Contract With America becoming popular and dominant socially.
Ah, no surely it must have been the machinations of Virginia Prince, not those of Newt Gingrich, Jerry Falwell, James Dobson, Tom DeLay and the Reaganauts! Well, could you just think about that for awhile and see what you can come up with? I’m gonna move along a bit.
In the 1990s the advent of the Internetz started changes in regard to the “pat story” of transsexing women. Information became easier to obtain through various early list-serves and there was a more open discussion among people who were inclined to transsex than had existed before, at least among those who were able to connect to the ‘Net through work or at home. At the same time older women who had spent so very much effort and heart in following the “rules of the game” were still amongst us, often in positions where they were able to join in such conversations. Experience is a powerful teacher and experience will be given as it was lived.
Dicta that were absorbed in 1976 were continuously given pride of place among transsexing women. Much of that transmitted experience, or the desire for a similar experience, remains a powerful force within the community today. Times may change and demand that experience change as well. But those who lived the experience will likely not be so open to the change. Why, for the simplest reason: we tend to think of new ways as somehow making our old ways invalid or not as good. It’s the “it was good enough for grandmaw and it’s good enough for me” syndrome translated to transsexing.
A tension began to develop between old and new transitioners. With the state of the Web today more than ever before we are seeing younger and younger people on forums that a few years ago were dominated by those of us who are now well into middle age and many of us who are decidedly even older than that. The demographics have changed and everything old is new again. Or everything old no longer holds the aura of complete wisdom that it once did. Again, a natural reaction among those who experienced the old is to feel denied in some ways of their efficacy, their voice of experience.
The tensions have not ameliorated over the past five years. In fact, they have seemingly become worse. Younger transitioners are not similarly inclined to follow the precepts of many older transitioned women. (Again, I use “women” instead of “men” because my experience tells me that these arguments and the sheer divide between “older” and “younger”, “stealth” and “out,” “HBS-movement” and just “plain ole HBS” are functionally more a piece of the lives of transsexed women than of transsexed men.)
Our younger generation of transitioners seems less likely to be as disturbed by “gender-variance” than are older transitioners. They seem less inclined as well to be as flush capitally as the older transitioners sometimes have been. Thus, they sometimes use every means available to afford the expensive surgeries required to reach a post-transitional state. To do so they often make use of their bodies in ways very similar to those ways other women have chosen: they use their sex to do what they cannot do with their position,prestige, and economic status. They pay for surgeries and often get stick for doing so.
As in any basically generational conflict (by the way, it’s not entirely generational. I’ve experienced women who are 19 or 20 be just as adamantly dismissive of “transgender” as any older woman. I’ve also experienced many “older” women who are more than willing to embrace the validity of people who don’t do things the way they did. So the generational thang isn’t always generational at all except in where I see the conflict-seeds being originally sown.)
The younger transitioners in areas like dating, sex-work and just plain sex, acceptance of gender-diversity, lack of worry about “what the transgenders are gonna do to us” and in other battleground areas tend to be more open to difference. My older sisters appear, more often than not, to be more exclusively inclined. There ya have it: breaks and battles, demeaning arguments fought with every bit of the force and “true believer” ferocity as any partisan battle about anything, from Shiite/Sunni to Mainline/Evangelical to Socialist/Capitalist. Each “side” seems very convinced that they are “right.” Middle-ground appears a good place to be battered on both sides of one’s body.
So, what’s a girl to do? Generally this girl speaks her mind and “calls ’em like she sees ’em.” What she sees is animosity and dissension where there doesn’t need to be dissension and animosity. My sense of being “right” doesn’t mean, perforce, that I have to batter someone else with invective, name-calling and witheringly-directed hatred in an all-consuming effort to “win.”
In point of fact, I suspect that winning is consistently in the mind of the debater. Each person believes she has “won.” Yet, the “loser’ usually will also declare herself the “winner.” Just as I pointed out in yesterday’s essay the activity is everso reminiscent of sandlot baseball games among pre-adolescent boys. “Winning,” “cheating,” “making-up the rules as you go” appears to apply to each “side.” The backyard becomes a raucous and nasty fist-fight that leaves only animosity and the prevailing sense that “we’ll play ya again next Saturday and you’ll see.”
Let’s be honest here: if someone decides to transition and does so through an orchiectomy rather than through Genital Confirmation Surgery, I may find that my take was different than their’s on the subject. But, does difference also mean that they, or I, am unreal, un-true? Does it mean that for one of us to exist in the world and be able to live our lives in some relative peace that the other must be exiled to some desert-margin where they’ll be neither seen nor heard? Must “my way or the highway” be the ultimate litmus-test of my sense that another human being is valid and worthy of my esteem?
Well, no. For me it doesn’t mean that at all.
Until “they,” whomever “they” happens to be (wish we knew so we could take steps to annul the forces of “they” before “they” could do any real damage to any of us!) deprive me of my life, liberty and pursuit of property as John Locke dictated, then they haven’t done me a lot of damage, except maybe in my ego. Like most egos mine can probably use a bit of downsizing on occasion.
It’s all well and good to declare that “she isn’t real because she made a sex movie using her penis. I saw it and she admits it and everyone knows that real women don’t use their penises.” OK, but perhaps women who have no other way to pay to bring their bodies and brains into alignment do use their penises. It doesn’t mean they’re not damaged by the sex-trade. It doesn’t make them less-than. It simply means they have employed what was available in order to get the job done. Period. I mean, let’s be real; that’s one of the major dicta of the “true transsexual movement.” “True transsexuals” go all the way at any price, so cut the girl on the street a break.
Or, you who are well-employed or professional and who’ve made it, might consider the good that could be done by donating a portion of your treasure to the establishment of trust that could accumulate donations and employ a couple of people that would assist in helping those who cannot transition fully due to lack of being able to fund transition. I’ve seen the idea broached, but never seen any evidence that it’s been placed into the “reality” we wish to argue so relentlessly over. In fact, the only times I have ever seen that done to date have been efforts by people who were struggling themselves to assist those they felt were struggling even more. The so-called and much cited “successful” transitioners don’t appear willing to set up a foundation at this time.
So it goes. Our battles rage and the battle-cry is often “Shut The Fuck Up because you are full of crap.” I dunno about the efficacy of that particular tactic for bringing people together. I’ve heard that, or something similar, for years myself, beginning with my father when I faced him lo-many-years-ago on a Saturday morning with “I am a girl and I’m gonna be a woman.” The belting that resulted lasted a while and certainly got some immediate results, even some long-range ones. I never again spoke with my father about myself, my truly deep self.
But, here I sit many years later being exactly who I said I was gonna be, just another woman, writing a blog and posting it out there for you to read. I suspect that the current arguments that resolve themselves into “STFU” will prove to be similarly successful: at causing and maintaining division and dislike. The new ways will eventually win out, for the old are dying. Soon there will be a new “pat story” for transsexually-historied women and men.
To be very honest, I hope to live to see the day when the old passes quietly into the peace of history and women and men are just fine with being themselves, fully, however they are most comfortable being full.
Explore posts in the same categories: Lookism, Psychology, Relationship, Transgender, Transitional Dichotomies, Transsexing, TranssexualsTags: Dichotomies, Out, Psychology, Stealth, Transgender, Transsexing, Transsexuals
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January 14, 2009 at 3:41 pm
There is a big difference between being lonely and enjoying solitude. Communities are over rated as is their franchise of marketed things we are supposed to enjoy. The culture has moved from people connection to consumerism. It is not a place conduced to enjoying each other. The responsibilities expected of you to prolong the agonies of this disconnected world are not worth the return. Give me peace and quiet anytime to a noisy mall, traditions, concert or party.
January 14, 2009 at 4:03 pm
*****
January 14, 2009 at 6:06 pm
Gosh, Nica, I hope that’s five-stars instead of “speechless;” and if it is five stars, I hope it’s five stars outta five instead of five outta twenty!! 🙂 Thank you.
Lisa, relationship and community don’t mean “a noisy mall, traditions, concert or party.” When I talk about connection I mean human beings in one another’s presences enjoying one another’s company. Relationship is NOT milling together at a mall or, for that matter, milling around on a bulletin board on the Internetz!! Please try to get that when you read these essays. And I’ll keep in mind that when you talk about “peace and quiet” that you don’t mean being a recluse exiled from all human contact and relationship! 🙂
It’s kinda scary isn’t? To think you and me might come to a meeting of the minds!! 😀
January 14, 2009 at 6:12 pm
You never cease to amaze me, Radha. 🙂 I believe we are riding on the same train.
January 14, 2009 at 10:17 pm
O, my Michael!! Between you and Nica you guys keep confusing me!! OK, I’m gonna take this as absolute praise. 🙂 Thank you, Michael.
It’s taken me awhile to realize that this was the train I was riding. But it struck me pretty forcefully back in the spring (Thank you, Francesca M., if you ever read this) to get clearly within myself the implications of my basic foundational understanding of myself and the way I live in the world and combine that with the way I discover and live through my own history.
That train ran for some time with a assenger who thought she was on another train until that woman I mentioned above helped me find my ground again. 🙂 No, she isn’t someone with a transsexing history, but she’s someone who managed to teach me a whole lot more last spring than I ever expected to learn. 🙂
January 15, 2009 at 9:17 am
Ah, yes. The infamous stars! lol
Actually, the stars mean both a very great affirmation of what you are writing and also an acknowledgement that I have nothing inside of myself to add that would increase the value of what you wrote. Speechless, indeed.
Well, maybe something, now that I have finished my morning slug of motor oil. You knew that was coming, didn’t you. 😉
Right. Here’s my deal. Even though I am on the eve of obtaining SRS, all is not milk and honey for me. I feel a lot of sadness at the event which will surely mark the final passing of my old life. My co-parent, with whom I still share the same house and table, has been given to bouts of hysteria over the last few months.
Almost as if by sheer force of emotional–and sometimes physical–shock she can disrupt the progression of events. My evolution over time into the female. There is something deeply heart-breaking about this. For both of us.
Madly pressing buttons to which no wires are any longer connected. Male buttons. My oldest reacts. Of course he reacts. Even though the hysteria is not directed at him. The general cloud of female distress rings all of his alarms. And he tries to fix everything. I feel so sorry for him when this happens. But there is nothing I can do except remain peacefully quiet. He could not understand even if I tried to explain to him.
I had a near miss not long ago with some materials left over from several surgical procedures earlier this fall. I remembered a transsexed woman, oh-so-passable, who I met several Thanksgivings ago. She had reached the goal I am trying to reach. And yet I saw her, invisible to everyone else at the gathering, neatly draining wine bottle after wine bottle after wine bottle…
It’s OK, I think, when used to dull the very real physical pain of electrolysis. But what about the pain of seeing your loved ones confused and groping in the darkness for someone to comfort them in their fear. Someone who is no longer there?
It’s not OK. Ironic, isn’t it.
So easy to turn one’s thoughts from the happiness which you so rightly described. They see me for me! That truly is bliss for someone who had to hide themselves all of their life. But at what cost?
So to go back to basics. That’s the only safe way through this part of the journey. Did I sleep well last night? In a warm bed? With a roof over my head? Did I eat good food today? Did I have clean, warm clothing to wear? Was I able to bathe myself? Brush my teeth? Exercise?
Did I take care of my autistic son? Did he have all of those things which I mentioned above? Was he happy when I tucked him into bed?
Was my oldest happy at making it all the way back from a severely broken leg and ankle which knocked him out of school and life in general for the last six months? Does he feel loved by both of his parents and his brother? Family nurturing.
Did my co-parent feel loved and supported at the women’s meeting she attended in Ocean Grove the other night? Does she have something to look forward to in her life as it is evolving?
Did I keep our house clean and warm?
Forget about surgeries, OK? These are the building blocks of my transition. Caring for my loved ones in a traditionally female, nurturing role. It has nothing to do with my height or bulk or proportions. Nothing to do with the clothing I wear. Although all those things are as consistently female as I can make them.
It’s about who I am inside. In my heart. And how I shine my light on others.
Namaste.
January 15, 2009 at 10:37 am
That’s a lovely response, Nica. Someday, with your permission of course, I’m gonna take one of these stunning responses and publish it separate under your name.
They’re lovely and touching, grand marks on the wall of your growth over time into you.
Yes, I knew you could do it, even though I often despaired you would. Time for a bit of peace, eh? Although I expect that bits of peace nicely set among clamor is about the best any of us can hope for until, as Lisa shadowed, we find it within ourselves. No exterior facts or musings seem to be able to give us what we cannot find within ourselves.
January 19, 2009 at 7:21 am
It doesn’t seem like hiding to me. I just feel normal. The more time that goes by, the less I have to worry about it. I don’t think that would happen if I had all the old things confronting me on a daily basis.
On the subject of this label fight, I’m not sure it is a fair representation to say that those who consider themselves “transsexual” are trying to do anything in particular to the transgendered. It really isn’t all about them, you know, lol. I think most of us just object to having our womanhood denied. If certain people are going to engage in those sorts of recriminations, they should expect to receive the same sort of treatment. I’m not sure why one would expect to get a free pass for anti-social behavior.
January 19, 2009 at 9:23 am
That’s really nice, aria, that you “feel” normal. I believe you’ll find that general feeling amongst all sorts of folk. I’m sure the Ted Bundys and Jeffrey Dahmers “just felt normal” while doing the things they were convicted of having done. I believe that you’ll find someday that when “I just feel normal” that is usually enough to satisfy one’s self with one’s life. Those who “just feel normal” don’t generally make habits of trying to cajole and dictate that others “feel normal” just like they “feel normal.” Attempts to force a single behavior on everyone with a transsexing-history don’t speak of “feeling normal” at all. They smack more of feeling like you haven’t gotten what you thought you’d paid for.
Realizing that protections are, indeed, needed for the weakest and most marginalized and using whatever skill-set you can bring to that endeavor aince their marginalization doesn’t affect one’s self at all would seem to me to indicate much more forcefully one’s “feeling normal.”
Indeed, I am often struck by how forcefully this “movement’ resembles nothing so much as the old fat guys sitting about in their club in “Trading Places” reading the papers, smoking cigars and having expensive brandy in cut-crystal snifters while moaning about “what the world has come to.” Now, in that light, explain to me again “anti-social behavior,” please.
I fail to see how being open about who one was in any way denies you, or anyone else, her womanhood. Rather the construction resembles Phyllis Schafly and her remonstrations that “real” women behave in certain ways she finds comfortable to declare “womanly behaviors.”. You guys invariably choose the most hackneyed and warmed-over bits of illogic to force home “your points.”
There are huge logical flaws in the HBS-Movement “arguments” that mostly resolve themselves when one sees their identity in the light of those “exclusive men’s clubs.” 🙂
January 19, 2009 at 9:50 am
Aria’s posting elicits much emotion from me, a transgender male (“transgendered” is not a proper use of the term, but that’s beside the point). I recently watched a bout of discussion in one of my online groups between several trans-women who argued the semantics of “transsexual” vs. “transgender”, animosity abounded, and enemies were formed.
We are all Trans people. Whether or not we have had surgeries or have taken hormones. We were each born in a body that was not right. We all have our obstacles to overcome, and we all have the inherent need to feel accepted as our true gender. Arguments over words, separating ourselves within our own community – well, I’m sorry, but that’s just plain dumb.
I am very open with who I am, and I make it a point to educate the public, even those within the GLBT community, not only reminding them that we exist, but we are human beings who deserve the same respect and equality that any other human being deserves.
Without those of us who actually stand up and speak for the trans community, society would still be where it was in the Stonewall days. Those who choose to hide who they once were only serve themselves. Hiding is synonymous with “secrecy”, and although I respect the right of every trans person to make their own decisions in their lives, in the overall scheme of things, I believe it stunts our progress in the community, and affects us all.
Just my humble opinion, and possibly off topic here, but I needed to say it.
January 19, 2009 at 10:42 am
Good morning, Michael. A pleasure as always to see your comments. They didn’t appear off-topic to me. 🙂
When one goes back and re-writes social history to fit one’s argument, a matter done with regularity by the “movement,” then their logic appears more perfect than it is.
They’d like to have it that all over the USA there was acceptance of people with transsexual-histories from 1973-1995 and make like “transgender” somehow changed all of that and laws were repealed. Fact is, the laws were repealed or never passed in the first place by the early eighties, well before there was any “transgender” movement at all.
As my friend Monica said yesterday on her blog ( http://transgriot.blogspot.com/2009/01/being-truth-teller.html ) bringing out some truth to shade their propaganda is usually not well-taken by the propagandists. Rather inconvenient for them, in fact: “If certain people are going to engage in those sorts of recriminations, they should expect to receive the same sort of treatment.” If that were true, I would imagine it wouldn’t need to be consistently argued by them that they are purely “innocent.”
The deal is this, sir, in the machinations of their arguments the HBS-pure generally ignore the facts of FTM existence and the state of the art in transitions for FTMs. They also contrive to blind themselves that their arguments ususally have nothing to do with “science” and a whole lot to do with socio-economic status as the underpinning of many of their dicta about how any one individual will act in favor of declaring that to be “true” one must be like themselves.
That seems about normal for those who never worried much about “women” while they were being inculcated into their sense that they were the “masters of the universe.” The tell-tale scraps of privilege of some sort usually float rather openly about the hems of their skirts.
The trick to counter that isn’t much of a trick: you pick the child up from the bathwater and empty the bathwater from the basin. Voila Nice clean baby and the dirt down the drain.
January 22, 2009 at 10:07 pm
Hi Radha,
That was a lovely post, and reflected my own thoughts about transition quite nicely.
I’m also happy to see so many comments from others who have so clearly transitioned to live their lives honestly and authentically – filled with joy and not regret.
I suspect you are correct in accusing McHugh of failing to take responsibility for the role that his therapists took in telling transsexuals to bury their pasts after transition resulting in dissatisfaction and regret.
Over time, more and more people will come to see me primarily as a woman (that’s already happening in my workplace – and it is really quite lovely to experience). For myself, I’m just ridiculously happy, and I think that speaks volumes – and is by far the most important aspect of things.
January 23, 2009 at 10:48 am
Hiya, Michelle. Yes, the quality of one’s life certainly appears to me to be the overridingly important valuation of one’s transition. They are all personal journeys regardless how well, or not, they follow common patterns or the received templates.
The measure of anyone’s life, I find, is personal to that individual. Difficult for me to make a decision that someone is lying that she’s happy and content in her life.
I imagine that how Dr. McHugh imagines himself without his male “privileges” colors around 100% of his evaluations. There seems nothing more common to our existences than that we judge all others’ contentment based on how their decisions and lives would feel were we living them. I think that would require than somewhat more than 6 billion people who aren’t me be miserable in their existences. 🙂
January 24, 2009 at 3:20 am
So I am compared to mass murderers because I don’t want to be told who I am. Lovely.
January 24, 2009 at 4:04 am
But more to the point, I am not an HBS strawman. The people involved with that particular endeavor can speak for themselves, and I have disagreements with their methods and ideas myself.
When I say I feel “normal”, it is a judgment of my own life and how it is at this point. When I move through society I don’t feel that I am hiding anything. Some people may have problems of that nature, but I am not one of them. I mention it only because the theme of this particular blog post is that in the past people were counseled to do what I did, and now you are arguing against it. I tried to make the statement that it works for some people. I did not mention it to deny protections to other people who do things differently, as you have charged in your response. I’m not sure how you came to that conclusion. But the way you morph what I said is very interesting.
I took issue not with you assertion that we shouldn’t be forced to hide, but with the subtext that we MUST be “out”. It comes across to me in your writing not as a new path with more possibilities, but a condemnation of the “old” way. It seem to be part of your argument with that HBS contingent. And by the way, not everyone who believes that their condition is biological in origin can be labeled with the political term “HBS”. That tiny group is a convenient bogeyman, but it doesn’t encompass everyone who doesn’t agree they belong to the transgender spectrum.
It is not I who is pushing and demanding. I am not the one telling people how to transition. And no, the pushing and shoving I’m talking about is not some brave struggle against the majority’s power structure. The transgender movement is pushing and shoving another marginalized minority, transsexual men and women. But what would I know. I’m just another Dahmer waiting to happen, aren’t I?
January 24, 2009 at 10:11 am
1) It doesn’t seem like hiding to me. I just feel normal. The more time that goes by, the less I have to worry about it. I don’t think that would happen if I had all the old things confronting me on a daily basis.
On the subject of this label fight, I’m not sure it is a fair representation to say that those who consider themselves “transsexual” are trying to do anything in particular to the transgendered. It really isn’t all about them, you know, lol. I think most of us just object to having our womanhood denied. If certain people are going to engage in those sorts of recriminations, they should expect to receive the same sort of treatment. I’m not sure why one would expect to get a free pass for anti-social behavior.
2) I tried to make the statement that it works for some people. I did not mention it to deny protections to other people who do things differently, as you have charged in your response. I’m not sure how you came to that conclusion. But the way you morph what I said is very interesting.
I took issue not with you assertion that we shouldn’t be forced to hide, but with the subtext that we MUST be “out”. It comes across to me in your writing not as a new path with more possibilities, but a condemnation of the “old” way. It seem to be part of your argument with that HBS contingent. And by the way, not everyone who believes that their condition is biological in origin can be labeled with the political term “HBS”. That tiny group is a convenient bogeyman, but it doesn’t encompass everyone who doesn’t agree they belong to the transgender spectrum.
You don’t find any variance between these two statements? None in tone, content? And how would you imagine is the “transgender movement pushing and shoving another marginalized minority, transsexual men and woman?” The only reasoning I have ever seen yet about the “pushing and shoving” is that somehow the existence of transgenderists somehow throws a bad light on transsexual men and women. Just by their existence? How would that work?
Touche Dahmer and Bundy were not the best exemplars, but if you’re gonna indulge in polemic, aria, then perhaps you should realize, as let’s say you might in a courtroom or a sales staff conference, that you’re playing in a different arena then. Had your original post been more on the order of this one. The one in which you extend and clarify your remarks rather than try to simply be cute with them — well, that might elicit a different response.
We could all learn a bit more about eliciting differnet responses, I imagine.