Yes, there are certain things about the process that are absolutely terrible.
But I do not identify as transsexual, trans-anything... these are labels... we are human beings. I identify as a woman, except when I was little, when I identified as a girl and had not learned any of the labels yet.
For clinical purposes, though, I have to check the boxes on the form and endure the bureaucracy, tell them what they want to hear so I can get a driving licence and a passport that says F; grovel to get permission to have my birth defect corrected. I'm wondering if I should also lie and say that I've turned 'straight'; but then again they may force me to take another HIV test, as that would lump me in with their 'gay male' study group.
The real me might disqualify me in the eyes of 'professionals' from the straight community, who impose their standards on us, suddenly finding ethics (ethics that they never had when dispensing ritalin like candy). Presuming to dictate to me what a woman should and should not be, who her partners should and shouldn't be, shouldn't be too outspoken... reasonably clever but not too intelligent... and certainly never bruise a fragile male ego.
But then again... for me Feminism has always been about every woman's freedom to be herself.
But the revolution hasn't happened yet. So I check the boxes and move on, and work to help younger people in the same position as I am, so that they shouldn't have to go through what I went through. The standards-makers don't count the youth suicides... but our small communities do.