Quote from: FA on April 18, 2014, 07:43:46 PM
Thanks hon. Well, I guess my feelings right now are both rational and emotional. I think it adds insult to injury to be born as 'the other' when you're male inside. And that ftms have to deal with something mtfs don't - accusations and insinuations we are just trying to escape a 'lower status'. Mtfs don't have that to deal with. They never have to wonder if somehow at age 2 they got the message it was less preferable to be female. Usually, their childhood experiences enforce directly the opposite - that they are of the 'ruling class' and should never deign to don the clothing or mannerisms of slaves. (now that's a bit of a dramatic way to put it but... pretty much).
So as an ftm, I've got to deal with all this stuff. I've got to feel bad about acquiring what society sees as the preferred position.
I completely understand why you would feel that way. And I agree that what you're saying is part rational, part emotional. It probably helps to sit down and go, which is the rational part, and which is emotional?
Umh, for example, when you say that ftms have to deal with accusations and insinuations that mtfs don't, trying to escape a lower status... I think the part that is rational is that FTMs DO have to deal with that, and MTFs don't. I think the emotional part is subtle. The emotional part is the implication that FTMs have a negative experience here that MTFs have no equivalent of. The reality is that they have a negative experience that is unique to them, but not necessarily that there is no equivalent for MTFs.
I mean, that's an invalidating reaction to your transition. But on the rational side, don't MTFs also have their motivations questions and reduced to something invalidating? Paraphilia. Fetishist gone wild.
The implications are different and happen for different reasons but in this case, the implication is the same... being unfit to transition via some fault attributed to your birth sex.
So rationally, I would want to call that a negative experience of being trans as a whole, even if it happens for different reasons on either side. And I think that would save an MTF person feeling invalidated at the emotional implication (MTFs don't have their motivations questioned like FTMs do) and saying that people accuse them of just having a weird sexual fantasy.
This is just an example of why I'm trying to split the rational/emotional stuff we're saying in this thread... cuz when it's blurred you get people who are speaking 2 different languages and of course it's frustrating.
So everything you said is valid, but I'm just suggesting that it means different things in different places that can come off as confusing. What do you think? Sorry if this is not making any sense to anyone.
And I want to reiterate that I'm not trying to set those things as perfectly equal. I don't really know if it's equal or not. I don't really know who has it worse. But at the end of the day people don't experience it like that. Everybody feels bad about some things and good about others. And it's totally okay to focus on what you feel bad about. And to acknowledge that there is a broader, very real social context that affects it in some way, but that maybe it's hard to know the exact level of effect on a personal level. You just need to remember that it's personal first when it's emotional. And it's impersonal first when it's rational. So you have to make points mainly rationally and vent mainly emotionally, and I think if everyone does that we will all be on more or less the same page. Or at least closer to that!