Quote from: Tori on June 10, 2014, 02:25:49 PM
But why then were we dysphoric to the point of needing to transition?
I can offer my experience:
I long held off on transitioning precisely because I knew if I DID transition, I'd still be the same person, and I didn't need to physically BE female in order to do stereotypical 'female' things; to assume one must be female in order to be verbose, to enjoy shopping, to wear dresses, to be emotional, etc., was to me, to be as sexist as those who forbid me from doing those things in the first place for being 'male'.
I continued on doing whatever the hell I felt like, social consequences/gender-binary be damned, convinced my dysphoria was the result of being gender-programmed. Gender is a purely social construct right? I thought there was no such thing as "gender-identity", that identifying as "male" or "female" was dependent entirely upon how you were raised, and that I was just a nutjob who needed a good kick in the pants. (If you have even a tenuous grasp of human biology and/or psychology and/or the numerous case studies which contradict this perception, you realize I was way, way off, but I beg your understanding as I was a stupid teenage armchair philosopher/psychologist)
It was only after trying this for a couple years that I accepted I still wasn't happy (in fact more miserable than ever), and this approach had in no way ever remedied my GD in the slightest. There was a profound disconnect between my mind and physical body. I may have been expressing myself in whatever way I chose, but try as I might I never overcame the trigger of seeing myself in the mirror. It was only after doing my homework, seeing the physical evidence for transsexualism, being exposed to the error in my (quite frankly TERF'y) theories, realizing that in 22 years of telling myself I could "beat this" I'd never come any closer to actually doing so, and realizing that the alternative was ultimately spiraling deeper and deeper into depression ending in suicide, that I chose life and decided to pursue transition.
I'm still me, and I'll always be me. The pains of GD have steadily begun to subside, despite never 'feeling female', and for once I'm a happy, productive member of society.
tldr: I transitioned because transsexualism is a physical condition, and transition is, as of this moment, the only viable treatment.