Quote from: Yasuko on April 04, 2009, 06:53:16 AMi dont refer myself to anything much.. at best id call my self a New-Half.
its commonly used in japan and its less degradeing in my opinion...
It isn't clear to me how the phrase "new half" applies to trans people in the original Japanese, because it loses something in translation into English. Can you explain the context of why "new half" is the term in Japanese? Half of what?
Whoops, I see that Yasuko is banned. No use asking her. So does anyone else here know enough Japanese to explain "new half"?
Quote from: Stormy on October 14, 2007, 11:22:58 PM
I did refer to myself as "transsexual" during my transition--mainly to explain my transition to others even though I've always
been female (the rest of the world just doesn't understand that yet). With full transition complete, I do not use the word nor
do I consider myself "transsexual". After all, a transsexual in my mind is someone who desires to be the opposite gender.
I am a woman and the idea of being a man repulses me.
WORD. This describes my thoughts too. I went through three stages with it, as my consciousness of self and situation in life evolved.
1. When I first came out to myself, and didn't know what I was going to do about my gender, I called myself transgender.
2. When I knew I was on track for transition, but before I was able to achieve it, I called myself transsexual.
3. After transition, I'm just a woman. I don't use anything with "trans-" in it to identify myself. I don't say HBS or IS either. As far as the whole world is concerned, I'm just a woman and that's all there is to it. My private medical history is no one else's business, except for a few healthcare personnel with a need to know.
Having experienced what it's like to live with these evolving understandings of my identity through all three stages, I can't disparage anyone else for how they understand themselves. It's up to you to find that for yourself, and it behooves the rest of us to respect your self-definition-- just as I want mine respected.
I dislike being identified as any subcategory that sets me apart from other women, or implies that I'm anything less than a full woman. For a time when I copped to "transgender" I experienced the allure of being seen as a "special" sort of being. But that allure quickly wore off for me. I've been marked out as "special" or different or weird all my life, and I'm damn sick of it. Now I just want to be ordinary--or, if I'm to be distinguished in any way, I want it to be for my intelligence or compassion, some generally human quality. Not for something that objectifies us. I'm sick of being objectified.
The central value in life that motivates me is the sisterhood that connects me with other women. The womanhood we share in common. Connection is all. I will remove anything that gets in the way of that.