Hi Liz,
First of all, let me apologize beforehand if this post sounds confrontational, or as if I'm picking you apart. That was not my intention. You raise some very interesting points. When I read your post, I had all sorts of thoughts that came from a very different perspective. For me, passing is everything, because I am a scared little rabbit and would never have the nerve to do what you have done. Kudos to you.
So here I go:
Quote from: ElizabethK on December 30, 2016, 05:18:01 PM
You do not have to wear a dress or a skirt to be a woman
You do not have to wear make up
You do not have to have long hair
You do not have to wear high heels to be a woman
No, of course not, but it helps. Most of the people on this site are "in transition". Many are not perfectly passable. If you are AMAB want to go out in public and be perceived as female, the best strategy is to give people every cue possible that you
are female. It's just common sense. No one can see your "inner woman".
Quote from: ElizabethK on December 30, 2016, 05:18:01 PM
There are plenty of women in this world who will never wear a dress or skirt from the time they are allowed to choose...that does not make them any less of a woman.
You're right, but public presentation is not simply an exercise in personal validation. It's a passport to being able to safely integrate oneself into desired female social roles. That takes other people to interact with. People who may not be very receptive to the idea of transgender people, if not downright hostile. You don't get to pick.
Quote from: ElizabethK on December 30, 2016, 05:18:01 PM
Personally my dysphoria is so intense at times that I don't care anymore.
I can appreciate that. I never thought I would go out in public before FFS, but I did, and I very much
did care how I was perceived. Everyone is different.
Quote from: ElizabethK on December 30, 2016, 05:18:01 PM
I have now completed all the medical procedures I can afford apart from SRS and once healed I should be out as fulltime by April.
So then, why
did you have all those expensive and painful medical procedures done if it has no bearing on your "womanhood"?
Quote from: ElizabethK on December 30, 2016, 05:18:01 PM
What I am saying is don't be boxed in my some therapists view of what a woman looks like...
I have never had a therapist tell me what a woman should look like, so I find that statement very surprising. I agree with you, of course, and that sort of comment from a therapist borders on unsupportive at best and possibly unethical.
Quote from: ElizabethK on December 30, 2016, 05:18:01 PM
this is your journey you decide how you look at a woman no one else. Pass don't pass you are still a woman.
I assume you meant "how you look
as a woman". I think that is a very noble sentiment - and could potentially be very dangerous. People may also conclude a transgender woman is nothing more than a mentally ill guy in a dress that deserves to have the crap beat out of them. That concerns me, to say the least.
With kindness,
Terri