Quote from: Ritana on June 20, 2017, 10:25:57 AM
Yes, deep down I do believe I am trans. All of us here are. Trying to fool myself into believing I am cis is a blatant lie. That is a fact. I consider myself to be a female, but NOT a cis-female. I.suppose I could convince myself I am a cis-female but a simple visit to the doctor would prove the opposite. Very simple:))
Hear hear. I guess I agree with you on many points... I've transitioned at a younger age as well, and as a result am enjoying my 'passing privilege'. You know what it boiled down to for me in the end? Being a woman is a matter of who you are. There are many ways this is intwined into your personality, but I believe the personality and the person you are, are NOT the same thing. Let me elaborate a bit on that....
I started transitioning when I was 23 years old, and quickly got to the point that I had a full passing. As I got older, my only goal was to live as a ciswoman, since I believed there were no differences between me and that. But as the years kept creaping on, I ended up developing this nagging feeling I had left something behind. A part of me simply didn't get on the train when I chose to take off, it got left behind and the greater the distance, the more I felt that this part of me was missing.
Even though I now believe have always been female, transition and life in general is about becoming a full, balanced and happy person. Leaving parts of yourself suffocate in the past doesn't help in this regard. My choice to resolve the situation was a unique one, I fully detransitioned and moved to another country to start over (hadn't had SRS yet) and tried to find this male part again. This was a success, and it actually made me happy as a man for a little while.
Since then, I rebooted my transition and right now I'm happily living stealth and being post op. Even though, there are people who do know, and people who don't. Those who know are part of a community of real friends, of people who have seen me through the experiences described above, or of people who I have come to feel comfortable enough with to start explaining who I am and what matters to me.
Being stealth, for me, isn't about wanting to be cis, it's about a choice you take to make it easier on society to accept you as female. If I were to live in a world where telling the majority of people that I was a transwoman would make me happy, I guess I would live a more open life. But alas, to my opinion many people still lag behind, even those who are tolerant of our existance. We still, albeit subconsciously, get branded as 'different', we get othered and thus get a separate treatment. Unfortunately, I haven't found society chance a lot in the last 10 years or so that I've lived as trans, open or not. So to get back to what Sophia Sage meant (I believe): our truth is that we're women. But with society being a bitch on us, we have to help a bit and leave out some parts when dealing with most people.
We all have our emotional needs, and being trans with a passing privilege is a balancing act. Being othered isn't nice, we're women and we can and do want to live that way. So non-disclosure is in some ways a necessary evil. But on the other hand, as others have stated, living a lie is never a good thing.
You don't have to be cis to be a woman, but as long as the world hasn't got that simple fact etched into their harts, I'll keep living stealth with a couple of intimi around me for emotional support.