Well, Heather, I too read your post and just didn't know what to respond. I thought about it all day yesterday and still don't have good conclusions.
(I know what you mean about non-response, though. Sorry.

)
I don't think there will be a third gender designation. At a database class in the early 90s, the instructor was a jerk. He claimed we could use only one bit to designate sex (either/or). Since there are at least three alternatives – male, female, unknown – I knew that was wrong. But then he said that the state of California prison system uses 17 (I think) gender designations and isn't that ridiculous.
It wasn't the place for me to ask him what do you do with a pre-op MtF transsexual who can't pass as male anymore – throw her in with the convicted rapists and child-molesters? As Kate I probably would have made a point of it anyway, but I used to be a lot quieter.
I spent the day yesterday in a neighboring town where people don't know me. I ate at a restaurant and shopped for clothes. Everyone treated me as a woman. (I
am a woman.) I saw several women who may have been trans but probably weren't. The thing is, unless we fall under some crazy system like the Nazis, where we would have to wear identifying armbands, how would people know?
There are perennial and persistent threads about passing. Passing is easier for some of us than for others. Passing is also easier the longer we live full-time. And I really have my doubts that complete stealth is even possible. But I'm not sure that is really the issue.
I struggled for quite a while with the question of whether I'm a woman or a pretend-woman. I've finally come to the conclusion that I
am a woman despite some markers to the contrary. (Unfortunately, I still have male genitals, and I probably have XY chromosomes – I never checked.) Am I recognized as being trans when I live my life as a woman? Probably, but I don't know. Other than the people who remember me from before, I just can't tell whether people see me as a somewhat masculine-looking woman or as trans. And I really don't care as long as they treat me as human.
I live in a little Podunk town on the edge of nowhere, so I don't have the experience of doing this in a metropolitan area. But I've spent some time in the metropolitan areas and have found things little different from here (except people aren't as friendly as here). Do you really think that most people who see you are trying to determine if you are trans? And if they think you are trans (determining it in their own minds but may or may not be right), do you think they care that much?
I don't know, Heather. I just don't see it. (But I can be oblivious and tend to be rather naïve.) I'd like to see some other opinions, but this question may be too tough.
Take care, sweetie.
- Kate
Post Merge: October 28, 2009, 11:48:39 AM
OK. I'll try to be more coherent.
I think we are in a time of great social change. As in any period like this, there are those who go along with it – even push it along – and those who resist it.
I think what is happening is that society's view of gender is becoming more fluid. People are coming to realize that you don't have to stay in the gender you were assigned at birth. As TG people become more common-place, they (we) become more acceptable. As the kids wear more androgynous clothes and seem to switch presentation at will, society begins to realize gender is not immutable. As questions like that of the South African runner come up, where a panel of experts couldn't decide whether she is really female, people realize sex and gender are far more complex than previously thought.
I don't think late transitioners have it any easier or harder than early ones – the issues are different is all. (And gradually, the backlog will get cleared out and there won't be many late transitioners.) Those who, for one reason or another, forever seem to be recognized as transsexual will become accepted just as it becomes understood that some people have to transition. I see us heading toward acceptance, not toward the requirement that we wear one mask instead of the other.
How soon before we will see the Promised Land I don't know, but we are MUCH better off now than ten years ago and that was MUCH better than 20 years ago. We'll get there.
- Kate