Quote from: K8 on December 19, 2009, 02:20:15 PM
OOPS. Sorry I wasn't clear.
I am seeing people who knew me for many years pretending to be a man and who assumed I was a man. I want to be able to describe to them what it is to be transsexual - to be born a girl with a boy's body (or vice versa). I don't want to get into an argument about how much of a girl I am. I want to help people who knew me before know what it has been like for me.
OK. Assuming you are talking to people who knew you when you presented in the opposite gender and who assumed you were that gender, how can you help them understand what your experience was like?
My life, being born in the body of the wrong gender, has been like ...
- Kate
What it felt like emotionally?
Like a fugitive. In the sense that a person who is, for instance, an escaped prisoner or subject to arrest though they are actually innocent.
You have to maintain the "cover" and the false front you present is always uncomfortable not only because it's not really you, but also because you are never 100% certain that you are "pulling off" the deception.
Technically you are free of imprisonment, but spiritually you are just as bound.
When you finally realize you are innocent of any crime and don't have to hide, it is only then that you are truly free.
Alternately, I have another thought on your "misprint" analogy - in that it's the sort of metaphor in which you describe how you precieve the world more than how the world precieves you...
try this and see if it communicates the same idea in a simpler way:
Tell the person you are talking to to cover one eye. Now tell them to assume that that is the only way they had ever seen the world - without depth perception. YOU see the world around you but in a not-quite-normal and natural way. it's only when you see it unobstructed that see life the way it is meant to be seen.
does that convey the same thought?