I'm still very hesitant about this word 'transsexual'. I know a lot of us use it, but I'm a bit of a word nut and at least when applied to me, it doesn't feel accurate. I don't mean that I feel any different than most of the people here, but sometimes words sneak into our vocabulary and we use them without taking a deeper look at what's behind them.
My issue is this: what exactly is 'trans' about being 'transsexual'?
Dictionary.com gives this definition for the prefix 'trans-':
1. a prefix occurring in loanwords from Latin (transcend; transfix); on this model, used with the meanings "across," "beyond," "through," "changing thoroughly," "transverse," in combination with elements of any origin: transisthmian; trans-Siberian; transempirical; transvalue.
Now, for people who are on the outside watching us, I can see how things like 'across' or 'changing thoroughly' could make sense when applied to our sex/gender situation. But from my perspective, on the inside, there's nothing 'across' or 'beyond' or 'changing thoroughly' about my sex/gender situation. I'm just me, I've always been me, it's just I've spent 27 years playing the part in a script that other people have given me. I mean this is what happens to 99% of people: the doctor pulls you out of the womb and looks between your legs. Depending on whats there, they say 'boy' or 'girl' and that defines the entirety of your experience for the rest of your life, not because it says anything about
you, but because everyone else in the world will treat you one way or another because of what the doctor said.
So for me, 'being transsexual is like' having the courage to tell everyone in the world, you know what, the doctor was wrong, and I'm done playing by his/her script for my life. And by 'tell' I mean either through words (which some of us are okay with), or just action and presentation (for those of us who may want to put past gender scripts behind us).
As for the word 'transsexual', people can use it for me if it helps them talk about me without tripping over themselves, but it's not a word I use for myself.