Quote from: Matilda on January 01, 2010, 07:37:05 PM
"Acceptance" & "tolerance" is what you get when people know that you are NOT female in the first place.
In other words......"Okay, I know you AREN'T female but I 'accept/tolerate' you as one anyway"
In the real world, far away from La La land, women don't get "accepted" or "tolerated" as female/women, we simply are female/women, and everyone knows that.
Quote from: Marie731 on January 01, 2010, 08:06:51 PM
Great points!
The difference though, IMHO, is that a gay person is always doing something "different," in the sense of having same-sex relationships. They really can't "assimilate" into the mainstream, they can only hope to be accepted as being different, but just as valid.
Yes, there are those for whom being a transsexual becomes something of a open and proud "lifestyle," with TS cruises and TS seminars and TS bars and TS outings and... you get the idea. And for those people, "acceptance" is what they must hope and strive for. Acceptance for being different, but equally valuable. They set themselves apart from the mainstream as "transgender women" in a "transgender community" and demand to be considered equal, but not the "same." And sure, for those people, their struggles and aims are similar to the GLB.
But for me, it's just not part of my life. I don't hide it, but I don't "identify" as a TS either. I'm not "stealth," nor am I out and proud. I'm not part of any community outside of my neighbors, friends and family.
So by "assimilate" I don't mean I'm hiding or deceiving anyone, I just mean my life doesn't revolve around all this gender identity stuff. I just go to work and live my life without any thought of "gender issues" or doing "TS things," same as so-called normal people do. And if some people consider that deceptive or hiding, then that's really more telling about their issues more than minetev
I so completely agree with everything you both said.
It's like saying people with AIS or Swyer syndrome are being dishonest if they don't reveal that fact to everyone the meet (a sentiment I have actually heard in the past as well).
I do think it's being dishonest to withhold something like that from a serious partner, given that it's something they would probably want to know. But I don't see how withholding it from anyone else is deceptive.
If you're not planning to sleep with them, it's none of their business.
Call it deceit, stealth, whatever, but I don't see why people should even feel this need to be "out".
If we were truly "accepted", there would be no more need to divulge this fact of our medical history anymore than to withhold it.
I'm actually not too fond of the "openly proud trans" kinda mindset. In the same way that I think openly flamboyant gays don't do too many favors to the gays that act no different to any other guy.
If we want to be accepted, we need to show that we're not "trans" as opposed to male or female, we're trans as well as being male or female. Acting outside the norm doesn't help that perception.
I really don't want to sound like I'm trying or wanting to stop anyone expressing themselves however they like. I'm just saying that I don't think this "I am trans first and foremost" attitude is helpful to us as far as true acceptance.
Tolerance is not the same as acceptance. Trans acceptance should be that we're seen no differently to any other medical condition, and most of all that this isn't perceived a choice, either by personality or lifestyle.
I never asked to or would have chosen to be TS, in the Transgender spectrum, GLBT, or whatever, and I don't feel any compelling desire to be apart of it any more than I have to be.
It's great that there are people sticking up for our rights as human beings, and some of the most inspirational people to me are the one's who dedicate themselves to showing that they're normal people, who just happen to have been born trans, out in the open. But that's not what I ever wanted to be about, and I don't feel like I should be forced to be "out" or made to feel guilty about it, when I never choose to be this way.