Quote from: Matilda on January 05, 2010, 09:39:00 PM
To the world & to society, I'm female in every sense of the word. Plain and simple. Society put its stamp of approval on my life a LONG time ago.

Bully for you. Shall we schedule a parade?
I'm beginning to see why everyone says these threads always end in hostility.
For my part, the issue is NOT what "you call me" - you can call me anything you like, I'm not bound by the words you use
(the general generic "you" - i.e. "anyone")
when I entered this discussion it was to speak of what words
I would like to use or see use
to best communicate to those who haven't lived this experience just what is going on.
Do
I know my gender has always been female and hasn't "transed" anything?
Of course.
That and a buck might get me a cup of coffee. Communication isn't about what is going on between my ears, it's about how I can convey an idea to a person who doesn't understand it.
Now, it can certainly be argued that "transsexual" does the job better than "transgender" or the reverse - that's a perfectly valid discussion and one that should easily be discussable without much emotion.
Discussing how we can best communicate with others shouldn't be a loaded discussion.
On the other hand, if this was a discussion of "my label for me is the only right label for me and you best HEED!" then, well, I have no interest in that nonsense.
labels - all of them - are the problem, not the solution. (and yes, that includes "male" and "female" because that just invites disagreement about whether one is legitimately entitled to claim the label).
Post Merge: January 06, 2010, 02:07:12 AM
Quote from: devi ever on January 05, 2010, 09:39:48 PM
Because people with such genital / hormonal deformities are often discriminated against, regardless if they identify as male, female, transsexual, transgender, or androgyne, and (unfortunately for some of us who object to the semantics) "transgender" is the blanket term for such things.
I've said this once, and I'll say it again, the one thing most, what I simply call, "trans" people I know share is a life-long hormonal imbalance that pushed their body into growth they don't feel comfortable with, and put them in a world of hurt in dealing with the social / psychological repercussions of such deformities.
To ignore the fact that we live in a world where trans people, regardless of their self-identity, are discriminated against (I myself have experienced multiple occurrences of such sad truths in this world), and to say we should throw it away because the government / science decides to use a label some of us are uncomfortable with is just... silly.
The medicine might taste bad, but if it helps, it helps.
I think you missed tekla's point entirely.
Or I did.
If I understood the point, I find myself in agreement with it.