Quote from: Michelle. on February 07, 2011, 01:02:17 AM
I am transitioning and I am Legally Blind.
I find this entire topic to be offensive and verging on exclusionary.
I think this question or similar ones are asked sometimes because we wonder about the nature of gender identity and whether it is inherent in biology or a purely a social construction or due both to biology and social interactions. I suspect it is some of both but I don't think there is a definitive answer.
Our senses are a large part of our social interactions and knowledge of ourselves so asking how we might feel if this or that sense were missing is just trying to explore these ideas about gender identity. I don't think anyone posting here wanted to offend anyone. If we had no senses at all, we would have no social interactions at all, right? The degree to which missing one or more senses affects us probably depends on whether we were born without that sense or lost it after experiencing it, since we would have memories of it if we lose it.
I know we can be very sensitive to the slightest suggestion that our GID condition is not legitimate or that someone could apply some arbitrary criteria to tell us we don't need to transition. When I saw your post Michelle, I looked carefully at all the other posts to see whether anyone suggested anything exclusionary but I can't see it. Everyone has only stated what they might do themselves and so far there was only one poster who believes the lack of sight might prevent them from wanting to transition and I hope you would agree they should have the right to decide that for their self. For myself I am with the majority, I don't believe blindness would have changed my desire to transition.
Now with your post I see you are a real life example of someone experiencing the very thing that was being pondered and it does not change your mind. If you do continue reading here and if you are willing to share with us, I am curious whether you have in fact experienced someone telling you that you should not transition because of your blindness and how you have handled it. Then there is the difference between wanting to transition and how to actually accomplish it. I can only imagine the extra difficulties you must have Michelle, compared to my own transition.