On Dominant Narratives and Why Trans People Lie
Posted by helenboyd – October 8, 2012
http://www.myhusbandbetty.com/2012/10/08/on-dominant-narratives-and-why-trans-people-lie/This is a really fascinating article written by a trans person and sent to me by one too, and it echoes a lot of the thought and sentiment of the MHB Boards over the years.
But it's true that, before I said it, I carefully mined my personal history for examples of how I was never really a girl. And when I presented my decision to transition to my friends and family, it was with the "always knew" narrative well rehearsed. In that, I'm like almost every other trans* person I've ever talked to about the coming out process.
Why is "I always knew" the common narrative? Why do so many of us tell some version of that story even if it isn't true?
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Transgender Narratives: Why We Lie
October 1, 2012 in Zach McCallum by Zach
http://www.owldolatrous.com/?p=838I really couldn't tell you why trans* people have become so much more interesting to the media and acceptable to governments than they once were, but I welcome the change, since I'm one of them.
But as the cultural narrative expands to include 'transgender person' as a stock character, it does so in a way that's, well, just a stock character. The trans* person in the public eye is almost always some variant on the woman who was born with a penis and just "always knew" she was female, or the boy born with a vagina who refused to wear a single dress and never touched a Barbie Doll.
It's a nice, easily packaged, easily understood story, and sometimes it's even true. Some of us do know (and as those recent news articles reported, some are even lucky enough to begin transition) before puberty. But others live entire lifetimes as one sex, and then at the age of seventy or eighty or ninety, make the change. Many, like me, transition in early-to-mid adulthood after months or years of soul-searching and introspection. And there are people who identify as something other than male or female, who don't jump across the line from boy to girl or girl to boy, but take up residence in the broad middle plain known as genderqueer.