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Going Stealth, Good or Bad?

Started by Renae.Lupini, May 26, 2007, 01:50:22 PM

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Renae.Lupini

I completely understand some people's reasoning for wanting to leave their past behind and live in total stealth from the rest of the world. OTOH, how does this way of living help to progress acceptance and understanding for future TS to fully live their life? I am often asked why I don't try to hide the fact I am TS more? I see it as my way to educate people i encounter about what being TS is really all about. To me, if we all lived in stealth then society would just keep perpetuating half-truths and myths about us. Is it so ingrained into us that we should feel guilty or ashamed for being TS that we always live in a constant state of denial of who we are?
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Fer

I suppose that it depends on each person.  To me, being stealth is as important as having genital reconstruction, an absolute necessity.  Frankly I cant afford being discovered
The laws of God, the laws of man, He may keep that will and can; Not I. Let God and man decree Laws for themselves and not for me; And if my ways are not as theirs Let them mind their own affairs. - A. E. Housman
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gothique11

I don't go stealth on purpose. If someone discovers me, I'll educate them. Most of my friends know about me. My co-workers, on the other hand, don't. Very few people question if I'm something other than a regular girl. I don't go out of my way to be stealth, but then I don't go out of my way to announce that I'm TS to everyone I see. I just live my life doing whatever, and if the TS stuff comes up, then I'll talk about it and so on.

Most of my friends know about me because they knew me from before and have been with me through the whole process. I know a lot of people, and people talk. People ask me things, usually awkwardly wondering if I'm going to get offended, but I'm not offended if someone asks. I'd rather have someone ask and learn, rather than rely on TS myths.

--natalie

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Yvonne

Because of my work, I have no choice but to be entirely stealth; besides, it's nobody's business to nose around our personal lives.
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Suzy

Quote from: Yvonne on May 26, 2007, 04:17:54 PM
Because of my work, I have no choice but to be entirely stealth; besides, it's nobody's business to nose around our personal lives.



Kristi
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sarahb

Funny you ask. When I first started out, I was totally against anyone knowing and was planning on being as stealth as possbile. However, the more I accept it and the more I become me, the more I don't really care, since I'm confident with myself. As Natalie said, I'm not going to announce it either way. If it comes up I will educate them, if it doesn't then I won't. Once I go full time, all the people I'll hang out with from my job and other friends will know anyways.
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Kaitlyn

I'm of two minds about going stealth. Actually, pre-transition I was very much for deep stealth, but over time I've started to look it it very differently.

Of course, it's going to depend on the person and the environment they're dealing with for sure, so it's hard to make any general statements. Starting out, I was terrified of being read or outed as TS, in any shape or form. My psychologist probably put it best: I was essentially laden with 'internalized' transphobia. It was extremely difficult for me to even accept being described as 'trans'. I absolutely believe that it was true, but at no point did I really want other people to actually *think* of me that way. Somehow though, as I grew more comfortable with just being myself, it became less important to me.

I'm sure the fact that a college campus is a fairly open environment did help me feel that I can just be myself, and not really concern myself so much with labels and how other people view me. As a result, I'm taking my transition slowly and gradually at my own pace, without being nearly so obsessed (anymore) with being read one way, and having to flip a switch suddenly to be read the other. I really feel like I'm 'growing' into myself, rather than spontaneously trying to contort myself to fit some stereotype.

And the comment about guilt and shame rang true for me. I don't want to feel ashamed of who I am, and as much as possible, I'm not going to let social prejudice force me to hide my background. I don't want to feel afraid that everyone is going to find out my 'big secret', or feel anxious worrying whether I might have accidentally been read.

Which doesn't mean I'm going to march around announcing it to every person I see... but I'm not going to pretend I grew up a normal little girl or whatever, because as much as I wish I did, it's simply not true. Even though I'm not planning to become an activist, I'm still going to try to inform people I know personally.

~k
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cindianna_jones

This question comes up every couple of months and there are loads of posts concerning the stealth subject.  It might be worthwhile to go back and see some of the responses from users past.

Most of us achieve some level of stealth.  Total stealth is very difficult unless you don't visit the physician and have abandoned your family.

I do live most of my life in stealth.  Of course here, I'm not.  I still maintain a relationship with my family, so with them I am not.  My husband knows but he is totally cool with it.  We will discuss specific issues I have from time to time and he is very supportive. Yet, he has never had the desire to know anything of my past.  "I love who you are, not who you were," he will tell me.

Chin up!

Cindi
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tinkerbell

Quote from: Kristi on May 26, 2007, 05:06:31 PM
Quote from: Yvonne on May 26, 2007, 04:17:54 PM
Because of my work, I have no choice but to be entirely stealth; besides, it's nobody's business to nose around our personal lives.



Kristi

Double ditto!

A former post of mine:

Quote from: Tink on June 25, 2006, 11:58:19 PM
I'm stealth, have been so for many years in fact.  I don't usually discuss my past with people at work (I don't know if they know, and I really don't care if they do)  or people I just meet.  As far as telling someone in a relationship, well... in my opinion, that's something different, and I think a partner deserves to know everything about the person s/he is romantically involved with.   Just my opinion.
Tink :icon_chick:

Personally, I don't want the world to see me as a TS; I am a woman and that's all there is to it,  plain and simple, no "buts", no "conditions", no "TS label".  I know that some of you disagree with me, for we've had endless discussions about this topic many times before, but still, it's my choice. ;)

tink :icon_chick:
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Jeannette

Quote from: Tink on May 26, 2007, 08:38:35 PM
Quote from: Kristi on May 26, 2007, 05:06:31 PM
Quote from: Yvonne on May 26, 2007, 04:17:54 PM
Because of my work, I have no choice but to be entirely stealth; besides, it's nobody's business to nose around our personal lives.



Kristi

Double ditto!

Triple Dito!

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Suze

Lots of people (myself included) don't consciously decide to be stealthy, but end up doing it anyway.

If you pass reasonably well, people will assume you are your chosen gender.  With time and reducing dysphoria, you lose contact with many of the people you knew before and while transitioning, and gradually the stakes of being outted increase.  Before you know it, you're quite stealthy.

This is pretty-much how it happened for me.  I transitioned back in the mid-nineties, at the age of 24.  At the time I was committed to being a gender warrior and was very out.  But my relationship with my family went south, and I lost my job (not due to being transsexual - the place just closed its doors).

So I moved interstate, upgraded my qualifications, and got a new job.  The whole time I was expecting questions about my being transsexual, but they just weren't asked.  With every passing year, every small lie told, the stakes get higher.  Coming out to workmates is of similar scariness level to what it was back when I transitioned.  The difference is that now it's optional.

For a few years the only people I had any contact with that knew of my sordid past were my husband and my doctor.  In the last few months I've made a conscious effort to get back into the trans community a little, as being very stealth is a somewhat lonely existance.

I reserve the right to maintain pretty big walls between my trans friends and my colleagues though.
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katia

Quote from: Suze on May 27, 2007, 01:12:41 AM
Lots of people (myself included) don't consciously decide to be stealthy, but end up doing it anyway.

If you pass reasonably well, people will assume you are your chosen gender.  With time and reducing dysphoria, you lose contact with many of the people you knew before and while transitioning, and gradually the stakes of being outted increase.  Before you know it, you're quite stealthy.

i concord with you, suze.  so this is the fifth ditto in reference to this post:

Quote from: Yvonne on May 26, 2007, 04:17:54 PM
Because of my work, I have no choice but to be entirely stealth; besides, it's nobody's business to nose around our personal lives.

terrific!
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Dennis

I'll ditto pretty well everything here. Some people know, others don't, and I don't make a habit of announcing it. Given that I pass, it means I wind up being stealth.

Dennis
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Sandy

To my mind, I feel that people who knew me before I transitioned will never forget that I was born male (yuck).  So my friends, family and coworkers will always have that memory.  I can't do anything about that so to them stealth is impossible so I don't even try.  I am all female though, and that is who they see now.  And now that I've been full time for a little over a month, I'm finding that those people deal with me as a female.  My transition is now old news and as time goes along, that fact will fade, though not disappear from their memory.  That is about as "stealth" as I hope to get.  If someone asks me about being transsexual I will answer their question, but for the most part people don't ask.  I'm happy with that.

Out on the street, however, I am all woman.  I have no intension of wearing a sign that says "transsexual!", though I may at the next gay pride parade ;).  To the store clerk, the waiter, the cop, and everyone else, I want them to see me exclusively as female.  That's because I really feel that way, and I really don't want to endanger myself by being clocked by some random redneck transphobe.  Like someone once said, you can't fix stupid.

My take on the subject.

-Sandy
Out of the darkness, into the light.
Following my bliss.
I am complete...
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Dennis

Quote from: Kassandra on May 27, 2007, 11:42:58 AM
To my mind, I feel that people who knew me before I transitioned will never forget that I was born male (yuck).  So my friends, family and coworkers will always have that memory. 

People do forget. It's funny. I have photo of my Dad when he was about six. People are always asking me, "is that you?" People have asked me if I was in boy scouts, or other all male organizations for kids. When I say no, they realize and sometimes get kind of embarrassed. Hell, I find it flattering. It means that they have forgotten that I didn't grow up male.

Dennis
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Dorothy

Stealth and proud.  I lost track of the dittos.  Tee-heee
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rhondabythebay

I'm not at a place in my life to decide yet and unemployed, so it hasn't come up for me yet except as an intellectual problem. From all the 'my line of work doesn't allow me to' explanations, it points to the very problem of trans people having job rights and people being afraid to have the information out. I'm wondering what are these jobs that don't allow trans people to hold them?

Rhonda
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seldom

Quote from: Renae Lupini on May 26, 2007, 01:50:22 PM
I completely understand some people's reasoning for wanting to leave their past behind and live in total stealth from the rest of the world. OTOH, how does this way of living help to progress acceptance and understanding for future TS to fully live their life? I am often asked why I don't try to hide the fact I am TS more? I see it as my way to educate people i encounter about what being TS is really all about. To me, if we all lived in stealth then society would just keep perpetuating half-truths and myths about us. Is it so ingrained into us that we should feel guilty or ashamed for being TS that we always live in a constant state of denial of who we are?

I think going deep stealth is one of those decisions that it is impossible to do completely.  I think as somebody stating here it leads to a life of fear and loneliness.  How honest you are about your past, and who you are honest with, though is a very personal decision, and it is more dependent on the individual more than anything else. 

I think that all of us want some level of stealth, and live with some level of stealth.  As progressive activist though, well I have no issue with a low level of stealth.   The concept of deep stealth is not appealing to me.  In fact from where I am now, it would be destructive, to my career, to my life, and well it just doesn't match who I am as a person. 

For me going deep stealth would mean abandoning several friendships and a career I am comfortable with, in a segment of society where transsexuality is largely accepted.  I am not going to abandon a lifetime of friendships running from my past, especially when I have extremely accepting friends.

The other thing, is unlike many people, I was never really perceived as being very male.  Even before my decision to transition I had clear issues with gender identity that nearly everybody picked up on quickly.  I was already seen as gender queer, I was very androgynous and I had close ties to the transgender, androgyne and the larger queer community.  So me being TS was not surprising to my friends, and they have been entirely supportive in my transition, and they pretty much see me as a female with physical issues to overcome. 

The other thing is I LOVE my job and profession.  Progressive activism is a wonderful career.  Why would I abandon something I love, especially when my job involves making the world a better place.

Above all else, I am in a place where I can help the community being open about who I am. Because I do have the skills of being a professional activist, and because I am in a place where I can change things for the better.

I am the type of person who has spent years in school, and years in my career fighting injustice.  I think me going deep stealth would be a selfish act that would not only abandon the friends I love, the career I care deeply about, but I would also turn my back on everything I believe in.  I would have never become a professional activist if I was not opinionated and wanted to make the world a better place.     

I have spoken to other trans people in the activist community who are younger (generally this is a professional, highly educated group),  going deep stealth is not really appealing to us, even though passing is not as big of an issue.  I have no shame about my past, and neither do they, and they do not have a large issue with the TS label. 


Some TS become activist because they were forced into it because they did not pass or faced outragous discrimination and had the courage to speak out.  But for those of use who are part of the newer group of transactivists, where we were activists prior to transitioning, abandoning activism, especially when we are professional activists, would betray who we are as individuals. 

Being an activist though is acting and speaking without fear though, and I think that is difficult for many transgender individuals.  You cannot be afraid to speak your mind and be an activist.

For me, going deep stealth betrays my identity as an activist.  I think that one has the balance every aspect of their life.  For me abandoning activism would be huge issue, and going deep stealth would abandon that part of my identity.   

The stealth I desire, is walking down the street, shopping, etc.  The stealth of everyday life.  In my career, in my friendships, and in my activism, I have no shame and no issue with speaking out.   

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LostInTime

Why go stealth? because there are a lot of hateful, narrow minded people out there.

I could probably go stealth and, to some degree, have done so. I no longer bring it up in conversation unless there was a question or concern from someone that already knows about me. I do not hide the fact that I am TS, I just do not offer it up. I no longer do lectures for college classes although if I were to be asked to do so, I would consider it.

All of us have different needs, wants, and expectations. We cannot all walk the same path but we can share it with others from time to time.
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Emma_J

some ppl live to be stealth I prefer to be stealth enough to live
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