Quote from: Elsa.G on May 22, 2013, 10:57:11 PM
a while back i had some female cousins gang up on me when i was explaining to them that I was a woman just like them and of course they brought up all the biological stuff about how my DNA and all that says otherwise
This. This might be where you've gone wrong.
We know that female is female, and it doesn't matter whether you're a natural born female or a trans woman because gender isn't sex, and a woman isn't defined by her vagina and breasts but by what is in her mind and her genes.
But this isn't how most of the cisgendered see it. To many of them sex and gender are one of the same thing and unless you were born with a vagina there's no way possible that you can be female.
It's an extremely narrow view of gender and bears very little in relation to the reality of medical science or biology but it's usually pointless trying to explain because the mind is firmly closed and they are right.
Please try for a minute to stand in their shoes and look at this through their eyes. They were born girls, they were raised as girls and brought up to be women and it's a lengthy process of socialization and conditioning.
From their perspective all you've done is made yourself look like a woman, take hormones, and do all the usual stuff of transitioning and yet you're claiming to be equal to them. This is what they find unacceptable.
This is why I keep saying that it doesn't matter how passable you are, it doesn't matter whether or not you can live in stealth or not, because the key to gaining acceptance from the cisgendered lies almost entirely in your ability to integrate yourself into their world.
On Kuan Yin's 'Empathy' thread I made the point that many people don't have empathy. This is precisely a shining example of why I hold that view. I suspect that none of these women have ever had their femininity or gender identity challenged or called into question so they don't see it. But my point is that because they don't have any empathy, they're not making any effort to see it either.
It's a sad fact that being trans in today's society puts you in a position where you have to pick and choose your battles. Sometimes when you're coming out to people you have to make concessions and quite often one of the concessions you have to make is that you have to play up the bit about being trans to highlight the difference between you and the cisgendered.
If you're claiming to be a woman just like them then you're giving them quite a lot of ammunition to use against you if they choose not to accept you. But if you come across as a trans woman who's every bit as female as they are but without the rites of passage and but for a few inches of flesh here and there then there's not much they can say to argue against you.
The payoff of course is being accepted as female by other women.
Please don't think by what I've posted here that I'm suggesting that you're the one with the problem. You're not. They're the ones with the problem, pretty much the same as anyone who cannot accept someone just because they're trans. It's their issue and it's something you should never feel responsible for.
I mean, are they so insecure in their own gender identity that they feel threatened by a trans woman? Bless their hearts (and yes I do mean that in the exact same way as is said in the South). What is it to them just to accept you for who you are and as a female just like them? I mean, it's not going to cost them any money is it?
In your shoes I would probably look at leaving and starting all over again somewhere where people are a bit more open-minded but if you can't do that then you're going to have to stick to your guns and keep repeating to yourself over and over again that it's them that have the issue, not you.