Quote from: jker86 on July 26, 2013, 10:35:30 AMI'm not 100% sure on any of this but the proposition is this:- I am female, 100% always was and always will be. when I was in the womb, something happened and made my body produce too much androgens. This caused my female body to grow male parts and those male parts proceeded to 'terraform' my body into the resemblance of a male. This of course caused the doctors and those around me to incorrectly label me a boy. and of course now a man.
Hmm... while I definitely agree that I'm not a fan of all the connotations that come along with the term "trans," which implies that I was a "normal" guy and just randomly decided to change myself into being a "normal" woman instead, and also which still adheres obnoxiously to the cultural gender binaries, I think your description of it still kind of rubs me the wrong way.
I mean, the way that you put it, to other people it's going to sound like you were born with XX chromosomes, and yet due to high testosterone exposure, you grew male genitals. Kind of like the opposite of Androgen-Insensitivity Syndrome or something.
I don't know. At its core level, this really is no different than any other congenital medical condition, and I wish that it would be seen more as such rather than as just a conscious decision. But it's admittedly a very hard thing to explain, because most people don't know just how much their bodily and mental development is completely dependent on prenatal exposure to sex hormones. That's really what needs to become more-public knowledge. Especially since speaking about it in that way would do a LOT to include everyone in the description, and not just those who were completely dichotomously trans since they were little kids. (Because not all of us grow up knowing that we should have been female. I, for example, looking back, can ALWAYS see that I behaved in a more feminine manner, and yet, admittedly, I didn't have a female gender identity as a kid. My gender didn't start feeling "wrong" until my body was filled with male sex hormones as a teenager for the first time. So I don't think I really can say that I was always a girl. I do think that my mind developed in a way that made it programmed to run on estrogen and not programmed to run on testosterone, but I really do think that I fall somewhere more in the middle. So if I say it in that way, saying that I really am a completely normal female, and yet had a genetic defect that made me look male, I'd personally feel like I'd be lying. Because I personally see it more like yes, I'm technically male, but due to a lack of exposure to androgens during a certain phase of fetal development, my body and mind never got the "keys" that told them that they were going to eventually develop as male, and therefore they developed in a way that was more female, expecting to have estrogen and go through a female puberty, and yet they went through a male one instead due to my chromosomes, and so this male development never felt "right" to me.)
I don't know. Again, I just feel like the description you came up with is too binary. Saying that it's due to a lack of androgen exposure is probably more accurate, because then it means that not all were exposed to the same amount, and therefore it's a spectrum. And again, I feel like I fall somewhere more in the middle, so I'd appreciate a bit more of an inclusive term. Really, it's just because people aren't widely aware just how much their development is so completely dependent on prenatal exposure to sex hormones. That's really what we need to work on getting out there.