Lately I've seen several threads in which one person observes that trans* people (mostly transwomen) are not the same as cispeople (specifically ciswomen). This usually seems to end up with one person giving a thumbs down on the reputation system to the one who said it. And sometimes is followed by the person who got the thumbs down getting a thumbs down for giving them a thumbs down.
But can we just have an honest and frank conversation about the issue? Perhaps we could agree to not give anyone thumbs up or thumbs down for the purposes of this one thread just so we can talk about it. It's an issue that I, for one, find very troublesome to understand in my own life and I'd really like it if we could just talk through it. It would really help me. And it might help others too.
I understand myself as a person who was basically socialized female, tried to absorb male socialization, have up, and that's how I found myself where I am. This creates issues for me in the trans* community because people tend to assume I was born biologically male, socialized male, and the transitioned to female and tried very hard to conform to female social norms. In reality, I would say the opposite is much more true and I do not understand myself that way at all. I'm just reverting to how I learned to be when I was growing up.
This affects me a main reason for me to give up trying to be a guy was the social stuff. For example: I went to a workplace happy hour that was in progress. The first conversation group I came to was abut four guys talking about school hijinks that got into in their youth and other such mischief. The conversation might as well have been Swahili. I ended up standing there for probably 10-20 minutes. I had absolutely nothing to contribute, no similar past experiences, and no clue what was going on. I eventually wandered off. The next conversation I joined was a pair of women colleagues who were talking about movies, books, and the like. That conversation was easy. We had the same tastes in movies. We had read many of the same books. But it was like being a guest. There was this huge, gender based social divide where women lived on one side and men on another. I couldn't fit with the men, so I couldn't live there. But the women only saw me as a visitor so I couldn't live there. I had no space for me to be at home. This happened right as I was finally breaking and becoming unable to continue living in male mode and I cried about it for about 3 days. But it was not the last time. The same basic scenario repeated itself every time I was with a group of guys who wanted to talk about football, martial arts movies, their life histories, dating, politics, work, and so on. It might as well have been Swahili. I could not speak the language. And I couldn't participate in conversations with guys as one of the guys and I could only be a guest and a foreigner, however welcome, among women. So I had nowhere to be and ended up very alone as a result.
When I go and interact with trans* people, and especially transwomen, the same thing tends to repeat. The male socialization and the learned behavior patterns show in transwomen. And they seem to expect me to share that same socialization, same learned behaviors, and so on. So the conversation turns to football, martial arts movies, life history, dating, politics, work, and so on. And it might as well be Swahili. And I'm again left unable to participate, say anything, or have anywhere else to belong. Transmen tend to be closer to my wavelength, but there is a factor of "ewww, you're a girl, so you're an outsider." And more than once, I have walked away from trans* spaces in tears. There have been times I have almost literally had to get up and run.
I am a trans* community organizer and advocate because no matter how you slice it, I'm affected by the same issues as anyone else on the trans* spectrum and I've gotten hurt badly because of them. I also firmly believe that identities are real and valid and they should be respected. And I believe in simple, basic fairness and kindness to others. But I don't know how long I will keep it up because of this. I have to be careful how much time I spend in trans* spaces and which ones I spend it in. But ciswomen and their spaces are a radically different experience. They just take me at face value and I fit right in. The same is true with cismen. They are a whole lot easier to deal with now that I'm no longer seen as one of them and the rules that apply to men interacting with other men do not apply to be.
I won't get into the biological stuff here. But there are differences in how transwomen vs ciswomen and transmen vs cismen interact with themselves and others. Just because a transwoman identifies as a woman (and that identity should be respected) does not mean that all the learning she gained while living as male about how to be in the world suddenly vanishes into thin air when she transitions. The same is true for transmen. And that's true for me too. I may have been socialized female, but I spent enough time trying to live as a man that I am a somewhat socially retarded woman in the world. I know I act at least ten years younger than I am.
So this is me baring my soul a bit to talk about a difficult part of what my life is like. It may or may not match up with others' experiences. But I hope we can have an open, honest, and frank talk about it. No one is dismissing or disrespecting anyone else's identity. In fact, if life is a soup, then trans* people being different from cispeople is the spice that keeps that soup from being boring. And maybe the biggest lesson of my experience is not that trans* people are different from cispeople! but that trans* people are different from one another. No matter how you slice it, it's a good thing as long as we are willing to be honest and make room to take others at face value and give them space to just be who they are.
And can we please not get into the +1 and -1 with the reputation system? No thumbs up or thumbs down in this thread? Just let people talk without worrying whether people approve or disapprove of what they have to say?