Quote from: FA on March 19, 2014, 02:23:06 PM
The other thing that always makes me feel bad talking about this kind of thing is the fear that somehow I'll make MAAB people feel bad or sound like I'm accusing them or belittling their experience or something. And a lot of you are my close friends. So I hate that this is such a loaded thing and that some rad fems have turned this around to attack trans women. When really, I just need to talk about things that are eating me up inside, that really bother me. If I'm ever to heal some of the most insidious hang ups I have - very toxic things that are crippling. I'm not sure, but I strongly suspect they're rooted in both trans and female issues. Toxic messages and programming. So, yeah that's where I'm at with this. If I get kinda ranty, I guess it's cause this stuff is really bugging me.
I think the important part to acknowledge is that, regardless of how the trans woman grew up (and folks are starting to transition young enough that they are going to have mixed programming), the experiences they had are still the experiences of a woman. I.e. you are talking about females who grew up being perceived as male and treated as male.
Also the discussion of privilege frequently falls into strange territory, because, as a sociological tool, it was never really intended to describe an individual's experience. It's for analyzing groups within society. I.e., you aren't suggesting that one person's experience is worse or more difficult than another's, you are suggesting that all other things held equal, one particular trait is more valued than another. In this case, male over female.
A reason why some trans feminists in particular get their back up over this topic is that there is a tendency to obscure trans women's experiences post-transition in favour of their experiences pre-transition. And, while it is true that trans women have the advantage of being percieved as "cis male" for a period of time, being perceived as "trans female" post-transition is, well, very bad.
There is also a bit of a tendency as well to universalize "raised female," when that looks extremely different depending on class, country and culture. For example, a straight woman with muscular dystrophy being raised in Australia is going to have a very different experience of being a woman than an able-bodied Palestinian lesbian raised in the West Bank. It tends to be more reasonable to explain a trans woman's childhood of being raised as male as being a particular variety of a woman's childhood, rather than something entirely "other."
Anyway, ya... it's a touchy subject, because, as you said, it has a tendency to get weaponized in transmysogynistic ways. And I think you are doing pretty well at keeping that from happening.
That said, trans communities, due to the laser focus on gender dichotomy, have a tendency to be a breeding ground for sexism. And that leaves us frequently with really awkward things like victim blaming, slut shaming, denial of gender inequalities, threads about "female privilege," and the occasional really inappropriate PM in my inbox. The sexism also isn't entirely limited to the trans women's part of the forums, of course.
I tend to just ignore a lot of that stuff these days in self-defense. It's so constant it's kind of overwhelming.
As to your actual topic: I think there are some slightly odd effects that can be produced from being trans while growing up. Like if you learn as a kid that "girls are meant to be quiet," and you perceive yourself as a girl... do you end up becoming more quiet? Or if you perceive yourself as a boy... do you fight against the programming? I think it creates some unusual dynamics and internal conflicts that cis folks don't experience. A lot of trans folks growing up are super stressed out for a reason, nah?
I wonder where exactly I fit into that stuff myself. The feedback I got when perceived as a boy was that I was "too quiet." Shy, self-effacing, never spoke enough. Now I'm told that I'm very assertive and not afraid to speak up for myself. Did I change or is it just that my actions are being filtered through a differently gendered lens. It seems just about impossible, from my perspective, to really unravel where all my programming came from, or how I ended up the way I am.
What is the programming that you ended up with that you are struggling with? Do you want to talk about it?