It seems so often that I hear the phrase 'Living a lie' when relating the trans* experience. I'm curious, how many here really identify with this?
For me, I actually latched on to the phrase at first. Because there was a big lie, it started at day #1 of my life, the lie that I was a boy. That lie caused all kinds of hell that I'm even going to go into. But when I realized the truth, when I accepted the girl that I am, I looked back at all the years of pain I put myself through; I could see the deception so clearly and thought to myself "God I was such a fool! How could I live such a complete and total lie!? Why didn't I realize this sooner?"
So in that sense, I get the sentiments of the phrase. But... there is also an added connotation, and this is what has been slowly grating on me for a while now. To say you've been living a lie also implies that you had the knowledge of the lie, that you had been deceitful, lacked integrity, and were basically lying to everyone. I've even read coming out letters that say as much, that we lied to everyone and are the best liars in the world--and jokingly that we should all be actors, lawyers, and politicians, cuz we'd be the best at it.
I've also seen it in statements made from one transitioner to another, conveying how they lacked integrity and were deceitful and untrustworthy when making a very serious life choice (marriage), and how could they do such a thing without sharing the truth?!

But I digress, that's a rant for another day...
I just want to talk about this idea that seems to have infected our community--that we have been living a lie and are liars, that we are the deceivers.
I cannot express how much I do not relate or agree with this narrative nor how strongly I feel that this needs to stop being perpetuated.There is so much shame and guilt that comes with that narrative. And that is shame and guilt that we do not need to own. This lie did not start with us, it was not from our own intention. It was born out of ignorance and a lack of knowledge and understanding, nourished by fear and intolerance, and told to us in almost every interaction. From the doctor who delivered us and marked that gender on our birth certificate, to our parents, our families, friends, religious groups, society, and the world. Is it really our fault if we didn't understand but just went along with what everyone was telling us? I'm not saying it was everyone else's fault either, they were just relating based on what they could see with their eyes. But they had no true perspective though as they could not feel how we felt inside. They did not understand the wrongness that was there.
Fortunately, there is a lot more education and acceptance about being transgender out there now. And as knowledge and acceptance grows the lie is becoming less and less destructive and the truth much easier to see.
But back to what I was saying. The lie was never our own. We did not give it birth. It may have left it's mark upon us, but we did not live it. We did not perpetuate it--we fought against it in a mighty epic battle! It was difficult wrestling with that bastard and for some of us it took away years of our lives. My point here is this:
We weren't living a lie, we were just living the truth as best as we knew how.At least that's how my narrative is going to be. I shoulder no shame from the choices I made in the past. I was doing the best I knew how according to what I thought was right.
There was an immense amount of self-sacrifice, loyalty, trustworthiness, honesty, and yes, even integrity. For while I may not have felt whole or complete, I was living whole and complete according to my knowledge and beliefs at the time. Over the years new experiences and allowing myself to question some things that just didn't feel right slowly brought me around to the truth. So yes, I can look back and see how wrong my life and some of the choices I made were before. But I didn't have the knowledge I have now back then and I can't hold myself accountable for that. No one should. That's just how life is, we learn and grow from experience and then we hopefully adjust accordingly.
Living the truth as we learn of and are capable of accepting it, that is integrity.
Anyway, I'll step down from the soap box now. But seriously, next time I see someone conveying shame and guilt over having lived a lie, especially if it's projected onto another member, I'm going to send a serious virtual slappity slap!
Actually probably more like a gentle nudge
I love you all. This community has been amazingly awesome and without it my heart would be a much emptier place.
So please know that anything I've said here is only because of that love and because I want to bring to light anything that I feel may be detrimental to the community, however subtle it may be in this case.