Earlier this week, a fairly naive friend asked me how I could be transgender if I didn't like men. One thought led to another, and now I am sitting here ruminating on just how ingrained the idea of what it means to be a trans* woman is-you need to be feminine, heterosexual, like wearing heels on a daily basis, want to marry a man who will take care of you, grow your hair out-I could go on but you all get what I'm saying. We need to fit into these stereotypical roles to prove that we are women. And some of you here do, but others (like myself) don't, and I feel like our community is really suffering as a result of this fairytale we've whipped up: If you are trans, you must have known from the day you were born. You must have cross-dressed as a child. You must have thought you were gay and suppressed those thoughts, until at some point you decided to get a plane ticket to Thailand and that's it-you're the women you were always meant to be! You can't be bisexual, or gay, or lesbian. You can't have a sexuality that is anything other than vanilla, and you certainly can't connect your sexuality to your identity in any way. You can't identify as something other than male or female, and not look exactly like what you identify as.
This is idiotic, and I wish I could say that I've only seen this among uneducated cis people-but that's not true. I saw a trans* woman I met briefly going on about how a transgender person who doesn't seek out surgery isn't actually trans*. And I've seen it here too-I'm not writing this in the interest of starting a fight, that's the opposite of what this is about. What this is about is expressing how upset I am that this mentality exists in the community. If someone says they are trans*, they are trans*. There are transgender people who don't want surgery, and their experiences are valid. There are trans* people who have traditional, binary identities and want to fit into traditional roles in society. Those identities are valid, with the understanding that there are identities outside that binary. There are also people who do not subscribe to traditional gender binary, and our experiences are valid too, with the understanding that we aren't saying yours are any less valid. And people who don't want (or in my case, cannot access) surgery, don't fit neatly into one category or another, don't fit into the standard narrative-yeah, we do face a few more obstacles than a stealth post-op transsexual. But her experiences are just as valid as my transgrogynous ones, and neither of us has the right to put the other down.
I understand that it's a bit alarming for a binary person to see someone living without the system that their identity is based in. And sometimes it's a bit weird for us to see people who identify as part of a system that we feel restricts us. But guess what? We are all trans*. We all face oppression for more or less the same reasons. We have similar needs, and we need to all make sure that the needs of all transgender people are met, no matter how they identify. We need to stop treating the identity of any transgender person and the struggles they face as a personal challenge. We are all in the same boat for better or for worse, and the sooner we stop shouting at one another the moment someone brings up how it is harder for non-binary non-straight people to get hormones or how important passing is to some (often, but not exclusively binary identified) trans* people, the sooner we will be on our way towards a community that welcomes people of diverse experiences and identities.
This is important. Frankly, I'm a bit sick to my stomach that an online community of some of the most oppressed people in the world feel the need to fight one another in interest of securing a standard narrative within the community-this isn't a one sided thing that's going on (and frankly, there should not BE sides here). Anyhow, I'm done with this post, but anyone who reads this-please. Please. Can't we just accept that we are all trans, and we are all different?
Thanks.