I just came across this article online that I think is worthwhile to read:
"the_emergence_and_danger_of_the_acceptable_trans_n on the bilerico site from March 2013"
This is the 'acceptable trans narrative' that the author sees problems with:
"This is the story everyone can write: Ever since childhood, so-and-so felt they were "trapped in the wrong body." They wanted to wear the clothes and play with the toys of the other gender. They were bullied and ostracized. As they grew up, they became depressed. Perhaps even suicide was considered or attempted. Eventually they got the help they needed and transitioned to the opposite gender through hormones and surgery. They're much happier now, but things are still tough and they struggle sometimes."
I have to agree with what the author says about this. That 'acceptable trans narrative', the author's term for the stereotypical transgender person's story that most cis people are familiar with, does represent many trans people. However, for each trans person that DOES represent, there are many more of us that it does not. Not everyone gets their happy ending. Not everyone can afford to transition. Too many trans people are the victims of violent hate crimes. There are also transgender youth who aren't accepted by their families and either end up homeless or coerced into repressing their true gender - and this can have tragic consequences, such as in the case of Leelah Alcorn. The 'acceptable trans narrative' doesn't represent these less-privileged trans people who don't get their happy ending.
Heck, for many of us, transitioning isn't even as simple as 'transitioning to the opposite gender through hormones and surgery' because we don't fit into the gender binary. There are plenty of us nonbinary people out there who either have a gender that isn't recognized by society at large as legitimate or, like me, have no gender in a world where everyone sees them as gendered. Us nonbinary people, whether genderqueer, agender, genderfluid, bigender, demigender, and so on, tend to be overlooked by the media when they do represent transgender people because we don't fit into the 'acceptable trans narrative' because we're neither MtF nor FtM.
I'm not trying to say the 'acceptable trans narrative' is completely 'wrong'. If you write a simple, summarized narrative to sum up the experiences of transgender people, it would be arguably one of the most representative. The problem with it is that the lives and stories of transgender people are too diverse to sum up with one large generalization. The 'acceptable trans narrative' doesn't need to be done away with; there just needs to be more representation of trans people who DON'T fit into that narrative, and their stories need to be seen as just as 'acceptable' as this one.
Anyway, there's my two cents. Feel free to share whatever opinions you may have.
Mod Edit: sorry the posting of links to external sites is not allowed (ToS1) apologies, I have edited to show the location of the information.