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Agreed.
The day is for the holiday, not about the 'coming out day' for the one in transition.
Allow these examples.
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One cousin invited me all-expences-paid on a cross-country trip to her wedding (June 1984). Everyone in my extended family knew my history. Talk, other than gossip, was kept to a minimum; only one question remained unknown among us all, 'When would they last see Nick and first see Sharon?'.
Sure, I could have attended as Sharon. I was already presenting part-time female and part-time male (mostly only at work and church). But the wedding was for the couple and their immediate families, not my presentation. There I am in the various wedding pictures as Nick / male, not Sharon / female. Rightly so; it was too soon for me.
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Once you are full-time female and once everyone knows who you want to know (directly or indirectly), then there is that certain naturalness to appear as your transitioned persona to such special events.
It came that another cousin cross-state invited me to her wedding (1988); by then I had long been female full-time forever, post-op five years, and everyone throughout family knew my finality. Yet this cousin had the explicit demand that I was permitted to attend only as Nick / male. Unless this was to have been a ->-bleeped-<- attire event, her demand to me was obviously unreasonable.
My father came to give me a ride, brought a most horrid-looking men's suit of orange-brown shade made of polyester, and told me that I either wore that suit or I did not go. Yech! No man should ever have worn that monstrosity let alone a woman. My presence as Sharon / female would have meant no ripples among anyone; I did not attend.
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The message can get worse.
Two years later (1990), my sister got married. She never as much gave an invite to me; she wanted nothing of my attendance. She still considers me an embarrassment.
Her daughter's wedding will be in a few months. My sister told me that I am un-welcomed to her daughter's wedding.
This is when it gets plain and simple to me: family is clearly telling me that I am ostracised.
These latter situations are when it has nothing to do with whether anyone appears as their 'before' or their 'after', but that you are not welcomed whatsoever at any and all events.
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