Quote from: arice on February 20, 2017, 07:45:05 PM
Being pregnant never made me feel womanly.
Ditto. In fact, this is one of the things that most surprised me about pregnancy: like most of us, I'd swallowed the line that pregnancy & childbirth are the most womanly thing you could do and I'd hoped it would make me feel like a woman. Kinda like the large numbers of trans women who join the military in a desperate attempt to 'man up', I got married & fell pregnant as a way of trying to 'woman up'. Well, I wanted my own biological kids anyway so I thought I could kill two birds with one stone and finally be happy in my own skin.
It didn't work. Quite the reverse.
Instead, I found that I felt even more alienated from the women around me, especially the pregnant ones. They were all bonding over a shared experience but I felt like an imposter, cleverly disguised as a woman but feeling desperately out-of-place in a female-only space doing something that society tells us is a woman-only thing. I felt like a secret agent who had infiltrated spaces that I shouldn't be able to access. It was a very weird feeling. But at the same time it was kinda cool: it occurred to me that I was experiencing one of the most amazing things a human being can experience, and this is something that most men aren't capable of experiencing. But by some bizarre stroke of luck I happened to have been born with the same male brain as other guys, but with the reproductive organs that enabled me to do something many men (and women, for that matter) wish they could do. It was thrilling, and an awesome privilege.
I learned that if your core identity is masculine then
nothing you do will change the core of who you are. A trans guy who happens to be pregnant is still 100% a guy no matter what anyone else may think. You don't magically transform into a woman just because you choose to use a bunch of organs.
Quote from: arice on February 20, 2017, 07:45:05 PM
Being treated as a "mom" by society is a particular form of torture for me
Same here, and for the reasons stated above. In my society (the UK) the role of 'Mum' is almost fetishised. The British get a bit weird about quite a few things, and the role of 'Mum' is one of them. For example, when taking my kids to hospital I've had triage nurses ask me "Are you Mum?" as a means of introduction, which is a very strange question for me. Because where I grew up, they'd ask for your actual name & then after that they'd ask for your relationship to the child. A subtle distinction, but a very important one: it shows that the role of 'Mum' is more respected and more valid in the UK than your own individual identity. Here, they don't care who you actually are... they only care about your identity in the context of your role as a caregiver to a child, as if that's more important than who you actually are. Very strange, and very uncomfortable.
Quote from: arice on February 20, 2017, 07:45:05 PM
That said, I know many people with uteruses who have no desire to be pregnant and I completely respect that choice. All I ask for is equivalent respect.
Me too. I have some heterosexual cisgender female friends who have never had children because they are horrified by the thought of pregnancy/childbirth and many actively dislike kids. In fact, one of my daughters feels this way, so I accept that there won't be any grandkids coming from her direction. Many people - irrespective of sex or gender - are grossed out by the idea of pregnancy and childbirth, and that's perfectly fine. I respect that 100% and agree with the way they choose to live their lives. They've made the right choices for themselves, and I'm making the right choices for me.
Quote from: arice on February 20, 2017, 07:45:05 PM
I have always wanted kids (though I don't actually like other children) and birthing them was the way I got them. I don't regret it for a minute.
Same here. And I
really dislike other people's snotty brats. But pregnancy was amazing; childbirth is a life-changing adventure; and parenthood is a lifelong journey in which you get the privilege to get to know someone brand-new whilst they're learning about themselves. I'd do it again in a heartbeat.