So I've just got in tonight from meeting up with an old friend from university, where we met 10 years ago and had a close set of friends. Since then, we've known each other in a more distant way. She's always presented as male, but goes by a female name, and describes herself as gender variant.
I hadn't seen her in years and I told her about my figuring out I was trans, along with other life stuff that's happened. I was surprised, given her experience, that she didn't take the news very well. I didn't really expect to have to defend why I'm trans or get into the nitty gritty, nor should I have to. I gave her an example and she ran over it and said that it didn't mean anything--but it does mean something to me, as just one thing in a lifetime of things that now make sense. But the piece that really struck me was that she said something along the lines of 'all trans guys sell out and join the patriarchy/no longer support feminism.' Which is obviously not true, but I didn't want to get in a fight over this. I just disagreed and said that wasn't true in my experience. She's a self-described passionate feminist. I am too. I didn't think being trans precluded that.
I also had another experience last month coming out to a distant friend who is also a self-described feminist. And challenged me on how do I know, that I don't know myself well enough (and somehow she does). Anyone who knows me well knows I'm a thoughtful and considerate person.
I'm just caught off guard by supposedly needing to 'defend' myself and my choices, which I shouldn't need to. Has anyone else come up against this and has advice on how to deal with it?