Quote from: yayo on May 07, 2018, 07:56:02 AM
I think what bugs me about this whole conversation is the reason WHY people feel the need to keep their past a secret...I can't think of one that sits well with me. Because it's icky? Because it makes you less of a woman? Neither of those things sit well with me.
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I'll agree it isn't necessarily dishonest...but is deceitful because you want to be seen as something you aren't: cis instead of trans. When you're a woman either way.
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YOU deserve to have a guy who looks at you, who knows all your dirty little secrets and still thinks you're the best thing he's ever seen. I've known girls to keep this secret and it always comes out. Almost always. Sooner beats the hell out of later.
No, the right time is better than too soon or too late. What that time is is simply different for different relationships.
No it's not *icky*. The trouble is when your potential partner (or family or friend .. ) think's it / you are icky. Unfortunately this is still the majority of people.
You can't have it both ways, if it's dishonest then it's deceitful, they're synonyms. Strong relationships are built in part on having boundaries. Lack of boundaries is what generally results in co-dependence and a host of other relationship ills. And why today would a person assume that anyone is cis or trans? sure lots of people do, that doesn't make it right or acceptable. People make assumptions about others on all kinds of things like this like whether they're straight, gay, bi etc. Those assumptions are also not generally helpful, healthy or productive.
I'm absolutely not sorry about not having a whit of sympathy for someone who would judge a person for being trans vs cis, yes including after forming a bond or having sex. Is that sort of judgement a societal norm? Yes it is and that doesn't make it right. That in turn is also why there are difficulties and risks going either way. Accomit'smodating cissexist assumptions and privilege is something we all get stuck with and we all have the right to choose which battles to fight and which to step aside from.
Racism homophobia were wrong and while they're both far less common now than a few decades back they're also not gone yet. Transphobia sits today about where homophobia was 15 years ago.
p.s. I'm absolutely wearing my activist hat in this discussion however my personal relationships hat is equally important. I'm never, nor am I advocating anything but personal choice and those choices have to factor in safety.