Quote from: deniz on July 30, 2008, 06:15:08 AM
stealth is the only way my friend.I will state that until i die. We spend so much energy and money to become what we really are, and a foolish cow (man or woman) ruins everything, just because his life is such a boring sterotype.
I do not want to hate people.I just do not trust them.Half of them are mean, and the other half just stupid.
Not even our parents can not keep such secret.Why a stranger should/could
i respect trans people who state what they are, but i would never jeopardize my hapiness after srs by telling i was born male.
call me eccentric, call me strict.
This is me.
Best of luck at work.Although i would walk away, blaming my self for being so stupid. However, if you can deal of being the ''half person'' at your workplace, the one you so much fought to complete, then it;s ok.your call
I didn't say that I was okay with being a so-called "half-person." Of course it bothers me, and I told before my SRS, but it's coming out know. As for stealth, I'm under lease at my apartment, I have a lot of friends, so it's not like I can pick up and leave the city ASAP. I would also need money to move.
Posted on: July 30, 2008, 05:45:47 PM
Thnx everyone. it is difficult, although I've been through it several times and pretty sick of it. On top of that, it's kind of hard to avoid people in this city, as I mentioned -- I know a lot of people and a lot of people know me. I'm the type of person who walks down the street and I'm bound to run into someone I know (one of my ex's commented one time, "What, are you a freak'n rock star?").
Although, with many of my friends, they are now to the point that they can't even envision how I was like in my past. They usually don't ask about it and respect me very much, even with knowing my past. Perhaps it is because I stoop up for myself so much in the past, and didn't care what others thought.
When people find out, however, it becomes a big sensation. Although my job isn't that great, and I want to start looking for another/better one in a couple of months when I'm ready, I don't like the feeling of having to leave because of people being jerks. I'd rather leave on my own terms, then bend to the wills of everyone else and be pushed around etc.
In the past I have been involved in trans activism, although this year very little and now after SRS I really don't think or talk about it. Others have taken my place, and I'm not longer the one always helping out other trans women starting out. Although, a few that I'm close to I have, and I'm good at what I do.
I'm a goth-punk girl, too, so I'm not used to blending in and being like everyone else -- I stand out, I be my own person, and I fight back. Although, at times, it can be difficult when you're picked at your sore spot.
I'll always have the rebel spirit inside of me, but that doesn't mean that I always want to be in the forefront battling it out for individuality. I think that the thing that bothers me the most is that the label prevents some people from getting to know me as a person -- they think of the label, the stereotype, but not the person. Although, in the past, I've been pretty good at educating and getting ppl off my backs about the trans issue, but that gets tiresome.
The other issue is that I'm popular. *shrugs* I don't know why. Maybe it's because I do something that very few people do -- be myself and say F*&k-it to the world. Of course, that also brings enemies and jealousy and people are bound to find something, take it, and run with it in order to hurt me... it's happened plenty of times before.
Because I'm popular, I think that's why the gossip around me also spread so quickly. People also get jealous over me and turn on me sometimes. I hate the popularity contests -- it's not like I seek to be popular or liked. I just am. I have no idea why. Although, i get away with a lot of stuff because of it.
When I was younger I wasn't popular. I was the weird kid in the back of the class wearing black, putting on eyeliner, and writing stories about vampires and zombies and weird stuff. I was the outcast. I was the individual who didn't want to be a robot like everyone else. (And this was back in the '80s - early '90s, way before Emo was popular poser culture, and I lived in a small tiny Christian town full of sheep who all thought alike).
Now that I'm an adult, I'm still like I was back then (but a more extrovert, with more confidence and a bit more fire). Now I either have people who think I'm the coolest thing since sliced bread (wishing they could also be an individual, but too afraid to be so) or still afraid of me because I'm still aan individual and it reminds them how robotic and lame their life is.
So, it isn't like I've never been rejected or anything. Or that I have never stood out before. I always have to some degree. Now that my SRS is done, I don't think those elements are going to change and I'm going to become a sheep -- but at the same time, I don't feel trans or identify that way. Yes, I have a trans history and that I cannot deny, but identifying as trans doesn't seem to fit anymore. It feels more like an enslavement term, rather than a liberation term (and transition is about liberation, not enslavement). So, maybe that's why I hate that label, because it isn't me and I'd rather people get to know me as me. I transitioned to be free, not enslaved.
I don't know what I'm going to do next. Running isn't really my thing. I want to leave my job because I have something better, and not become some a$$holes decided to be jerks. I don't want to live my life in fear. And I don't want to be a sheep in this world. It's probably a much harder path to be an individual, but hey, maybe something good will come out of all of this... maybe someone in the store will see me stand up and realize that "trans" isn't some kind of monster, but a human -- and that person will change another, and another, and the world will be a different place.
If Rosa Parks would have gone with the flow, maybe the world would be a different place now. It just takes one person to stand up and say, "f#ck you! Were not gonna take it anymore!"
And maybe that's the relevance to it all. I don't want to be the slave to the trans stereotype; I don't believe in slavery in any form. And so I refuse to let others use my past to enslave me and get there way. I want to enjoy life like anyone else and not be bothered, but sometimes you just have to hold your ground rather than shrink away.
Liberation, baby! Liberation!
--natalie
Posted on: July 30, 2008, 06:38:35 PM
PS A slave to society is never free.