I think it's very hard, and difficult when someone goes up to me and asks, "Do you think I can pass?" type of questions. I think it's difficult for most people to be put on the spot like that.
Over the last year, I've seen this question lots. I've had people email me this question. And I've hand may local trans ppl ask me the same question.
This is something I've pondered about every time someone asks me this -- and I never really know what to say, because the truth is that I can't answer that and I'm not sure if anyone can, except yourself.
What is "passing" anyway?
I know the literal term -- but really, what is the psychological drive. To live up to someone's real or imagined expectations? And who is that? Yourself? The world around you?
I've looked in the mirror thousands of times and thought, "Gawd, I look awful -- there's no way that I can pass." Yet, I walk out that door, I go to work, and I get ma'am all day. At the start of my transition, naturally and expectantly, I'd get a sir or the question "are you a boy or a girl?" But over time, that happened less and less. There would be days, weeks, months with ma'am until one person would go sir. *BOOM!* my world would end there.
I'd sit up for days, wondering where I went wrong, analyzing myself over and over -- looking the the mirror and picking part every flaw until I was beaten. I wasted a lot of time when that happened. But why? Why did I care what one person -- who in the whole life of things is less then a blip -- affect me so much?
The most valued piece of advice I got when I was starting out was this: Just be yourself and don't care what others think. Be happy with you.
Easier said than done, but a valuable trait to obtain.
I realized this: the more I focused on passing/not passing the less happier I was, the more fake I felt, and the more I felt as if I was failing. As I focused on "passing" I ended up living in fear.
It took a long time -- and I'm still working on this -- is to be myself and be happy with who I am. Yes, I have flaws -- and so does everyone else. A lot of people aren't able to point out those flaws that I see. Sometimes I think that focusing too much on the flaws is a type of psychological anorexia. Ever notice that an anorexic person will complain about how fat they are, yet the world sees them as skin and bones? Ever notice how much a transexual says they don't pass, when the world sees them differently?
Now, before I get ahead of myself there's one thing I want to mention. SRS and FFS is fine. I had my SRS and I'm very happy. SRS for me was about feeling complete. I don't feel that I need FFS at at this time I've opted out of it; but I also understand and respect those who feel that they need it to feel complete. The surgeries bring a sense of zen to their soul. I also respect those who are non-op and go that direction, as that's a valid option as anything.
Surgeries can help you be happy with who you are; but they do not make you. Only you make you and only you decide if you're going to be yourself and be happy and go forward -- or live in fear, self-hatred, and self-destruction. Surgery isn't the cure for those, but rather surgery is the manifestation of who you are and accepting who you are inside.
Passing isn't self acceptance. It's seeking self-acceptance from the outside world. And you can never rely on the outside world to make you happy. Happiness comes from with in.
One of my friends I was talking to the other day said, "Do I pass or not? I really don't care. Why should I? Why would I let someone else decide who I am when I already know who I am? I just be myself, be happy, and that's been the secret to my success in life." My friend is 6'3", and one could pick out masculine parts in her and claim she doesn't pass, etc -- but I've never seen a more confident and happier person in the local community as I have with this woman. She's post op, and has been doing this for 7-8 years.
She as an amazing woman. And you know what, when people see her they see the confidence first. They see her happiness. They see her as the woman she really is despite any handicaps one might perceive.
And then I see the other women in the community struggling, constantly using this excuse and the next excuse to beat themselves to the ground. And why? Id doesn't make you happy. And it certainly doesn't help your transition one iota -- often it hinders it as it asks as an excuse not to go forward. Transition is about being yourself, it's not about passing or not passing.
Those who so call "pass" in the worlds eyes pass because passing isn't their focus. They pass because they are who they are and let that shine to the world. People notice when you're confident and see that and don't question you. But when you aren't confident, people also see that and they'll also look for those flaws as well.
Now, there is a certain level of self-respect that comes with being yourself and being happy with yourself. Being yourself doesn't mean you throw on grandma's clothes, go out with facial hair, and unzip your pants to have Mr. Ugly hang out. If you love yourself, you'll go out and find clothes and show that, you'll get electro/laser, and you'll be pretty in your own way. Surgery is also about self-love and being yourself (if that is the route you choose) because you are just being who you are.
So, the opposite extreme of not taking care of yourself isn't a manifestation of self-acceptance or self-love.
When you accept who you are, the rest follows in other words. You'll find clothing styles that fit you and your personality. You'll get ma'amed more often, and not let the odd sir's get you down. You'll find that you'll feel free and actually enjoy life and the transition process. Things will be smoother. You will do your transition for you. You will do your surgeries for you. And you'll be the happier for it.
You won't have to constantly rely on someone else view point (as it will always disappoint in the end). You won't have to spend time worrying. And you won't have to stumble as much. You can actually start on the road, be yourself, and fight for you. You'll be much stronger in the end.
Anyway, this is my thoughts on this and I'm basically just thinking out loud as I'm processing all of this even for myself. Transition is a journey, so someone doesn't automatically accept themselves 100% all of the time. I still second guess myself sometimes. I look in the mirror and catch myself picking at my flaws or finding ways to get acceptance/reassurance from others. It's normal, it's natural, and I recognize that I'm not perfect. It's about being aware of it.
Are you aware why you are asking if you pass? Why are you asking really? Is it assurance? Is it hopes that someone will tear you down and feed your self-loathing? Why not just be, and enjoy the ride. It's about being aware, and letting that awareness take you somewhere. It's not about me changing anyone or saying that one should do it this way or that... that's a journey you make on your own.
--natalie
PS For fun, here's my "before" picture. I could only imagine if I started asking pre-everything if I was going to "pass" or not... that'd be a very difficult and unfair position to put anyone into... and mostly unfair to myself in the end, actually.
July 2004

July 2008