Here's the bottom line, about that essay or any other that anyone might choose to write.
You can't please everyone all the time. Nor can I make a silk purse from a sow's ear.
I spoke my own truth in the "Lookist" essay. That truth wasn't meant to hurt, dismiss or damage anyone else. It was simply my truth and one that, in years of experiences among women of a transsexual history, I have found to be simply true for me. So, I put it out there.
It is what it is. No, I cannot be miserable and make a difference, SusanK, in the way you feel. Nor can anyone else. Your feelings, your path through your life, and your opinions are simply your own. To feel a need to keep mine quiet and hidden would be only to ensure the continuation of what I readily agree is a privilege that some women with a trans-history have that others don't.
O, we don't have to talk about it. We only need to find ways to make ourselves scarce when we run across people like yourself. We can act as if we don't see you and make you disappear. We can see you and then excuse ourselves to go elsewhere. And the entire difficulty that we have and that you have remains right where it is: under a very thick blanket of "off-limits" -- hold that feeling otherwise someone like you will come along and bash us. *sigh*
So, I chose to write about it after discussing it with my friend. Perhaps you'll give me an essay on "internalized transphobia." That's your prerogative. But that essay you write will not change anything. Mine, oth, may help me along in a change within myself.
About a year ago I was PMing with someone else on this board. Eventually she sent me a pic and my initial response to the pic was "Yes!! You are real, you are a definite woman." That was based entirely on my perception of her looks in that pic. It was a reaction to what I saw.
Now, in reality, how can I make a legitimate judgement on that from a picture? I can't. But, I was willing to do so. That is my struggle, what I wrote about in the essay you so evidently could not read with any understanding. That it exists in the so-called "trans-community" is a fact. To hide it is simply to perpetuate it. In us all in one way or another.
A very wise woman who helped me immensely through the years once told me, "Nichole, don't get involved with "transsexuals." They will drive you crazy and they will never get better. They will only hurt you."
The goal is to find my own womanhood. That is not some monolithic, one-size fits all block of 52% of all human beings. That is a journey through an individual life that leads each of us to a different place. Hopefully we can still stand together about the things that harm us, demean us. But to do that I need to talk about what I see as my own problems. Talking about yours does me not one whit of good.
The wise-woman was exactly spot-on as far as I'm concerned. Anyone who remains stuck in "transsexual" is not going to find either "manhood" or "womanhood." They are simply going to perpetuate the notion that no one who has a trans-history is "real." Because to stay stuck in "transsexual" is simply to stay stuck in my own pain and misery. What is real about that is simply the pain and misery.
If I am a woman, then I shall be a woman. To do that I must learn of myself and my path through the world. I cannot bring you along on that little walk, to try would make the effort useless to start with. I can only bring myself.
Now, you may criticize that and hate it. You may decide that I am "internally transphobic." So be it. But for me, SusanK, "transsexual" is not a state that continues indefinitely. It's a phase that one realizes and lives through, like any other physical/mental phase, childhood, adolescence adulthood.
So, I don't "identify" as transsexual. No more than I "identify" as a "child" or "adolescent." I am simply another woman with a relatively interesting biological past. You see, for me transsexuality ends. Just as childhood ended.
YMMV.
Nichole