It was a year ago, on October 11, National Coming Out Day, I transitioned to full time with the full support of management at my job. It was the happiest day of my life. Looking back on a year of full time and ahead to the rest of my life, I'm assessing where I'm at in life.
My gender history is TS. For some, the trans- prefix is interpreted as "transgressive"-- they want to disrupt the gender binary. For me, it means "transience"-- having crossed from one side of the binary to the other, I just want to leave transgender behind, and settle in where I feel at home. One year on, I'm just a woman. No more, no less. Not a woman with an asterisk, not a special subcategory of woman. Just a woman like other women. I don't want to stand out or be marked out as different from other women in any way. All I want to do is assimilate into womanhood, I do not want to be identified as trans.
I'm not calling it stealth, since with all the electronic trail and the increased surveillance and intrusion into people's lives, there is no such thing as privacy any more. Any job worth having these days involves a background check-- and they WILL turn up your gender history and out you. Realistically, there is no such thing as stealth any more (unless you earn a living off the grid as a day laborer or a subsistence farmer). The concept of "stealth," now obsolete, is left over from the 1960s when people really could make a fresh start in life. Nowadays our past, like William Faulkner said, isn't even past. It will tail us for the rest of our lives anytime anyone decides to investigate us. This makes it all the more imperative to enact full legal protection from discrimination against gender identity.
Although true stealth isn't possible any more, in everyday life I do not go around volunteering information about my gender history. It's no one else's business. I am simply a woman and that's all anyone needs to know about me, with the exception of a few medical caregivers. Because the point of my going through all that transsexual hassle, expense, effort, and heartbreak is not to be transgender-- it's to be a woman.
By saying I'm just a woman, I in no way intend to disparage TG activists for openly identifying as trans. Actually, I admire them for taking upon themselves a burden to help the community which would be too hard for me to bear. They are better women than I.
I've just been through so much difficulty and even trauma about my gender already, I don't think I can take on any more. We each help out in any way we can. Now this is how I need to heal.
I actually identify as a lesbian. I am an LGBT activist in my capacity as an out & proud lesbian. Since these days many lesbian activists are vocal in their support for transgender equal rights, I join with them and work for transgender rights as a lesbian ally of transgender within the broader scope of LGBT.
I adamantly do not disparage crossdressers for being different than me. They are human beings and totally deserve equal rights, freedom from discrimination, and basic human dignity the same as any other human beings. I will fight strenuously against transgender-phobic transitioned TS people, like that atrocious HBS ideology so filled with bitter venom against transgender people. HBS's hatred is obviously the result of fear: some of us TS are deathly afraid of being connected with transgender. I can be a bigger woman than that. I am a strong woman who believes in herself, and that's all I need. I feel secure enough in my own womanhood that I can support people who, unlike me, are between genders. I do not gain anything for myself by putting down others who are different. However. I have real difficulty seeing how crossdressers and I can fit into the same category. Our issues are completely different. I support transgender rights as a matter of principle, because it's the right thing to do, the same as many non-transgender people support them as allies. I am not putting down crossdressers by defining the vast differences between us. Just being realistic.
Sometimes non-transitioning TG activists complain that TS are taking up all the action and ignoring TG issues. If so much more attention is being paid to TS issues, please consider there is a sound reason for that. Our needs are so much more extreme. We have to take dangerous hormones and pay for expensive surgery, otherwise we will die from our extreme dysphoria. Our needs are vastly more dire compared to individuals who feel free to flit back and forth easily between genders upon a moment's whim. I am totally for protecting non-transitioning TG people from discrimination and ensuring full legal and social equality for them. But let's keep things in perspective.