Hi

I have been thinking that if we as transsexual women are going to be accepted into mainstream society. where we can be completely open about ourselves and our wants and needs. We should draw up a list a manifesto, a statement, or a 'Ten Commandments' that state our wishes, attitudes, and demands.
For example I think that we would all want the right to feminise our names or choose a suitable female name that we wish to be know by. We should also have the right to tick the female box and use the terms 'Ms' or 'Miss', not just on forms where it doesn't really matter, but on legal, financial, job applications, rental agreements and government documents. That is if we self-identify as transsexual women. We should not have to wait until the medical establishment - which is almost solely interested in us a 'cash cow' that they can milk for years - 'validates' us. We should all start using the honorifics 'Ms' etc as a matter of principle from now on regardless of the document. My only proviso is that everything else you enter in a document should be the truth. I know that many people here will object saying that they are not yet ready to come out to the public at large. Or that the document would be invalidated because of ticking the 'Miss' and/or the 'Female' box. I can sympathise with the first position, and it is undoubtedly true that ticking the above could cause you some considerable difficulty. However, we could use any threat of legal action as a platform to raise the general public's awareness of our situation and plight. Think of the Suffragettes, Rosa Parks, Martin Luther King, and the whole Civil Rights' Movement. If many of the Suffragettes where prepared to go to prison and endure forced feeding, and civil rights' protesters in Birmingham, Alabama, could stand up to beatings, water hoses, and vicious police dogs, then we should not be afraid to go to court.
My whole argument so far is this: I want the right to be known formally by banks, government, prospective employers, schools, universities etc as 'Stephanie X' and be completely free to use 'Ms' or 'Miss' before my name, regardless of where I am in the SRS process.
I am graduating on 6 July with a BA(Hons) in History, but on my parchment will be my male name, a name I don't identify with. Also I will have to start sending out my CV to potential employers using my male name. A little bit of me dies inside when I have to answer to 'Mr' or someone addresses me as 'sir'.
Other 'Commandments' could be 'thou shall not cast doubt on thy sister's transsexuality'. If a person, regardless of their age, appearance, job, financial and marital situation etc, self defines themselves as female then we as a community must completely accept that. Casting doubt on another sister's genuineness or commitment only weakens our cause.
A third 'commandment' could be that we should not empower our therapist, psychiatrist, endocrinologist. This means questioning them and not accepting their pronouncements and judgements meekly. Too many transsexuals mix up womanhood with submissiveness. How many readers think that doctors and the pharmaceutical industry are only really interested in us because they can make money from us? How many of us have been told to dress in a stereotypical feminine way when we go to see the therapist etc? How many are told to tell him/her that we are sexually attracted to men when we aren't? (if you really are attracted to men then of course say that, but don't tell lies to conform to medical science's cold stereotype of the 'typical transsexual').
I am sorry that this post has been rather long, and unfocussed in places. It was a first-draft and a
cri de courWhat to you think out 'demands' upon mainstream society should be?