QuoteI'm rather disappointed with some of the statements here. Some of you would not permit me the "right" to ask people to address me in a way I feel is appropriate and respectful. Thanks for the support.
You have the absolute and complete right to ask people to address you however you want, whenever you want. You have the right to be as fickle as you'd like. That's your perogative.
Now, if you want people to comply with your request, it helps to do your best to look the gender, and the earlier in your transition you ask people to switch pronouns, the more likely people will screw up.
But you can ask any damned time you want.
QuoteI have to agree with Alyssa, that's exactly my opinion on this issue too.
QuoteRe: You don't have the right to ask for pronouns until
Yes, I do. I have no fewer rights than anybody else. No fewer rights than a cisperson to basic respect. A transperson has every right to ask to be called by the right name and pronouns, whether they fit appearance norms for their gender or not. That doesn't mean people will respect that right. But then, passing perfectly and being completely post-op often doesn't guarantee basic respect from others either. How many people post-op people are suddenly treated to the wrong pronouns once people know their status?
I get the argument that it is easier on people to use the correct pronouns when one visually fits them. But we're not here to cater to the sensibilities of cispeople. We don't have to apologize for not meeting their standards. The world doesn't have to cater to us, but then they seldom do anyway.
Absolutely. The moment someone starts posting in the FtM section, for instance, that person is immediately addressed and referred to as "he", regardless of whether he's pre-op, post-op, non-op or whatever. As Alyssa and Nero said, if you request your correct-gendered pronoun from people when you don't look like a "typical" person of that gender, then yes, people may have difficulty complying 100% of the time without occasionally messing up, but that doesn't stop you from having every right to ask it.
One of the greatest issues we face is the ability to just be ourselves in the face of society's sometimes overwhelming and confronting prejudices, and being referred to as she, he, it (I know some people prefer that), ze, whichever pronoun, is just an extension of this right to being yourself.
Aside from having a "right" to it, being referred to as one's proper gender actually helps immensely, too, and can be (
can be, not
is necessarily) very helpful in determining how "right" someone is about their "transness". For instance, most of the time I am comfortable in the thought that yes, I am a transman (still dysphoric, obviously, but...at peace, perhaps, is better), but occasionally I still doubt, "Am I just being silly?", "Is it actually just a very long-lasting and rather delayed 'adolescent phase'?", but then I remember how exciting it was when one of my friends, without prompting, asked if I would prefer male pronouns, and how wonderful it is just to know that he'll use them in the future, and so being referred to as "he" etc. really does help me and my peace of mind with it all.
But, short answer, yes, I believe everyone has the right to be who they are, and be accepted and treated as the person they are, and the correct use of pronouns is just one aspect of that.