Susan's Place Logo

News:

Since its founding in 1995 Susan's Place forums have blossomed into a truly global lifeline. To date we've delivered roughly 1.4 billion page views to hundreds of millions of unique visitors, guided more than 41,000 registered members through 1,985,081 posts and 188,474 topics across 193 boards, and—most importantly—helped save tens of thousands of lives by connecting people to vital information and support at their most vulnerable moments.

Main Menu

Semantics of 'Transsexual"

Started by Hazumu, November 11, 2006, 03:52:09 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Hazumu

How you phrase something can change the meaning.

Consider the two phrases:

'I'm a Transsexual'

'I am Transsexual'

The former, to me, seems to imply a choice on my part, and a membership with a group -- "I'm a Kings fan"  "I'm a Miata owner."

The latter seems to imply no choice, and group membership is not an issue -- "I'm caucasian"  "I'm myopic."

I prefer to tell people "I'm transsexual".

What's your take on this?

Karen
  •  

Nero

#1
Never thought about that before, but I like your take on it.
Nero was the Forum Admin here at Susan's Place for several years up to the time of his death.
  •  

Elizabeth

Karen,

I'm = I am

So we have the two statements

I am a transsexual

     And

I am transsexual

The first one identifies you as one transsexual. The second identifies you as a member of the group of transsexuals.

That is how it reads to me.

Love always,
Elizabeth
  •  

Ricki

Lovely Karen....Elizabeth made it very easy for me I-AM-BOTH-!
kisses
Ricki
  •  

umop ap!sdn

I'm a human.

;)

Well, the first is using it as a noun form and the second is using it as an adjective. So the first says "this is something I am" and the second says "this is a characteristic of me". So yeah, I guess it kind of has some implication of choice, although to me it's more like "this is what I'm defined as/pigeonholed into" vs. "this is just something that happens to be true about me, therefore merely one aspect of me and not ultimately the whole of what I'm all about".

I hope that made sense.
  •  

Steph

Nope I am a woman.  I didn't have a choice it was how I was born :P :)

Steph
  •  

tinkerbell

I am the one and only fairy goddess, that is all! :P

Seriously, I am a woman although the world has made such a big drama about my being a woman all my life.  Tough toenails!


tinkerbell :icon_chick:
  •  

LynnER

Ummmmm.... Im not transexual... Im a girl... I just happen to suffer from an extreem genetic birthdefect... ;D
  •  

umop ap!sdn

  •  

HelenW

I think that saying, "a transsexual" objectifies it - makes it a noun - makes it something outside of myself that I've acquired.  Saying "I'm transsexual" makes it an adjective, just another part of my gestalt.  I prefer the latter.

I have been considering, though, to explaining it just as a major league, humongous, life long hormone imbalance that I've finally built the courage to confront and treat.

Or is that being too much of a victim?

hugs & smiles,
helen
FKA: Emelye

Pronouns: she/her

My rarely updated blog: http://emelyes-kitchen.blogspot.com

Southwestern New York trans support: http://www.southerntiertrans.org/
  •  

Sheila

I was both then I transitioned now I'm who I should have been, A female the woman type. I can't help it if the doctor and I think my parents had a 50/50 choice and blew it. What the heck it was in the 40's. I corrected their mistake and they didn't even have the nerve to tell me what they did. It's all about ignorance.
So I am a woman, I'm a woman, I have been a woman and I will forever be a woman.
Sheila
  •  

Debbie_Anne

I prefer to tell people "I'm Debbie".  "I'm a Debbie" doesn't sound right, even though there are a lot of "Debbies" out there.
  •  

Refugee

I think the phrase a friend of mine used was "I was born a transsexual, but I had it corrected when I was XX"

I always liked that better then anything else.
  •