Quote from: Sarah Louise on April 20, 2011, 01:46:33 PM
This is a very personal issue to many and unfortunately it usually ends up in disarray and hurt feelings.
Lets try to keep this civil.
It does seem to be a very personal issue indeed. I think the goal here was simply to establish a logical and general definition of the word transgendered. Valerie, I intend to respect your feelings about being forced to recognize what you see as a political label, but I'd like to repeat something that I have said again and again: The label in itself doesn't hold any power.
If an immigrant person arrives in a new country, that person will get the label of an immigrant. It doesn't matter why he chose to move from his country to ours, it doesn't matter if he had a choice in doing so, he still is an immigrant. Once that immigrant has been established in his new country and started over a new life, feeling completely integrated, will that person stop being an immigrant? The fact is that this person will always be an immigrant. That doesn't mean that he hasn't perfectly adapted to his new country, that doesn't mean that is not just as worthy as anybody to live there. Being an immigrant simply means that this person has a history of being in a different country.
Did that immigrant face discrimination for being one? Sadly, it often the case. But it is not word that forced that discrimination to happen, it's the other people's fear and insecurities. Someone might say "I'm not an immigrant, I'm a real citizen.", but that comes from a wrong set of mind that thinks immigrants can't be real citizen, which is a very discriminative one. While the person doesn't realize it, he has internalized the fear and insecurities that other people have projected on him, and took refuge from them by denying reality.
I think saying " I'm not transgendered, I'm a real woman." is exactly the same as saying "I'm not an immigrant, I'm a real citizen.". Saying so implies that being transgendered exclude being a real woman, when this is absolutely not the case. And the problem with that kind of thinking is that it doesn't help anyone, including the person who's denying. When people learn about your history, they won't care about the words you use to describe yourself. If no one as taught them that being transgendered is in no way an obstacle to being a real woman, they might just as well see you a man in delusion. Accepting the label means that you can start actively promoting tolerance and credible knowledge about it.
I have no desire to attack anyone on their beliefs and I have a huge respect for the history of everyone on this forum. I'm still very closeted about my own issues, but I've seen enough to know that the world his far from tender to those who aren't gender normative, and even less to the transsexuals. I know many of us have good reasons for not wanting to labeled as transgendered, but we should remember that people use labels everyday. Unless we actively shape our own, it's the cisgendered people who are going to do it. And the result is rarely very satisfying.