Category Archives: Social Transition

Gender Chat

I went to the university’s “Gender Chat” on Tuesday.  Not to process gender issues of my own, but to think about gender issues in general, and because it’s comforting to me to hear other folks’ gender-related thoughts.

When K and I first showed up, I think I was quickly introduced to the new LGBT director, and that made me think about K and his relationship to my gender and my transition.  I’ve always made it really clear that, at this point in my life and in our relationship, it’s important to me that K feel able to disclose my trans status when/if he wants to, to whomever he wants to.  And I think he believes me.  I’m pretty sure, anyway.  But, I’ve definitely noticed that he’s become as ambivalent about when/how/if to disclose as I have.  I worry some that it’s more about making me comfortable than making himself comfortable, but K of course is capable of meeting his own needs in this regard.  Still, I wonder about our visibility/invisibility.

It’s pretty straightforward outside of queer spaces–it all depends on how K is being perceived.  We’re either gay men, or a kinda funny looking straight couple.  People usually seem to think we’re pretty precious, either way.  But inside queer space, we’re looked at for longer.  People who assume K is a lesbian are baffled, and once they see how gay I am, usually just end up confused and fascinated.  People who know K’s a trans guy focus directly and pointedly on me.  I think it’s to figure out if I’m a cissexual gay man who’s actually okay with dating pre/no-ho pre-non/op guys (you know, a PINK unicorn, even more rare than the regular unicorns who will date post-transition trans men), or a trans man, or what.  That annoys me slightly.  I guess I could interpret that as “I’m okay with however we’re perceived, so long as my trans status isn’t brought up”.

So, I wonder how the director perceived me.  She’ll know eventually, probably, if I hang around.  But figuring out when to disclose is weird and new, and I don’t want to look like an ass, like “Hi, I’m Caleb–would you like to hear about my genital configuration?”  And, of course, there’s the fact that I don’t really like talking about it all that much anyway.  It was especially strange because I wasn’t sure if the person I was actually talking to (who is a newly-out trans woman) knew, and I definitely wanted to give her the secret handshake or whatever, so she’d know there was a community here.  Even if it is a bit of a sausage party… sort of.

In introductions, I didn’t think to continue the “name + pronoun” intro that K had tried to start, although I really should’ve thought to; I’m not really interested in othering people whose gender reception and pronoun preference don’t match just so I can enjoy my new privilege.  I was just too engrossed in thought, I guess.  Oh, and then I didn’t come out at first, because there were three people there (two facilitators and a student) I wanted to feel out first.

It’s almost like being drunk on power.  I have the power to have someone I just met never, ever know that I am not a cissexual man.  And it’s hard coming out sometimes, even in a situation in which I want to, like gender chat.  I’m not sure if I’ve written about it here, or just spoken about it in private conversations, but disclosing is different than coming out, by miles and miles.  Coming out as trans meant seeking respect for my identity.  It meant giving someone to whom I’m disclosing to know more about me, to get a more complete and accurate idea of who I am as a person.  It was a lot like coming out as queer.  It was kind of empowering in a way.

Disclosing doesn’t make me feel that way.  Disclosing to people I assume are cissexual has, in general, more cons than pros.  The pros are mostly that I get to know whether the person I’m coming out to is a transphobic douchebag I wouldn’t want to be friends with anyway, and that the person won’t be confused when I talk about things like my boobs, my puberty, my menopause, my uterus, my ovaries, my ex-lesbianism, my intimate familiarity with things that most guys know absolutely nothing about.  That’s about where the good bits end.  Someone finding out that I lived as female-ish until about a year ago causes most cissexual folks to start painting a mental picture of me that’s 1) inappropriate and 2) wrong:

My body becomes scrutinized, and if one more fucking person congratulates me on how “real” or “bio” or “genetic” or “magickal” I look for a transsexual (read: woman), I might start congratulating them on how trans they look.  Especially feminine cis women–they all look like femme trans women to me, anyway.  It’s so nice that they can go around looking trans to me, despite being [usually] uterus-laden imposters.

No, I haven’t had any surgeries.  Yes, binding fucking hurts.

No, you had it right the first time.  I’m faggy in the same way as a cis queer guy.  It’s not a holdover from my “natural” womanly mcvaginaness.

No, I’m not dating K because I only date other trans people, nor am I dating him because only other trans people will date me.

No, my family doesn’t need to be praised from the rooftops for not disowning me because of my decision to transition; if you wouldn’t be supportive and understanding of a trans family member, that makes you an asshole, it doesn’t make my family angelic.

Because the male-female spectrum exists de facto, “coming out” put me more towards the male end, which felt more accurate; “disclosing” puts me more towards the female end, which feels less accurate.  The way I’m perceived now is almost exactly how I perceive myself, and how I want to be perceived (fantasies of waking up one morning and having the body of my tall, thin, twinky, genderqueer fag roommate aside).  It’s not as easy to convince myself to go through all that when I don’t usually get anything out of it, except someone thinking that we’re BFFs and that I’ve really opened up to them.

K and I went to The Grill late that night and talked, and I think I’m getting somewhere with my genderqueer stuff.  I’ve been examining my genderqueer identity lately, because I’m the type to pick at a scab.  And there’s some stuff about all this that just sits wrong with me, and I want to figure out if “genderqueer” is a vestigial identity at this point, or if it’s just evolved.

When I was living as female, before I transitioned, being genderqueer, for me, meant a freedom to express masculinity/maleness in a way that resonated with me, without invalidating or repressing my feminine qualities.  Even when I knew I would transition medically, I still identified with “trans-masculine” genderqueers and lesbians/queer women.  We looked alike.  Our experiences were a lot alike, or so I felt.

That’s just not the case at this point in my life.  My maleness is now affirmed by basically everyone I interact with.  These days, my non-binary identity is more about my expressions of queer maleness and femininity.  The genderqueer issues I wrestle with myself cause me to identify pretty strongly with genderqueer-identified people whose gender expressions/presentations usually align with binary maleness/masculinity.

Despite all the theory, I’ve never really seen too much breaking down of binaries, and the idea of the “spectrum” sort of looms large.  I feel like “transmasculine” people and “transfeminine” people are quietly pushed to either side, according to birth-assignation.  I feel like if my trans status is known, I’m pushed to the wrong sort of side–like I’m seen as the far-end of the female masculinity spectrum.  And, I know that tons of guys who ID as genderqueer totally see themselves this way, which is fine.  I just don’t.  Maybe a part of that separation is because the genderqueer community is so heavily female-assigned and currently-or-formerly-lesbian-identified?

I think that may be the root of the anti-cissexual male sentiment that shows up/peeks out sometimes in my conversations with other genderqueers.  And I’m not very comfortable with that idea.  At this point in my life, the only essential difference between me and a cissexual guy is what’s under our clothes.  And I’ve seen trans guys get away with so much misogyny and so much bullshit, and even if they’re called on it, they get the benefit of the doubt.  The possiblity that cissexual men may make those exact same mistakes is used as the reasoning for their exclusion.  I’m not interested in being a part of anything that would include me but would exclude cis men, because, as someone has pointed out, that is so literally phallocentric.

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Gender & Food

My partner, K, decided to go back to omnivorism recently, and I’ve mostly joined him.  I’ve distinctly noticed a couple of things, though, about maleness and food.

First, whenever I order something vegetarian and K (who is usually perceived as female, FYI) orders something with meat in it, I am usually offered the meat dish.  This has happened twice in two days.  The first time, with a barbecue sandwich at a pizza place, and the next time today at a local Thai restaurant–both places which we frequent, and where I’ve consistently ordered vegetarian meals.

Vegetarianism is very, very feminized.  It makes me feel weird to eat meat, in a strange way.  It makes me feel like I’m butching up.  Even though I really, really like chicken and fish.

Also, people assume things that they didn’t assume before.  At Panera, the cashier assumed I wanted chips with my meal, instead of the other options.  When folks thought I was female, that rarely happened.  This might’ve been a coincidence, but I suspect that the cashier wouldn’t have assumed that a woman would automatically choose the least healthy/low-fat side option.

Weird.

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xTM

I don’t know when I became uncomfortable describing myself as “FTM”. I’m not sure if it’s internalized transphobia, but it might be (although, I have no trouble describing myself as “trans”). It just doesn’t feel like an honest way to describe my experience.

I was a lesbian-identified bisexual, and that feels fine to say. But “female” is something that was put on me, from the beginning. I chose gender words I was comfortable with, of which tomgirl remains my favorite. I think that one of the reasons I’ve lost interest in being a part of most trans panels and the like is that I don’t want to refer to myself as “FTM” or “female-to-male” or any of that other nonsense.

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Stealth

Two years ago, I couldn’t imagine wanting to be “stealth” in any part of my life.  Being trans occupied a lot of my time and energy, and it was a really important part of my identity.  Neither of those things are true now.

Back then, though, I couldn’t escape it.  Every time I got dressed, or answered the phone, or introduced myself, I had to think about it.  Whenever I met someone new, I had to weigh the pros and cons of telling them.  If they knew, then there was a chance that they might respect my name and pronouns.  If they didn’t, I wouldn’t have to worry about being on the receiving end of transphobia, or suddenly being asked to do Trans 101.  That’s a lot to deal with when you  really just wanted to do some local volunteering.

Because it was such a big part of my life, and because cis people couldn’t really relate to most of the things I was going through, finding community with other trans people was a huge priority.  It was really affirming to go someplace and be asked what pronouns I use, or to not have people assume they heard me wrong when I introduced myself (“Kayla?”).

At the time, the most ideal situation I could imagine was to have somebody know that I was trans, and respect my identity anyway.  Today, things are completely different.  When I’m getting dressed, I don’t have to squeeze myself into a binder; I don’t think about whether the pattern of my shirts minimizes the size of my chest.  People automatically assign me the correct pronouns, and no one is surprised by my name when I introduce myself.

At first, it felt like I was getting away with something when people respected my identity.  I felt like I was “passing” as male.  Once the novelty wore off, though, I was simply left feeling comfortable.  Much of my social anxiety disappeared.  I still let most people I met socially know that I was trans, but it was primarily just out of habit.

I’ve gotten really used to being treated simply as male, without any scarequotes or footnotes.  And the longer I live this way, the more right it feels for me.  My transition is over for the foreseeable future, and my body dysphoria has lessened significantly since my chest surgery.  At this point, my trans-ness exists as a treatable medical condition that is essentially no different from male hypogonadism.

Eventually, disclosing my trans status (or having my trans status disclosed) to acquaintances started feeling less comfortable.  I began noticing that I was treated differently by folks who knew my medical history–and not in a way that made me feel more understood and respected.  I started to feel like it actually limited people’s ability to understand me.  For example, most folks (who don’t know I’m trans) attribute my femininity to my queerness.  So do I.  I look, speak, and act like an effeminate queer man because I am one.  Instead of taking my gender expression for what it is, many people who know my trans status assume that it’s really some sort of residual femaleness.

In actuality, I don’t feel that I ever was female, and I don’t think that most things have anything whatsoever to do with my transness.  But as soon as most cis people are made aware that my birth assignment isn’t what they had expected, they relate pretty much everything back to my being trans.  Learning “the truth” tends to bring them further away from really understanding and respecting me than they would’ve been had they not found out.

When I enrolled in school back in September, I enrolled without disclosing my history to anyone. It hasn’t come up, and it hasn’t felt relevant to bring it up.  Sure, there are lots of opportunities to tell people.  I just don’t see a reason to.  I get plenty of chances to talk about being a survivor of family violence, too, but that’s hardly ever relevant, either.  People can get to know me professionally and personally without ever knowing many intimate details of my life.  They might be surprised if they learn some of those things later on, but people are always finding out what happens when they make assumptions about other people’s experiences.

Not so very long ago, I thought that it’d be dishonest for me to interact closely with someone and not disclose–that I’d be hiding something, or lying about my past or present.  Instead, I feel like I’m being seen for who I am, without other people’s misconceptions about gender or transition getting in my way, for the first time in my life.  It feels great.

As my life has gotten busier, my involvement in local and online trans community is taking a backseat to other considerations.  I don’t know to what extent I’ll be “out” or “stealth” in the future, but I suspect I will always keep my medical history private at work in school.  At this point, most of my close friends know my history, but I can’t even remember the last time I disclosed to a cis person outside of an activism setting (actually, it was probably when I corrected my Social Security information).  If this trend continues, I might eventually find myself almost completely stealth.  It’s still not something I’m particularly looking for, but I’m certainly not opposed.

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