Tina

I am a post-op "Toby Girl." Although I dislike being labeled as a T, I have to acknowledge that I am. I work in higher education, as an administrator. I've had one unsuccessful transition (my job was eliminated...my last day was during the time I had my surgery). Now I am working on my second (and hopefully last) attempt. I am in my early 50s (barely!), have some great friends and a portion of my famiily that is exceptionally supportive. I love to read, write in my journal, have thoughtful dinners with friends. Oh, and I am Jewish...I converted about the same time of my initial transition. Being Jewish is very important to me, and "most of my best friends are Jewish."

Homepage: http://www.gender-id.com


Posts by Tina

Same Chapter, Fourth Reading

Saturday, July 3, 2010

Have you ever read a book and not wanted it to end? I imagine that may be how some people feel about the Harry Potter series (I admit that I may be the only person in America who hasn’t read a single word…the names are just like those in Russian novels, so many, so odd…and there are so many other books I want to read). I am currently in the midst of one. It isn’t great literature, but it is about a family…or rather it really focuses on a woman. I don’t want to dwell on the plot, but rather that we don’t want things to end at times.
I’ve always thought everyone felt that way about things, but I am not sure that is true. I rather think that most of us do about certain things. For instance, I didn’t want my mother to die, but I did look forward to going to college (although I stayed at home). I looked forward to my marriage to the most wonderful woman in the world and felt deeply saddened the day it ended.
For some of us, transition never ends. In a very real sense, we are all transitioning from who we are to who we are becoming…but some transgendered individuals continue to stay in a state where they still see themselves as transitioning…as if scared about what comes next. How can I say such a thing? The old adage, write what you know and have and/or are experiencing.
We can argue whether a post-op is no longer transgendered, but the one thing one cannot say is that we grew up with the “equipment” we currently have. I can’t pretend to have had a childhood of being a girl. My memories will always (until I don’t have them) include little league baseball, swim trunks, and really short haircuts my father used to give us.
So, I can’t pretend I’m a natal woman, but it is possible (at least my friends assure me it is) to get past feeling that you are a transsexual. What makes it hard? Well, I still have a father who thinks of me as his son. He refers to me that way and refuses to accept the woman I have become. People I know still slip on pronouns. It makes it hard to forget. There are times when I wonder: if I was wealthy, wouldn’t it just be easier to go somewhere where nobody knew me?
I may face that decision at some point, but not right now. I’m facing another transition, probably later this year (although I hope to forestall it). My gorgeous, amazing dog who just turned 17 in June, is rapidly nearing the winter of his life. We like using other words other than death, don’t we? It is as if most of us are uncomfortable with that end. It might be easier for those who truly believe in heaven, which includes at least two of my cousins. They believe in a time when they will meet their mother in heaven. I’m not so sure. I just know that my very best friend in the world is Buster. He comforts me when I’m sad, he gives me a reason to get up in the morning, and he has given me more pleasure than I can imagine.
Every story, however, must end. We can (and some of us do) continue going over “Chapter 12” for years, but at some point we all move on. Spouses die or get divorced. Children grow up, move away, get married (and divorced), have children, and so on. It is a cycle that has to end, just like my book. All of us eventually die.
There is a book called Rainbow Bridge that suggests that when a pet dies, it goes to a place where s/he is young again. No longer blind or lame, they run and frolic, with lots of food and water and no arthritic hips. There they wait until, one day, their person dies and comes to be with them…at which point they cross the bridge together.
I want so hard to believe that. However, just like with my life, I am scared of losing my little boy. If I knew I would join him somewhere else, I would gladly do so. That doesn’t mean I will, because the world doesn’t work that way…unless it wants to. I’m not scared of dying, at least I don’t think I am, but I am enjoying (for the most part) living.
Okay, I took a long break, a walk, started making dinner, and read some more of the book that got me started on this post. You see, I’ve relieved “Chapter 12” in my life. I started being more open about “dressing” when I was married, and then went back to pretending I didn’t have any gender issues. The second time, I got all the way through surgery, lost my job and was almost in bankruptcy (thanks to help from my ex, I didn’t have to…perhaps because we were still married and she knew it might impact her credit rating). So, after a couple of years of struggling, I went back. After a bit, it wasn’t working (okay, I’ve read the chapter before, I should have known that!), so I transitioned back to living female.
I think I’ve lived this chapter at least 3-4 times, and I’m tired of it. I’m also scared of Chapter 13. Will it continue a happily ever after story? Will I die penniless and alone? Will I ever find a guy to share my life with? The only way to find out is to turn the page…and it is time to do that.
More later.

Love and Hate

Just over a month into transition, but that isn’t what I want to talk about…at least not directly. I have had one person (a male student) call for me to be fired. What I really want to write about is love and hate. I can’t imagine hating someone for being different from me. I do not understand lots of people and their differences…I don’t understand why a woman would allow herself to be treated as chattle, for example. However, I accept their rights to live their lives the way they choose.
What has come up is that a person I care about, and who I believe cares about me, continues to call me he. I was at an event for a charity golf outing…a planning meeting. All new people who had never met me, and J kept referring to me as “he.” I didn’t react at the time, but I have emailed a couple mutual friends, seeking advice.
I know what I feel. It hurts and I need to let him know that. However, I need to radiate love towards him, while letting him know that his words hurt me. We cannot be punching bags for those who dislike or disapprove of us. We need to provide individuals with the opportunity to grow and understand, while still loving them. It isn’t easy. Standing in a parking lot as your congregation’s President refers to you as he to police officers is not fun. It hurts, and I won’t pretend that it doesn’t.
I cannot be quiet, but I can “make noise” in a loving manner. I can’t demand other people change, but I can work at changing my response. Attempting to be loving and not being a doormat isn’t easy. Being transgendered isn’t for sissies!
I spend time crying myself to sleep, because there are times when I believe we are making zero progress. People rehash the bathroom issue. We are condemned as sinful beings who are unrepentant. It goes on and on.
We can’t change the world, but we can adjust our responses. We can find ways to be constructively loving when we respond to the individual who calls us by the wrong pronoun. We can live our lives with dignity, using our actions as examples. We may never be able to overcome, but we can at least be loving individuals.
It isn’t easy. Tears may be shed, as they often are. True equality is a goal that is very far. We can only love and be our best, and provide opportunities for others to adjust. Being loving and kind is one way to go, perhaps creating a friend out of a foe. I don’t know if love can overcome hate, but I must go on, whatever the fate.

T DAY

It is almost 9 pm. In 12 hours I start my first day of work as myself. For most people transition is a single day when they start their Real Life Test, which is supposed to last for a year. I find it curious that the so-called ENDA (Employment Non Discrimination Act) will not apply to pre-operative transsexuals. This means that companies would be able to tell a pre-op M2F to continue using the men’s restroom during transition. We can’t have the “genitalia police” with nothing to do, right?
Anyway, that doesn’t apply to me. I’m a post-op, coming up on seven years at the end of June. So mine isn’t the typical transition…but that makes it no less scary. Our Senior VP thinks all he has to do is send out an email that says, “Starting Monday, May 10, the Director of the ______ will be Tina ______. We welcome her. That is it. He thinks that is all that is needed.
I’m not convinced, and I also know that the President of the university had the opportunity to assure me that things would be okay. He saw me several times at commencement this past weekend, and went out of his way not to talk to me. Maybe I’m making something out of nothing…and he doesn’t really even know I exist.
Anyway, I’ll have a full five day week, followed by only two days the next week and three the following, and four the week after that. So, I’m able to ease in a bit. I also have a vacation to see my cousin in Colorado, which should be great fun.
Lots of work to do this week, and that is probably good. I won’t have time to really worry about much…just keep doing my job. Enough for now, but I wanted to acknowledge that May 10, is “T day.”

On ENDA and the Lies Being Told

Friday, April 23, 2010

There are times when I think we are absolutely nowhere. I’m not going to make book on it, but I believe the possibility that a trans-inclusive Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA) will pass both the House and Senate and be signed into law is more remote than me winning the Powerball lottery.

I just got through reading an article that trashed Jillian Weiss, one of the leaders in trying to get ENDA passed. The author was vile in her condemnation of Dr. Weiss. In most instances, I’d provide some quotes to give you the context and feel, but there is nothing but hatred and intolerance in the entire article…and I refuse to allow one word of it to enter my blog.

Currently 12 states have protection similar to that provided by ENDA. Living in Illinois, I am blessed to be in one of them. Now I’ve followed the news real carefully since the Human Rights Act was amended to include sexual orientation (which was defined to include gender identity). I have not seen an outpouring of lawsuits. I haven’t seen tons of K-12 teachers lining up to have GRS. Maybe we are just more highly evolved than the rest of the country! Whenever I think that, I turn on the television and see our former governor, and I know that isn’t true.

Now I am not an expert on the other 11 states. I do know there have been a couple of instances involving K-12 teachers. In those cases, there have been parents who have found out. Now I don’t know about you, but news of a teacher transitioning would get out pretty darn quickly in any school I’ve been a part of. In fact, the announcement of my transition at my university will become known to employees at 3:30 pm on Thursday, May 6. I have full faith that it will be all over campus by 5 pm…the only thing that might mitigate that is the fact that it is graduation time.

So the argument that guidelines for medical privacy (available to all Americans) will keep students and parents from finding out that they are being taught be (gasp) a transsexual is insane. The grapevine will let people know.

It is easy to get discouraged when you find narrow-minded and bigoted people saying hateful things. It is worse knowing that for every one of them that steps up and says it, more will keep quiet and discriminate against us by their deeds.

The message line on my personal emails has a quote, “to change the world, you must touch the world.” There are so many times when I believe that the world will never change…that there will always be hatred and violence…so why bother? My answer to that is that I can’t change the entire world, but I can work to make my portion of it a little better, a little safer, a little kinder.

One of the things that drew me to convert to Judaism is the feeling that we are not obligated to complete the task of perfecting the world, but we are responsible to participate in it. We can begin to change by changing ourselves to be more loving and caring, while at the same time not allowing people to discriminate against us. We can be teachers to the world by demonstrating that we are sane, normal, tax-paying individuals. We can set an example that will make it difficult for individuals to square with their narrow minded thoughts.

On May 10, I will transition at work. My hope is that things will go well. I am certain that I will run into resistance from some. I am sure there are those who will call me names, either verbally or silently. I can’t let those things bother me. I need to live my life with grace and dignity. Just as Dr. King had a dream, I have my own. Mine is of a world where violence is the exception and civility is the norm. It is a world where differences are celebrated, not scorned. It is a place where the hungry are feed, the sick are cared for, and the elderly and children are both seen as priceless parts of the tapestry that is our society. I dream of a time where being trans will be much like being left-handed, of a time when love trumps fear.

It may not happen in my lifetime. It may never happen. But as long as I am alive and able, I will strive towards creating that type of world. Pretty Pollyannaish of me, right?

The Funniest Things Happen…

Really funny things happen when you are transitioning. Let me give you a few examples. First, a week ago I was waiting at a convenience store to pay for a diet coke. A second register opened up and the woman said, “I can help you, ma’am.” I was in male mode, but it was so cool! Second, I was being introduced this week by someone who supposedly doesn’t know about my transition to another person (I’m still working male until May 10). The person started introducing me as Tina. How cute!

Then at synagogue last night, a woman who is usually nice to me called me “he” while I was dressed very smartly in feminine attire. The moral of all this…you can’t win t hem all! Seriously, I need to be able to not let the setbacks bother me, and rejoice in the “good stuff.”
I know some people who have transitioned who remain angry and slighted at just about anything. They want to sue, confront, and basically are just not fun to be around.
My therapist and I were talking about one such person, who we both know. I am aware that what I need to do is to just be the best me I can be.

More funny stuff. My cousin went to a training session at a non-profit she volunteers at. The topic was in dealing with LGBTIQ kids…it is a bit more specific, but I’ll keep it general so as not to identify the group. Anyway, my cousin took her copy of True Selves (which I consider to be one of the better books to give to family and friends of transsexuals) with her. I, of course, had given it to her. Anyway, another person at the training had a nephew/niece who was just coming out as being transgendered…a M2F. Needless to say, the aunt is struggling with it…the person in question is married with children. Anyway, my cousin gave her the book to read.

I think what I am really trying to say is that we change the world little by little, one person at a time. While protections such as the Employment Non Discrimination Act (ENDA) are important, the real work is in helping people come to an understanding that we are okay…we aren’t all freaks and Jerry Springer castoffs. We aren’t all wearing 7” heels and parading around in mini-skirts. Yes, some of us do (not me, as walking in anything over a 3” heel would be daunting!), but most of are just decent people.

So, I volunteer, I work hard, I love those around me, and I try to change the world one person at a time. ..by allowing each individual to change themselves. I doubt this would work on Fred Phelps and his crew, but with most people it is worth a try. Being kind to others is so much easier and fun than being a jerk…which is why I believe most people will return your kindness with respect. At least that is my story, and I’m sticking to it.

I’m at T-22 days and counting until transition. Wish me luck!

I’m Just Tina

Monday, April 05, 2010

Wow! It has been a long time between entries. Life is going reasonably well, and I’m on pace to transition at work (or stop crossdressing as a male, which is what it really is) and openly be Tina 24/7. One of the challenging things about living PT (and remember, I’ve done this before, so I have at least experienced what I’m writing about, whether I’m correct or not!) is that it is easy to think of yourself as two people…one male, one female. You can even start talking about yourself as “when I’m Tina.” Well, friends, I’m Tina, even if I’m dressing like a boy! One of the funnier things in my life, since I’m still dressing male for work (a post op for close to seven years, and I’m doing that!), is that when people who know me introduce me to friends of theirs, they still call me Tina! That is because to them I am Tina.

I’ve been spending a decent amount of money on clothes for transition. When I determined that I could “tough it out” in male mode the last time, I purged of almost everything I had. Now I’m busy rebuilding a wardrobe…and I have until May 10…which is my first day at work. A few blouses here, a couple of pairs of pants there. Four pairs of shoes from Maryland Square last night…spending some of my dog sitting money.

I’m paying a price for having purged…just as many of us pay a high price for transitioning. We can end up bankrupt and homeless. We may lose jobs, and we almost always lose at least some friends. Depression can rear its ugly head. We may become uninsurable, unemployable, and suicidal.

I am trying to stay positive about my transition this time. I have tons of friends, to begin with. I have a little money in the bank, but more importantly, I have faith that somehow I will see this through. It isn’t a child like faith…not in a superior being, but merely a belief that the universe will be okay. I struggle to hold onto that. I live with depression…my daily dose of Lexapro is vital to keep me on an even keel…and even that doesn’t work all the time.

I just believe I was put on earth for a reason, and I’m going to keep on seeking my calling. Perhaps it is just to love others, or allow others to love me. Perhaps it is to teach people to challenge their prejudices. Whatever, I am mostly upbeat and ready to face the future.

The Survivor’s

I just got home from my Intro. to Judaism class. For those of you unaware, I converted to Judaism at about the same time I initially began transition (leading my Jewish friends to comment…what being transgendered isn’t enough of a burden for you?). Anyway, I am retaking the class, just for fun (yes, I do have a weird idea of what constitutes “fun.).

Today’s session was on antisemitism and the shoah (what others refer to as the Holocaust). The portion of the class that hit me as being transgendered is a small piece of research done on survivors.

The research, done by William Kelmreich and entitled Against All Odds, looked at what characteristics survivors shared. They were:

1. Flexibility – as evidenced in the rebuilding and reshaping of their lives after the Shoah.
2. Assertiveness – Survivors are not afraid to tackle new challenges. They feel that they will find ways to get things done. They are not easily discourages by obstacles.
3. Tenacity – Survivors do not readily accept no for an answer.
4. Optimism – Survivors see the glass as half full rather than as half empty. When problems arise, they take the view that things can always be worse.
5. Common sense or “street smarts” – Survivors have the ability to make a quick analysis of a situation and act on this analysis.
6. Moral courage – Survivors derive inner strength from the experience and knowledge of their survival. They have a sense that if they survived the Shoah, they can survive anything. They demonstrate courage in dealing with crisis situations.
7. Defense mechanisms – which consists in the ability to distance themselves from the horrors they experienced, yet they take comfort in bonding with other survivors.
8. Existential urge – Survivors have a strong need to find meaning whether this be in family, work, or religion.

Now, I’m not comparing the horror of the Shoah with being a transsexual, but I do submit that the characteristics are helpful to the transsexual during and after transition. Specifically:

• Having a degree of flexibility to what happens and that we may need to rebuild our lives after transition…either because of losses of family members, our careers, or whatever.
• We also need “selective” assertiveness. We don’t have to necessarily be militant about everything, but we do need to get things done and to not be easily discouraged by obstacles that will be put in our way.
• Being tenacious is a must. Picking oneself up after being ridiculed or fired, or read. Get up and try again and again.
• Being optimistic can help keep us going…even when everything in our lives seems to be going wrong. Believing there is a better future and that we can make it.
• Having “street smarts” can keep us from making huge mistakes and keep us safer. For instance, I’d never go out with a guy I just met at a club.
• Having the moral courage to understand that if we can make it through being transgendered, the rest of life isn’t going to be that hard. After all, if you’ve struggled through transition, with all it entails, why can’t you do just about anything you want. (oh, I’ll never win the U. S. Women’s Open, but you get it).
• Possessing defense mechanisms, such as using humor, can help. As an example, before fully transitioning, a friend from synagogue wanted to meet me for lunch during the week. I told her that was fine, as long as she knew who she was going to be meeting! The ability to not take everything as a personal affront can help…and humor is great…to an extent.
• Finally, finding meaning in life can be helpful. While I may wonder why I’ve experienced what I’ve experienced in life, I make a strong effort to connect with family (those who wish to be a part of my life) and my synagogue.

Anyway, again, just the thoughts of a nutty transsexual.

2525

In 1969, when I was a 7th grader, the song In the Year 2525 was at the top of the charts for six weeks (confession: I googled it to both find the date and number of weeks). I just listened to the song on You Tube. I have to confess that after listening to the lyrics, I almost didn’t write this entry.
The song paints a bleak picture of the future of mankind, looking at the dehumanization of the species. It is really a very haunting song. I’m sure people take different things from it, and that mine is different from what might have been intended.
I believe in evolution. I don’t just mean the kind that says we came from apes or something like that, although my limited understanding of science certainly seems to lean in that direction. I don’t see that belief as being contradictory to the belief that there may be a higher spirit…what many people call G-d (as an aside I don’t write that three letter word. Some Jews decide not to, as an honor to G-d, even though there is no real religious reason not to use the “three letter word” for the creator).
For however long we have been around as a species (I’m not even sure that word is right, as my science in college was a geology course, meaning that I can now tell you when something is a rock…I just can’t identify what type of rock!), we have been evolving from what we have been to what we are becoming.
Some of that is what we call “progress.” Now, instead of killing someone with a spear, we do so with bombs. On the other hand, our prenatal and natal care can now save babies who would have died 100 years ago. We have cures for diseases that would have been deadly 100 years ago, and yet cures for other deadly diseases elude us…and new ones seem to pop up (think AIDS).
Evolving is a mixed bag. The auto provided us with mobility, which translates to many people moving thousands of miles from where their families…and yet a staggering amount of Americans still live within 100 miles from “home.”
I guess that the purpose of this entry is to make an obvious statement: that while we have made progress over the past decade, we still have a ways to go…and that not all the “progress” is necessarily good.
I wonder. In 50 years, will gender constructs be gone? Will most men feel free to spend huge amounts of money to wear stiletto heels with knock out dresses? I doubt it…gender roles may blur a bit, but it seems as if there is some sort of a continuum, with most men on what I would call the masculine side of the teeter-totter, and most women on the feminine side. Some may move towards the middle, but for most of us, we stay on our side.
Do we have more gay and transgendered individuals now than we did 100 years ago? Even 50? 20? I don’t know if that is the case, or if we are just allowed to be more open today.
Does the internet create more transpeople or just allow us to not live in isolation? That is my theory…but I know others would dispute that.
We still live in a society where a boy going to school wearing a dress is likely to come home with bruises or worse. We still live in a society in which EMTs may stop treatment of a transwoman if they discover that she is pre-op. We still live in a society where bumper stickers proclaim that G-d made “Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve.”
It is still more dangerous to be gay or lesbian than straight. In many states, it is okay to fire someone based on that basis. In even more states, it is okay to terminate a transperson. We still face the potential of violence from individuals “repulsed” by us. We still face violence by those who are “turned on” by “doing” a “trannie.”
The optimistic part of me wants to believe that we are headed towards the day where ENDA won’t be needed…but since a woman still earns less than her male counterpart, I doubt it is coming soon. The bottom line is that we can have a limited effect on change…and it is up to us to decide if we have the courage (stupidity?) to work to make it happen.
In the meantime, we need to accept ourselves for who we are. As one of my heroes in the T movement says, “say it out loud, I’m T and I’m proud.” Although I’m not proud of being a T (that would be like being proud I’m left handed…I didn’t really have anything to do with it), I am not ashamed of it. I have to be me…as each of us does. I hope for a better world…and I work towards creating the

Acceptance

Although many members of our community may disagree with me, most of the hoops we have to jump through in following the Standards of Care (SOC) are easy compared to the challenges we face in acceptance. I think of acceptance as being like an onion…many layers of acceptance, rather than a banana, with one layer. In fact, it may be like a tootsie pop, but since I have actually never had a tootsie pop (a confession I make with embarrassment) that takes a while to get to the “center.

The first layer, for me, began with the acknowledgement that I am, indeed, a transsexual. I’ve always known I was different…in elementary school I fixated on the words sissy and effeminate in the dictionary…my only real source of information about the topic, since the Encyclopedia Britannica didn’t have any meaningful information. In junior high and high school, I spent time researching “change of sex” in the big green Guides to Periodical Literature books, and spent time in the library stacks reading the very limited information.

Even with that, I didn’t accept the fact that I was (am) a transsexual. Did I want to be a girl? Yes. Did I dream of waking up some morning and discovering that G-d had fixed the “problem between my legs?” Again, the answer is yes. Did it ever occur to me that the problem was between my ears…that I needed to be deprogrammed? No. I knew I was a girl, but I didn’t really accept that was okay. It wasn’t until well into therapy that I was able to admit that, not only was (am) I a transsexual, but that I am okay with that…internally.

The next level of acceptance we seek is from family and friends or from the ability to pass. I know these are really two different levels, but I am not sure which comes first. For some of us, myself included, being able to walk through a mall or try on a cute outfit comes before seeking acceptance from the majority of our friends and family. Having the belief that you won’t “always be read” is important in gaining confidence to go on. It comes in spurts. You may be followed by boys at the mall or giggled at by a group of preteen girls, but at some point you gain a little more confidence and feel a bit more accepted.
On the family and friends side, things get harder. I would guess that most of us have lost some family and friends because of this issue. In my case, my dad can’t accept who I am. His acceptance would be helpful to me, but I need to work through this knowing I won’t get it. Lacking the acceptance of a parent is difficult, and it makes acceptance by others more critical. Some of us are lucky enough, brave enough, or whatever, so that this portion doesn’t bother us. We say that we just go with those who accept us, and screw the rest. In a way, I envy that sort of attitude. I just can’t do it.

In the absence of true acceptance by those in our lives who are important to us, we either find the internal strength and/or find new support. Some of us attend support groups. I’ve never thought of myself as a support group type of girl. For one thing, the closest real group is over an hour and a half away. Second, I rationalize that I have enough friends who accept me, so I don’t need it. The fact that none of those friends know exactly what it is like to be trans doesn’t seem to sink in to me.
After we transition, (warning: this portion deals only with post ops or those living FT), we need to be able to integrate. We must learn to accept ourselves completely. For some this means seeing themselves as women, not as transwomen. For others it means embracing the fact that we are transpeople. What it is, however, is a letting go of what “was” and becoming what “is.” It is embracing the new you, and it is easy for some and more difficult for others.

The bottom line, is that if you don’t come to true acceptance, you will not find happiness…either in transition, not transitioning, having surgery, not having surgery. Acceptance is key. The challenge is that key has to open a lot of doors…and you have to be willing to explore them all…and to be willing to have some of them slammed in your face. In the end, it is worth it…at least it has been for me.

Prisoners of our Own Paradigms

I started writing this entry about a month ago, but other topics came up, and I just put this one on the back burner…now I’m going to refine it a bit.  This week has been one of reflection.  I had a therapy session on Saturday, a special session to address my concerns regarding transition.  I share most of the common herstory of transgendered M2Fs, including that with Mike Penner/Christine Daniels.  That is why her death hit me so hard.

As I’ve written earlier, my dad can’t (won’t?) accept me for who I am.  As long as I present male to him, things are fine, but he doesn’t care to see Tina.  When I complete my transition (hopefully sometime during 2010), that is going to mean he just doesn’t get to see me.  I may try to make one more visit to him before that happens

We face enormous societal challenges by being transgendered, whether we hide it from the world or not.  If, as I did for the first 40+ years of my life, we hide it we face the stress of living in a gender that we are unable to feel completely comfortable with.  Our degree of discomfort can lead to self-destructive behavior, sadness, depression, and even suicide.  If, on the other hand, we select to transition, we face the three R’s of ridicule, rejection, and repulsion.

Okay, so we all have paradigms about what we believe is “normal.”  To a large extent these are based on our own experiences.  As an example, I have a hard time understanding F2Ms.  Why would a woman want to become a man?  I mean, I understand it is the reverse of what I have felt (I am not THAT stupid), but I can’t understand why anyone would want to give up being a woman.  I am sure that there are F2Ms who are puzzled as to why I would want to give up male privilege.  Each of us is seeing things through our own lenses.

As much as most people, I am a slave to the binary gender system.  I like to believe that I’m not, but the reality is that even if I think of gender as a continuum, I feel that people “land” somewhere in that range.  So, if one is basically mostly male, that is where you land…I can’t easily understand how one can be hyper male one day and girly-girl the next.  So, I have trouble understanding gender f##kers.

My point, and I do have one, is that it is difficult to get past our paradigms.  Additionally, if we don’t at least identify and admit that they exist, we will never be able to understand them.  I am now trying to understand the M2F trans-whatever who feels the need to wear fishnet stockings and six inch heels, along with a mini-skirt.  It may not be (it isn’t) my cup of tea (I prefer a long skirt or pants, along with much lower heels and/or flats),   That doesn’t make me “right” or the other person “wrong.”  It simply makes each of us different from each other.

When we try to fit people into the “boxes” we create with our own paradigms, we are doing to them exactly what we don’t like in others who label us as “freaks.”  While I (and others) may wish to just be referred to as being a woman (without the trans), there are others who are proudly transwomen.  Both are okay, but some of us feel more comfortable with being identified by one term.

As Joel Barker, in his book Paradigms: Business of Discovering the Future, points out, our paradigms are valuable to us…an example being a stoplight.  My hope would be that you will stop at a red light…that is my paradigm.  It is when those paradigms are used to make others feel less than…to be made to feel like freaks…that they are bad.  Personally, I believe we need to challenge our paradigms.  While you won’t see me at a drag show (I am uncomfortable with them), I respect those who participate in them and those who attend…even as I am uncomfortable with it.

When I encounter a 50-something cross-dresser who feels the need to wear a mini-skirt, I’ll try to understand that this person is just expressing who s/he wants to be at that moment.  When my father rejects me, I will try to understand that he is a prisoner of his own belief system…and I will love him through the pain.

This entry, like most of mine, is an attempt for me to work through my own issues.  If it is helpful to anyone, that is great…but that isn’t the major point…at least for me.  More later.