Some thoughts about MtF transition, FFS, conformity, gender stereotypes, and "cis assimilation." If you're feeling dysphoric or likely to be triggered by a trans woman dissecting what she thinks is "male" about her face, please don't read.
-
-
But even if I were six inches shorter and perfectly cis-passing in voice and mannerisms, I'd still want FFS. I look at my face and see masculine features. Sometimes the hugboxing makes me question the validity of my perception, but it doesn't alter it.
Show this thread -
I want other people to see what I see, so they don't react like I'm crazy. It's more obvious in a profile-angle picture of me, like this (genuinely very beautiful) one Dan took on Saturday.pic.twitter.com/nSEHu5EXny
Show this thread -
The silhouette here illustrates the areas I want to adjust: hairline, browbone, trachea. Just minor adjustments in those areas. And then I want an unapologetic Hollywood rhinoplasty because I want to be pretty. (Don't we all? Why is this considered a character flaw?)
Show this thread -
"But I love your nose! It's so interesting! Petite noses are so generic and boring!" Well, my voice is also pretty interesting. And I'm interestingly tall (6'1). My shoulders and chest are interestingly wide. Personally, I think that's enough interest.
Show this thread -
I'm never going to be indistinguishable from a cis woman. I'm at best going to end up with a male skeleton trapped in a female body. Being overly cis-conformist is not high on my list of concerns. Why not change what I can?
Show this thread -
Some trans people will shake their heads at my entire way of thinking about this. The opposing viewpoint goes like this: "Trans women are women and you are valid no matter what you look like. Don't conform, revolt. Stop changing your face and start changing the world."
Show this thread -
There's def something to this, and I think that's a good psychological place to wind up at the end of transition. You can't change everything about yourself, and there comes a point where the goal should be accepting yourself as you are, society be damned, haters be fucked.
Show this thread -
But personally, I think the goal of transition is more than self-acceptance. It is to become your gender, to live your gender. Which genuinely raises the classic TERF gotcha question: "What does it mean to be a woman?" "Define womanhood."
Show this thread -
I think there are two answers, a pragmatic one and a philosophical one.
Show this thread -
The pragmatic answer is that a woman is anyone who identifies as a woman. It's pragmatic because there are many situations where it's best to *act as if it is true*—e.g. a trans woman who hasn't transitioned yet but requests she/her pronouns is entitled to that respect.
Show this thread -
However "a woman is anyone who identifies as a woman" is not a philosophically good answer. It tells you absolutely nothing about what being a woman is. So how do we answer philosophically?
Show this thread -
Well like all philosophical questions "What is womanhood?" has no definitive answer. But I'll tell you my thoughts. Remember, I'm a Wittgenstein gal: I don't think the answer can involve "identifying" because meaning is public & practical, not private & psychological.
Show this thread -
The way I think of it, the purpose of my transition is to become a woman *for most intents and purposes.* That's a very public, social goal that primarily involves the interactions I have with people around me.
Show this thread -
When I came out and said "I am a trans woman," that was not so much a metaphysical proclamation as a statement of intent to alter my behavior and appearance, and a request for other people to treat me and talk about me in a certain way.
Show this thread -
What I really want is not for people to call me a woman because they pity me, sympathize with me, or respect me. It's better than them calling me a man, but only as a last resort.
Show this thread -
Really I want them to call me a woman because it feels natural to do so, because I just seem like a woman to them. This is not something I can just demand, so a lot of the burden is on me.
Show this thread -
I have to change my appearance, my voice, my mannerisms not with the aim of becoming a woman in some metaphysical sense (a nonsensical idea) but of becoming a woman *socially* by appearing & interacting "like a woman" with other people.
Show this thread -
This is of course an extremely subjective and relative thing. Some people saw me as a woman before I ever did myself. Other people never will, no matter how I look and act, because they know that I'm trans and have decided on principle that I cannot be a woman.
Show this thread -
But subjective isn't the same as unpredictable. There is a lot of intersubjective agreement about what sorts of things make a person seem manly or womanly. And the point of transitioning is largely to present female to that collective perception.
Show this thread -
A year ago very few people thought of me as a woman. Now a majority of people probably do. My goal is to push that trend as far as I can, look back on my progress and one day say, "You know what? Good enough."
Show this thread -
Because I think about transition this way, I still use the term "MtF," which is now often considered outmoded and inaccurate, since, this way of thinking goes, trans women were always women, even before they knew it.
Show this thread -
This is another issue where I think there is a difference between the pragmatic and philosophical approach. I don't like being called "he" with reference to my pre-transition self, because it feels like I'm being misgendered now.
Show this thread -
So it's best practice to refer to trans people as if they were always their gender. But pedantically speaking, before I transitioned, I was a man *for most intents and purposes.* I was socially and publicly a man. And I'm now escaping that past situation—MtF.
Show this thread -
When people use my deadname and old pronouns, even when referring to the time when I used them, that impedes the escape.
Show this thread -
This is kind of a scary way of thinking about things because it means that trans people aren't completely in control of our own genders. But isn't that, in fact, the predicament we're in?
Show this thread -
The reason misgendering feels so horrible is that, in that moment, the person misgendering you is effectively barring you from being your gender, at least socially. That's the reason it feels oppressive. You're literally being deprived of something important to you.
Show this thread -
People who refuse to accept trans people for what they are, or what they're becoming, simultaneously attack us for not conforming ("you still have obvious male features") and for conforming ("you're just perpetuating gender stereotypes").
Show this thread -
Throughout this thread I've referred to my transition as an effort to seem "like a woman" to other people. So, what does "like a woman" mean? People who haven't thought this through will look at me and say "he thinks long hair and makeup makes him a woman!"
Show this thread -
No. Hair, makeup, surgery, voice training, mannerisms—each of these is only a small part of a general effort to change how I'm perceived, how I'm treated by others, how I interact with others.
Show this thread -
It's the net effect of these things—my acquired social position as a woman—that makes it philosophically sound to call me a woman. The minutiae of how I achieve that end are not particularly relevant.
Show this thread - 11 more replies
New conversation -
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.
Business email: info@contrapoints.com