3/ aggressively screws over anyone whose view of their identity is more complex, or whose trajectory was more complex. And the main group
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Replying to @jessesingal
4/ of people who talk about gender identity being a complicated, fluid, multifaceted things are... trans people themselves. People adopt
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Replying to @jessesingal
5/ an oversimplified view of "born this way" on trans issues without considering any of the potential political consequences. It bad.
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Replying to @jessesingal
This, YES. The pervasiveness of "born this way/always knew" rhetoric was a HUGE impediment to coming out, for me.
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Replying to @jessesingal
didn't recognize the possibility b/c I didn't fit the dominant narrative; later, shy of the implications of contradicting it.
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Replying to @NotLasers @RaeBeta
That's interesting -- thanks for sharing. Implications = how other people would react to your honest version of your story?
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Replying to @jessesingal
And the q of whether I was undercutting a narrative that served significant political/triage purpose--channeling recognition...
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Replying to @NotLasers @jessesingal
...and resources to the parts of an already vulnerable population in most acute need/crisis.
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Replying to @NotLasers @jessesingal
(Side note:
@nataliereed84 has done some brilliant deconstruction/refutation) of born-this-way dogma; no links on hand, alas)1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
then we should be twitter friends! thanks for the tip
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