In defense of the sanctimonious women's studies set || First feminist blog on the internet

Details, baby, details.

The writing project I was working on is finished. For now. I’m in the process of catching up on my sleep and my workouts, which is hard, because the two goals are mutually exclusive.

Anyway.

While I was trying to thrash this thing into shape, I bugged a dear friend who’s an excellent editor with many questions and drafts and meandering emails. For some reason, he thinks I have some reciprocal interest in his problems, so he sent me a draft of a piece of writing he’s working on for something else. His subject is trans communities, particularly the online ones, and the purpose they serve for transpeople. We’ve been talking about them and their dimensions a lot lately. Off of that, I thought I’d write a little bit about my experience with them.

Despite the exploding visibility of transpeople, we are still isolated and still suffering from a lack of information. This is particularly true when general social reception gives way to the concrete details of trans lives, both in and after transition. Unless we are very, very lucky, none of the adults in our lives are able to offer much advice. Our doctors may even be ignorant. We have achieved greater acceptance and formal acknowledgement than ever before, but we are still marginal.

We have had to step in and create substitutes for ourselves, and I am continually amazed at how well they’ve worked. I can’t imagine how we survived before the internets. I get the sense that it wasn’t easy; I know that it developed in the face of rejection from all kinds of care providers; I know that it originated the word-of-mouth principle on which we thrive today. Online communities are more open, more accessible, and more flexible than anything that’s come before them, and we’ve made very good use of the medium. I was lucky enough to come out when these exchanges were fairly well-established. There were yahoo groups, livejournal, and too many personal websites to count.

They have been an invaluable informational resource. I can ask about hormones, surgeries, recovery issues, surgeons, referrals, the HBSOC, legal name and gender changes, negotiating the DMV in any state, workplace protections, bathroom harassment, higher education, academia, coming out, family, dating, romance, safer sex, parenting, adoption, divorce, custody, passing tips, injection protocols, travelling while trans, transgendered history, certain large-scale employers, insurance carriers, physicians, therapists, pharmacists, drug interactions, certain chronic health problems, eating disorders, depression, sobriety and treatment for addiction, and a thousand thousand other things. And I will find some transguy who has experienced a similar situation and can point me in a useful direction. Most of the time, I’ll hear from a few dozen. Is this guy reputable? Where can I find a friendly internist near Oberlin? Anyone ever been to this support group? What does “real-life test” mean? What do top surgery results look like? Are there any information resources available for LDS families? Is anyone else bisexual all of a sudden?

But they serve another purpose, one that’s at least as vital: they help us to understand that we’re not alone. And forgive me for the melodrama, but they help us to understand that there is life after transition.

In popular terms, transition is described as a kind of suicide, extreme damage to life undertaken out of some senseless compulsion. On television and in movies, transsexuals are generally either killed–CSI, Boys Don’t Cry, Ally McBeal; or punished with violence, ostracism, and extremely fucked-up lives and personalities–CSI, Boys Don’t Cry, The Crying Game, Law & Order: SVU, Nip/Tuck, Better than Chocolate, Normal, Queer as Folk, The L-Word, Transamerica. (That last is the only portrayal I can think of wherein a transwoman gets to have a job. And didja notice how, in the most positive mainstream portrayal of a transwoman yet to hit the silver screen, there are no friends or acquaintances anywhere in Bree’s life prior to the roadtrip?) (Also, one notable exception: Transgeneration–although I would count that more in the information-sharing tradition than in the pop-culture one.) Combine that with a bunch of extreme and extremely rapid changes, and a family that’s probably going through the eight stages of grief, and the message to nervous newbie trannies is clear: life as you know it is over, and from here on out it pretty much sucks.

The senseless part is there, too. Transpeople are opaque. They’re allowed to recite a few canned phrases–“trapped in the wrong body,” “never felt like a boy,” etc.–to explain the motives behind transition. They’re also allowed to talk about how they’ll be a “real” man or woman after surgery. They don’t really talk about what it feels like, or how they got where they are, or what they think will happen next. Trans activists complain, and rightly so, that this communicates an extremely narrow, two-dimensional version of the trans experience to non-transpeople. What they don’t describe is how difficult it is for transpeople themselves to identify with these non-characters, and how much loneliness that can create.

That was where I was coming from when I started to come out. I was sure that no one would ever love me, touch me, sleep with me, hire me, rent to me, admit me, or talk to me ever again. I was sure I would never, ever pass, ever, not after hormones, not after surgeries. I didn’t think I could make this work, and I was flailing around in terror.

The ftms I encountered made it clear that it was possible to negotiate transition and to live life after transition. They’d found jobs. They’d gone on to grad school. They’d found partners. They’d found doctors who treated them respectfully. They’d gotten their families to come around. They were happy and well-adjusted and sane. They’d survived and done well for themselves. Their presence helped me to understand that I could, too.


16 thoughts on Details, baby, details.

  1. Sometimes, I think that — and this is true of queers in general, IMO — just the act of getting to where you can live happily in spite of all the crap is its own form of revolutionary act. Something we’re certainly not supposed to be able to do.

    For me, and bear in mind that I only sorta kinda identify in my own head as trans (an identity that’s developed its own weird baggage, IMO), the thing that usually chafes the most is the degree to which it’s difficult to have to constantly reject that 2-dimensional caricature of trans identity — I’m really tired of having to issue disclaimers to my friends every time my gender stuff comes up in conversation. The quality folks get it quickly, but there are always folks that just never do — which means that I wind up being stuck in yet another convenient little box that doesn’t work for me. The fact that my personal relationship with my gender is way too complicated to be summed up by a couple of convenient phrases is hard to grasp, I think, in a cultural world that works so much off of archetypes.

    Ramblings. Happy thursday.

  2. I thank god to the internet as well where I am allowed to exchange ideas on topics that I often wonder about or maybe feel enraged about, but am absent the peer groups to share these ideas.

    In even a more important note, the availability of information on the net and the sharing of lives and stories helps me to fill in the blanks about issues I otherwise would have little understanding of, such as trans-life or even queer issues.

    Keep it coming, opening communication offers an opportunity for all of us to learn from eachother and to gain a better understanding of our fellow beings on this earth.

  3. There’s a trans character in the wonderful Coronation Street, probably the most popular television programme in Britain. Hayley is a well-rounded and sympathetic figure – like virtually all the Corrie characters, she’s a little eccentric (and her husband is more so), but she has a normal factory job (where she’s usually the voice of reason), has many friends, and despite some nasty jibes from some of the show’s more unpleasant characters, is well liked and accepted by the community. Last year she and Roy took in a local boy, Chesney, whose dreadful mother and stepfather had abandoned him – the show’s writers made it clear that Hayley was a fantastic and loving parent, more so than Chesney’s real mother. And when the Guardian, who should have known better, ran a very nasty opinion column mocking transwomen, the actress who plays Hayley wrote a brilliant letter to the paper, not mentioning her dayjob, in which she declared her solidarity with the trans community. Pretty much everyone in Corrie is a cartoon, but Hayley is still a decent and loveable character, who’s depicted with dignity and affection.

  4. What about the BBC adaptation of Tales of the City? That was pretty positive, and while I don’t remember if she had an outside job after transition, in the time of the story line she seemed at retirement age anyway and her current job was being landlady. (and kind hostess with the homegrown tokes)

  5. It’s amazing, really, the impact that online communities can have on people’s lives. I’m sure that the recent explosion of trans-identified and visible people owes hugely to the resources you detailed.

    Trans activists complain, and rightly so, that this communicates an extremely narrow, two-dimensional version of the trans experience to non-transpeople. What they don’t describe is how difficult it is for transpeople themselves to identify with these non-characters, and how much loneliness that can create.

    Yes. And that is exactly where a community can enter someone’s life and provide so much variety and possibility. It’s a little bit like your own personal TV show (groan), watching those friends you know online go about their lives and grow as people. It inspires, I find. It’s funny, because while these communities serve some of the functions of local physical communities (that may or may not exist), they are also some kind of postmodern interpretation of what visibility means. (If I’m not gettin’ too big for my britches, here.) They hold up a mirror to the viewer/community member, and provide validation through multiple kinds of interactions: you see me, I see you, you give me advice, I report back, I watch you some more.

    It’s fascinating and wonderful, I think.

  6. I’m American–not that that’s an excuse, mind–and cable-deprived, and therefore not terribly well acquainted with anything British. It’s great to hear about those portrayals; I might try to track down TotC.

    The ones I can come up with from American TV are:

    Law & Order: SVU

    Transwoman kills a guy who sexually assaults her and then threatens to reveal her secret; the detectives out her to her boyfriend; he violently rejects her; she’s co-opted by a publicity-seeking attorney; she mounts a failed defense of self-defense; she is put in a men’s prison; at the end of the show, she’s been brutally gang-raped into unconsciousness

    CSI

    (1) Gil & crew find a murdered transwoman in a car; the scent leads them through seedy tranny bars to another transwoman’s body in a storage locker (she’s the victim of a botched black-market surgery) and finally to an eeeeevil transwoman doctor who performed this black-market surgery.

    (2) Serial killer turns out to have been an ftm in the most gratuitous plot twist ever aired.

    Nip/Tuck

    She’s a child-molester! She’s Satan! No, wait, she’s a man! And still totally Satan!

    ; and, finally, The L-Word, which apparently has an ftm character this season. I am not optimistic.

  7. Piny:

    I’m curious about your writing project. Is it fiction, non-fiction? Poetry? An essay? A piece for a magazine?

    Congratulations on making progress. Writing can be rewarding sometimes but it ain’t easy.

  8. For a fairly sympathetic portrayal, by American TV standards at least, I was suitably impressed by an episode of Crossing Jordan. I think it aired in the first or second season.

    Transwoman and husband (not legally married, I suppose, I think this was pre-Massachusetts court decision, but that’s how they were presented) come to the medical examiner’s office because the woman is inoperable due to terminal cancer. No operation, no change of sex on a Mass. birth certificate. They ask if there’s any way she can be listed as female on her documents so at least she can get her last wish. Dr. Macy, the cheif ME, tumbles it around in his head for the duration of the episode, and at the end when he finally has to sign off on the woman’s death certificate, the office clerk notices the sex listed as female. He posthumously took care of things, somehow, though they don’t get into detail. Yes, she’s still dead at the end of the episode, but not specifically for being trans, and not violently. My impression was they were trying to send a message about dignity, and I felt it worked.

    As far as communities go, I cannot begin to imagine how I’d be handling transition without the net. How did people get information 20 years ago? Granted I found my current social/support group the old fashioned way, through a flyer at the local GLBT health center, but I wouldn’t have found that place without the net, so ’round and ’round it goes.

    And last but not least, yes, the 2-D trans profile sucks hard. It amazes me how quickly people, even friends, want already to stuff me back in a box when I’m trying so hard to get out of the first one.

  9. Maybe people want to put you in boxes because they don’t like the little sneaking doubts it brings up in themselves. I’m willing to bet that a lot more people would make the switch if it were easier. I’m willing to bet that most people would make the switch if it wasn’t permanent. If you could be a man or woman for a few weeks or months…who wouldn’t want to see what it’s like on the other side?

  10. You know how, for the longest time (and this is only starting to end) the only way anyone ever portrayed lesbian or gay folks was during their “coming out” and the characters rarely had any personality beyond being lesbian or gay? I think that’s what’s happening now to trans-representation. And I do think, as totally frustrating as it is to wait, that this will change when people can finally get over the “how do they do that?” element and when more transpeople get behind the camera or computer or whatever. These things are absolutely painfully slow-going.

  11. Yes, she’s still dead at the end of the episode, but not specifically for being trans, and not violently. My impression was they were trying to send a message about dignity, and I felt it worked.

    Heh. Baby steps!

    Yes, that does sound like a really positive portrayal. I’m sorry I missed it; Crossing Jordan is my guilty pleasure.

    Crime dramas might be in a whole different category, given the titillation/violence/exposure dynamic they set up. I mean, yes, being written into the deshabille corpse means you’ve been relegated to object status, but there might be a fine distinction between actually approving or wanting to enact that kind of violence on the victim-proxy’s body and wanting that body spread out for examination. Not better, and certainly no more respectful, but different. Like butterflies, both with the dead trannies and the more customary dead women: stick a pin in them and they’re less confusing, less of a threat.

  12. You know how, for the longest time (and this is only starting to end) the only way anyone ever portrayed lesbian or gay folks was during their “coming out” and the characters rarely had any personality beyond being lesbian or gay? I think that’s what’s happening now to trans-representation. And I do think, as totally frustrating as it is to wait, that this will change when people can finally get over the “how do they do that?” element and when more transpeople get behind the camera or computer or whatever. These things are absolutely painfully slow-going.

    Absolutely. And I agree that it can still be a problem.

  13. Nymphalidae:

    I had a roommate in college that was quite honest about wanting to spend time as a woman just to see what it was like, so to speak. And to allay critics, he even said he’d be glad to take on a full menstrual cycle. But as you say, it’s the permanence that would dissuade him. He’s curious, but pretty happy being a guy.

  14. The value and resources of internet trans communities can vary immensely according to what you find and where you log on. I live in Australia, and the first trans communities I ever found online were radical ones — ones in which thinking outside the boxes in terms of masculinity, body modifications, transition options, sexuality et al were encouraged and supported. Problem was, all the people I ‘met’ were in the US, and they couldn’t provide me with concrete information about stuff where I live. Then I joined some Australian trans email lists and communities, and found, in amongst the concrete advice some people were able to give, some enormously conservative assumptions about ‘real’ transsexuality, my responsibility to be that thing, and negative feedback from those who thought I wasn’t really transsexual at all. Because I already knew what was possible independently, I was able to fight that battle. In the three years since that time, more supportive and open-minded email lists and forums have sprun up in Australia (particularly for ftm stuff, which is only just beginning to be visible here) and I’ve tried to help foster more broad-minded forums myself. But if I hadn’t found those geographically-distant, yet more politically or culturally similar people to start with, I would have crawled back into thinking I couldn’t/shouldn’t transition. It’s weird how inconsistent and pocketed the Net can be, how the collapsing of geographical space has its own strange dimensions and folds. It can be so random.

    By the way, I think the L Word’s ftm character is going to turn out interesting. In some ways, Max is a pretty one-dimensional character, and all of his current arc seems taken up with transition. (Perhaps once he becomes a familiar character, that will change?) But it’s also an opportunity for the writers to do some pedagogical work about queers figuring out trans stuff. The core cast spend at least one episode getting pronouns wrong and the name wrong and being, like, “A sex change? Huh-wha?” or “Does your girlfriend know about this?” which I found hilarious. (Perhaps it was unintentional.) On the other hand, on the L Word bulletin boards, hardcore fans seem to hate Daniela Sea with a passion, supposedly because she can’t act — or maybe she’s just too masculine for them, who knows.

    (I thank the innernet for enabling me to watch these as they screen on American TV… collapsing that geographical distance yet again :))

  15. As far as communities go, I cannot begin to imagine how I’d be handling transition without the net. How did people get information 20 years ago?

    many of us didn’t. i was already in my 30’s, married, and a father when i realized that there were actually other people in the world who felt like i did and somehow managed to transition.

  16. An mtf friend of mine asked me something about diseases in post-op populations, so I tried to find anything at all on PubMed. There was nothing but “this trans patient is psychiatrically ill, so all trans people are psychiatrically ill” articles from the late seventies and early eighties.

    I was glad to hear that there will be a follow up on all Swedish post-ops adressing the heart disease and cancer risk spectrum. It’s about time.

Comments are currently closed.