Not just Trans*: Why let anyone define you?

thursday-feb-26-15I’ve got a surgery coming up on Monday, March 2nd, as I talked about in my last post, and since tomorrow will be largely dedicated to blood work and the weekend to getting a few last things done, I decided today to get my hair cut. I hadn’t done that since before GRL Atlanta, so a year and a half ago, and it had grown out long, past my shoulders, a symbol of how much I don’t care about myself or what people see when they look at me… more or less.

The problem is that in order to not care what others think of me, I have to choose not to care what I think about me. That’s a slippery slope. In a world in which many people refuse to simply let me be me without demanding explanations for why I’d “be like this,” it’s often simpler just to let things slide. To just stop wasting precious energy on appearances when the best I can hope for is to make someone wonder if I’m a man or a woman before defaulting back to “ma’am”.

When I showed Clancy a pic of my new haircut, her response was “looking good!” followed by, in further conversation, reminding me guys can have long hair too. It’s true, and it’s glorious, and I am the last person to deny my passion for long-haired men. Unf.

My answer, though?

i prefer to look more butch for my own sanity. […] with long hair no one hesitates before they ma’am me. short hair i get that moment of “…is that–” and it’s good for my dysphoria. all the knowing “guys have long hair too” in the world doesn’t fix that deep down something in me is busted and gets wounded by people’s certainty i’m not a guy haha. if the best i can do is make them doubt for a minute, then i’ll take it. that’s sad, isn’t it? haha

 

The eternally awesome Clancy replied that it was more sad that it’s so important to people to know whether someone else is male or female. That it’s more sad that society trains us to categorize people–to define them–ourselves instead of just asking their pronouns.

Breaking out of the binary is desperately important, but not just for trans* individuals… Imagine how much more open our minds would be as a culture if our first thought on seeing someone else wasn’t “what’s in their undies?” but instead “how does that person see themself?”

This, like so many problems, could fall under the umbrella of intersectional feminism. Picture a world in which whether or not you have a vagina has no bearing on how you are viewed or defined as a worker, a parent, a voter, or a consumer. Picture a world in which the way you define yourself is the first impression someone else receives of you rather than the arbitrary box they’ve chosen to shove you in.

Those concepts may seem loosely related, but gender as a construct is used to empower people who support and uphold the patriarchal framework, turning some people into gender police who receive social kickbacks for “keeping the freaks in their places” or even just for criticizing cis women who step outside the narrow paths the Good Ole Boy network deems fit for their dainty lil selves.

Someday we’ll stop doing this to ourselves. Someday we’ll stop pretending that cunt or cock or something else is what makes us who we are. We’ll accept that some very feminine people love football and that some very masculine people love ballet. We’ll start to ask questions about each other before we form easy judgments and then enforce them because we’d feel foolish had we been wrong in that instant opinion. Maybe asking people who they are instead of just assuming isn’t such a crazy idea, huh?

Maybe all we need is a new approach. Next time someone’s gender presentation makes you curious or uncomfortable, instead of trying to figure out whether to say sir or ma’am, maybe you should ask, “What are your pronouns?” You just might be part of a revolution that gives you a better life too.

11 Comments:

  1. Pingback: The surgery and C word blues | Clancy Nacht

  2. ALL THE LOVE TO YOU. (& really good red velvet cake, just because)

  3. Why would you put a photo of yourself on the internet when you look like that? Girl to guy trans are usually cute but you must have been an ugly chick because you’re an ugly guy. At least take some male hormones and grow a beard to cover that mess because, seriously girl, you’re kinda gross.

    • This comment was brought to my attention. Whomever this Richard Ryder is that made this ignorant and hate filled comment, it is absolutely not me. I am Richard Ryder, the afternoon host at 103.9 PROUD FM and can be seen weekly on the OUTtv Network, in and out of drag (I”m a bearded queen, what can I say?). I would never judge someone or their personal journey the way this Richard Ryder did. And I don’t in any way agree with or condone his bullying comment. xox

  4. You look amazing! I don’t know what that dudebro is on about.

  5. Great post, Thursday, and your picture looks fantastic!

    As a cis gender woman I can tell you that part of the reason some of us don’t ask is fear of looking like a fool and fear of causing offence. When I was in the military I was frequently mistaken for a man, which didn’t offend me, but in cases where I noticed and corrected the assumption the other person seemed embarrassed. Just having your question, “what are your pronouns?” is actually hugely helpful. It makes it so someone can ask a question without assumption and potentially avoid embarrassment.

    Unfortunately there will still be people who will get offended by that question, “what? you can’t TELL?” but I feel more confident now that I’m better equipped to be “not offensive” (which is very important to us Canadians!).

    I wrote a review for Le Jazz Hot that commented on how I was better educated about terms after reading it (thank you both!) without the book feeling preachy. I know (we, well, I assume) you and Clancy didn’t set out to educate with your novels, but I’m grateful it worked out that way!

  6. Pingback: My First Trip to the HRT Doctor - Thursday Euclid

Leave a Reply to Clancy Nacht Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.