There are many different facets to being a transsexual, some of them different from person to person. One thing that remains the same, however, is that being a transsexual is a choice. There are many transsexuals that don’t want to admit that there is any choice involved with being a transsexual. Admitting that there is choice involved serves to give fuel to the people that would have us crushed under the heal of society. Making a choice, to some people, means that the extremists are correct in their assessment that we should be hated and ostracized by society. It appears to give credence to the people that think with their phobias instead of their minds. But speaking the truth is important to each of us that identifies as a transsexual. The truth opens the door for positive changes. The truth opens the door to self acceptance. The truth opens the door to people that genuinely wish to understand. The truth spans political parties and ideological divisions. But most important, the truth lets us take pride in ourselves again.
Before I continue, I feel I need to separate the decision to become a transsexual into two parts. First, there are the feelings that drive us to make the transition; and then there is the decision to make the transition itself. It is important to divide the early process into these two parts, otherwise all the talk of choices is simply lost in the noise of one person speaking past another. While I might insist that I didn’t have a choice, I would be referring to the feelings that drove me. Another person, insisting that I made a choice, would be referring to the actions I have taken in response to my feelings.
There are several hypotheses on the cause of the feelings a person has that might lead them to become a transsexual. Some of these hypotheses compete, while others are complimentary. Trying to find a root cause to transsexual feelings is difficult to say the least; and the more scientists look into these causes, the more possibilities seem to present themselves. There is even the possibility that the causes are different between the male-to-female transsexual and the female-to-male. Regardless of the cause or causes, these feelings propagate through a person whether that person wants them to or not. There is no choice whether these feelings will go away; so the real choice is what are we going to do about them?
What we do about these feelings is where the choice to become a transsexual arrives in our lives. I don’t think it is unreasonable, from the stories I have read, to believe that there can be different magnitudes of these feelings. For some people, I don’t think the feelings ever create a bigger problem than they are able to handle in their original gender role. If the pain isn’t more than the person can tolerate, they might make the decision to continue in their birth assigned gender role. For other people, staying in their assigned gender role can be so painful that it is no longer possible to continue functioning in society. There comes a point when it might even be to painful to continue living. But regardless of the extent of the pain our feelings cause us, we need to realize that we are still making a choice. For too many of us, the choice comes down to life or death, transition or suicide. This is the first choice we have to make.
Whether you have to make the choice between life and death or not, you still have to weigh the value of your pre-transition life with your post-transition hopes. Weighing these decisions is a balancing act that shows the magnitude of the pain we face. On one side of the scales is our family, friends, livelihood, home, money, community, safety, health, reputation, religion, and social network: on the other side, our need to be ourselves. It can be one of the most difficult and frightening decisions we will ever face, but it is a decision none the less. Most of us are all too familiar with this decision. We have lived with this decision brewing under the facade we called our lives until the weight of our needs outweighed the sum total of our pre-transition lives.
Transition brings on its own pain. Few, if any, of us are able to make a transition without being the center of attention for months if not years. There are too many mannerisms that need to be relearned, skills that need to be practiced, and prejudices that need to be faced. Often we are put through the very fires of hell for the hope of being ourselves. Often we can’t imagine the depth of the pain we will have to endure to let our true selves surface. Even if we thought we knew all the facets of society that would reject us, more often than not, these weren’t even the tip of the iceberg: but this was our choice. The medications, possible electrolysis, and surgeries are a crippling reality in themselves: but this was our choice. The loss of friends and family breaks our hearts and isolates us from society: but this was our choice. The loss of jobs and income ruins us financially: but this was our choice.
If none of these things sound like a choice to you, then you should consider yourself lucky. Transsexuality is the choice of the spirit over the body: a choice no one should ever have to make. But it is in admitting that we made the choice that we rebuild our self esteem — something that is often a casualty of our transition. By standing behind our decision to become the people we should be, we begin to loose the feeling that we are a victim of life.
There are people that would be our allies, but these people deserve the truth. There is no need to hide behind the victim mentality and claim that we had no choice. Only by explaining our choices can people understand the trials we had to endure, the strength of our character, and the value of the people we have become. We want people to see who we really are, not pretend that we are the poor victims of genetics, or hormones, or whatever the current hypothesis for gender dysphoria is.
Interesting piece, but I have to say that I don’t agree with your opinion. Two points of my disagreement stand out:
1. you speak about truth, but the truth you mention is a subjective sense of how trans people experience their decision to transition.
2. admitting it’s a choice does not rebuild ‘our’ self-esteem
A present self-esteem first has to be broken to be ‘rebuilt’, I don’t know about others but the self-esteem I had before transition was the one to not even sink deeper in denial of whom I was, the self-esteem I now have is there because I’m feeling more positive about myself than I ever have done, also because my transition is going well. Nothing had to break for that.
I do agree that there’s a decision one makes regarding transition, though a decision does not equal a choice. To have a choice one has to have at least two options. If something is not considered an option than it is not part of the decision making. So when I decided to transition I only had one option: transitioning. I could also at that point cancelled my decision, but that isn’t a decision to not transition.
Those whom feel they have a choice and make a choice of course have to stand behind their choice all through transition, or else transition would have been a false choice.
Every person has his or her own truth, and it’s only their own truth they have to acknowledge, in my opinion.
I could go on to discuss other aspects of your piece, but I will refrain from making a comment longer than you post
~
Sophie
Sophie, thank you so much for commenting! I would like to apologize for not replying earlier. It seems I’ve come down with a nasty summer cold.
First of all, point well taken about self-esteem. It must be true that not everyone faces self-esteem issues before, during, or after their transition. With proper support and acceptance, the act of becoming more genuine might actually increase people’s self-esteem regardless of the prejudice they face.
As for the subjective truth about how people experience their decision to transition, I just don’t see it that way. While it is true that I remember the overwhelming need to transition, I still don’t see how it could be anything other than a choice. If I were to live in circumstances where transitioning would have caused my death, I feel sure I would have been able to remain in “male mode”. Even if I did risk death by transitioning, I still think that the decision to face death instead of continuing to live a lie would be a choice.
Saying that transitioning is a choice doesn’t change the fact that our feelings are real and should be dealt with in the best way appropriate for each of the people that experience them. Just because transitioning is a choice doesn’t mean that it is the wrong choice.