this post was submitted on 19 Sep 2024
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[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago (2 children)

Trans etiquette wise you aren't correct. If someone transitions you apply current identity to all photos taken beforehand because the person is the same person. In the same way a picture of a pilot taken before they got their pilots licence is still a picture of a pilot your current understanding of a person updates to current and is retroactively applied.

Saying " this is so and so back when they were a woman" is considered rude since people generally look at their pre transition selves as not having a gender that aligns with their birth sex but rather a stage where they and other people around them did not know their current needs. People will generally not check you on it though if they think that your understanding is very basic. Proper nuance would say "Back when they identified as a woman" because then the implication is that the person didn't nessisarily change, but the general understanding and social category did... but functionally speaking it's close enough for someone who isn't up on best practice.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 month ago (1 children)

I don't think I follow that logic. If I was shown a photo of a baby (that eventually grows up to become a pilot) and asked if it was a photo of a pilot, I would say "no, it's a photo of a baby, babies can't be pilots". Sure, it's a photo of a baby that will become a pilot, but at that point, it's just a baby, even though they are the same person.

"Back when they identified as a woman" is the same thing as "back when they were a woman", because being a woman is merely an act of identifying as one, consciously or otherwise. There's no universal truth for "being a woman", gender is a human construct and therefore subjective, which means identifying as a woman is being a woman and vice-versa.

[–] [email protected] -2 points 1 month ago (1 children)

I mean you can get it or not it's not a debate. Trans etiquette is something that a concensus of trans people request of other people and we set the standards based on how gender makes us feel, not how cis or even isolated trans individuals understand gender. This isn't an exercise of strict logic. This is dealing with a culture of people dealing with a problem you don't have and telling you where their pain points are. You don't have to listen just like you don't have to obey another culture's etiquette when you are abroad... but expect to be treated as out to lunch or annoying to deal with. If I took you to meet other people in my community and you did that to one of their past photos I would be embarrassed on your behalf. If you did that to me I would probably not bring it up but internally wince because unless you were a friend I would treat you as a temporary inconvenience.

When someone says "I used to be a woman" my reaction is largely that is just incorrect. I never was a woman there was simply a stage of my life where I was afraid to be a man or unaware that other options were possible. In short - I was coerced. Other people identified me as a woman based on the sex characteristics I had and I identified as a woman because I did so out of fear of social reprisal or because I was kept in ignorance by dint of a society refusing to treat that knowledge as something I was allowed to have. Saying I "was a woman" would imply that I chose to do so freely, which I did not. Quite frankly when they look at a picture of me and read my past self as a woman it's a reminder that to a lot of people that presentation and body type is all that they need to misgender me in a round about way. They are referring to a time when I was a prisoner to a system and identifying based on what they think I should be coded, not how I code myself. You think it's fine to say I changed from woman to man because of social category and that it's a construct - but to be honest that's a pretty cis take. I react negatively to my SEX characteristics and use gender performance to stop people from bringing up my assumed sex characteristics into conversation. Language is a mirror through which we catch glimpses of ourselves. The mirror does me damage, I don't linger in front of physical ones and I ask people not to use linguistic ones. When you call me "she" even in past tense you are referring to aspects of my body that I do not have the capacity to feel neutrally about.

I know a fair number of other trans folks who wish to expunge every pretransition photo from existence in part because they invite people to comment on this sort of temporal understanding of gender. If we could have you forget we were ever our birth sex we would. Instead most compromise by asking for a retroactive update.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Frankly, I don't understand most of what you said, I must be lacking some context. But I do want to clarify one point, which will help me understand a lot of things better. You said:

Saying I “was a woman” would imply that I chose to do so freely, which I did not.

How does one actually identify if they are a "man" or a "woman"? What list of criteria makes one of a certain gender?

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (1 children)

How does one actually identify if they are a "man" or a "woman"? What list of criteria makes one of a certain gender?

Okay so "am I a trans person? 101". A lot of what cis people perceive as gender is best described by gender performativity theory. Basically at birth you were coded using physical sex characteristics as a guideline and a whole complex kicked into gear. You were probably praised for performing gender well and informed and shamed by others when you did not conform. This creates an external goad of social expectation that trained you how to feel about yourself. Most cis people don't appear to really question this because as long as nothing interferes with your ability to fit this model and cause social friction it's fine. Some challenge the conventions but not really identity. Gender is a thing you do rather than are under this model because it's a mass social phenomenon of culture clustered vaguely around sex characteristics. Being a Femboy for instance is something you perform. It's not a trans identity even though they might be easily mistaken for a trans woman.

But then there's a VERY different experience... And this is the rough thing to explain to cis people because it literally does not make sense. That's the hard part in this dialogue. How gender works for trans people is strictly not logical and if you experience this phenomenon you cannot logic yourself out of it no matter how hard you try... Because now we are dealing with a subconscious function. Importantly this is not a delusion. A delusion would be belief in something that doesn't exist, this is the opposite. This is intense but uncontrollable feedback about observable physical reality.

It you are trans, for whatever reason, your brain has an internalized feedback system that targets your physically held sex characteristics. Your perceptible sex characteristics make you feel things completely independent of anything external. You feel intense envy for sex characteristics you see other people have that you do not. Emulation of those characteristics make you feel incredible for literally no logical reason...it's like getting hit by a truck full of dopamine even when you acknowledge it makes no sense to feel that way. Reminders that you don't have those characteristics make you feel completely deficient. You can feel disconnected from your body and in social spaces you can feel fake or invisible, unable to express yourself. Oftentimes this friction between constant internal feedback and external pressure to conform to the opposite of that feedback causes stress which means you get stress related illnesses. Digestive issues, headaches, skin problems, harmful nervous behaviours, depression, social anxiety, escapist self medication or addiction issues... Some get metaphysical about this in the idea that there is a sort of spiritual aspect that never aligned but it's probably some kind of brain structure thing. But the idea of "being a (enter whatever here)" stems from the very consistent feedback that aggregates around a specific sexual phenotype. If you feel like your life essentially sucks because you don't have the physical characteristics that come from a masculine puberty then you can backwards engineer that feeling into the sentiement "I should be a man".

So when you face this friction between external feedback and internal feedback you have two routes to combat that stress.

Option one : You physically change the features that cause the feedback. You no longer are envious because you have the feature you want and you don't feel deficient or self conscious anymore because your physical reality has changed. The internal feedback loop is satisfied and you get that nice hit of dopamine from all forms of witnessing your physical body in action.

Option two - you remove the external feedback.

One way to not obsess over what you feel you are missing is to not be constantly reminded. Changing how everyone addresses you is part of this. When people generally call you a woman for instance what they are doing is adding up all your physical features, coming to a conclusion based on what they physically witness and spitting it back out as a physical assessment of you. Your internal feedback system is VERY AWARE of this computation happening and reverse engineers it instantly. Internally it is something like this : "This person called me 'she' because they noticed my high voice (oh how I wish my voice was lower!) and because I have boobs (fuck I wish I could just slice the damn things off) and because of my narrow shoulders (Gotta work out more) and is now creating an expectation of conforming to a cluster of social garbage and treat me like I am different from men which sucks but makes sense because I have a high voice (fuck I should talk less) and boobs (maybe if I starve myself...) " and the thought spiral continues.

So what you can do is trick the brain. You ask to be called by male forms of address and ask to be treated as culturally male and what happens is basically your mind fills in the empty room. You might not have the physical characteristics but it becomes theoretically possible to the mind that maybe those physical features aren't actually being noticed. It creates a sort of protective uncertainty. It obscures the witnessable physical assessment aspect of someone else's calculation of your sex. Even if logically it's pretty obvious what your birth sex is and you are absolutely sure someone is just gassing you up it denies that internal feedback immediate purchase. It creates room to consider - maybe my physical features aren't all that different from what I desperately wish they could be. "Man" in this usage is not just a social category. It's verbally applied medicine.

Of course the issue with option 2 strictly is that it's kind of only good at handling the feedback that comes from interacting with other people. No amount of people calling me a man is gunna help when I am in front of a mirror, or when I talk and hear my own voice or demonstrate some kind of physicality that my cis male counterparts do not have. But sometimes you get what you get and it has to be enough. Not all fully baked transitions make us perfectly indistinguishable from cis people. The process is imperfect so we ask other people to socially make up for physical shortfall.

A lot of trans people realize how important these things are once that friction is resolved. Like if you suddenly have like five different physical maladies that suddenly clear up because they were caused by stress you have normalized your entire life and you suddenly feel like going outside your house takes half the energy it used to it becomes really obvious what you're doing is working and nessisary. The experience can be a lot like quiting a very bad job that was slowly killing you.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Ok, I definitely didn't see it that way. But the way you describe it, I was just constantly drawing a parallel with something like anorexia; you have an uncontrollable urge to change the way you look (and behave?). I know that gender dysphoria isn't classified as a disorder and only a condition, but it certainly sounds like something that causes a lot of distress that one wouldn't want to experience.

But now I understand that a person experiencing gender dysphoria should be treated as somebody with a disorder, in the sense that it's something beyond their control and you can't just logic your way out of it. Like, they just feel that way, even if it doesn't make sense, and for their benefit, we just have to accept it.

I also suspect it's not as bad as you described for everybody, but I need to be prepared for the worst case scenario, too.

Thank you for this massive write-up!

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

Yeah dysphoria/euphoria runs a gamut of severity. Some folk only experience the effects of the dopamine hit of it being what you want, some just have the perpetual downer... most of us it's a combo plate of both.

And anorexia does have a somewhat similar approach to lessening body dysmorphia. Stay away from mirrors, avoid people who focus too much on your appearance... We as a society just have come to a concensus that making commentary about people's weight is really rude and harmful. Anorexia however is socially based. It's a response to a societies beauty standards and you don't find it in cultures that don't have those beauty standards. Transness however just pops up everywhere often in complete opposition to beauty standards, cultural norms or religious doctrine across time and place.

A lot of us go through this phase right before we accept being trans where we try to be like the apex version of our birth sex. We try to over gender perform because if you are the perfect cis man or woman you should be fine living off the external validation of others the way cis people do... But when that ultimately fails to fix the problems and actually often makes them worse the reality becomes there are only a few options. Be miserable until you run out of strength and die either by suicide or a life shortened by stress... Or you explore ways that might solve your rocksolid internal need but also potentially cost you family, friendships, careers, respect, safety and basically turn up the heat on external pressures to conform.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago (1 children)

In the same way a picture of a pilot taken before they got their pilots licence is still a picture of a pilot

Except you don't do that unless you're talking about the person in the present context and comparing to the old one. Getting a pilots license or some other certification doesn't make you always have had been that. A picture of a three year old playing with blocks is not a picture of a pilot, even if twenty years later they would get a pilot's license. But it might be a picture of Bob, who later on would become a pilot.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago

QED the pilot thing was probably a bad example I won't use again.

How about this, if someone changed their name and you saw a picture of them from before that update... Maybe a baby pic let's say, what name would you use when identifying the person in the picture?