I have just watched a documentary
that reminds me why I get so upset and defensive when it comes to non-trans*
folk discussing transgender people.
It was painful to watch and it made me feel the need to explain my last blog. I shouldn't need to, but it seems that I do. I get emotional when it comes to trans* rights and understanding. I want to explain why I bang on.
My attack was not on ideas or
ideals but an attack on any type of talk that may lead to people being hurt or
losing their life. Any rhetoric that belittles a peoples struggle is just plain
wrong, and if that particular group is significantly at risk then it transcends
bullying and becomes dangerous hate speech.
I come from very privileged
background. Not rich but not in poverty, white, smart and provided with
opportunities, living in the UK and, most of all, supported understood and
loved. On the surface all is good.
I spent most of my life trapped
by severe depression. Feeling that I was living a lie and pretending to be
someone else. My options became transition or give up. Saying that transitioning
is an affront to feminism is crazy - this was not a life I chose and it was
something that I had to do e from my position of apparent comfort.
Why would I choose to spend a
life where I have to think very carefully where I travel to? Where I give up
male authority in meetings to be taken less seriously and have to fight twice
as hard to be heard. Where, in part of the US - a 'developed' country - I can
be arrested for using the bathroom. Where I walk down the street and get
pointed at, stared at, laughed at, have looks of disgust. Where I risk beatings.
I don't get them - but I make sure I am not in that position as best I can. As glad
as I am to be spending time in Manchester over the coming Xmas weeks I will
have to make myself as unnoticed on busses as possible. Where it will be better
to have a scarf wrapped round my face till I cannot breath so that folks don't
catch whiff on my trans* status when walking around in the dark. Course, this
is something females often have to worry about but it does add another layer. If
I get attention for being female by some jerk that is not something I want. But
if they then notice that I am - in their minds - not female, that just makes it
so much worse. All of a sudden I become less than female, less than human. Worthless.
Meaningless. Expendable.
This is why we cannot afford to
have anyone talk about how much our lives are a joke. I realise that certain
folks talk about trans-women and the things we put ourselves through with
transitioning as an affront to feminism but know that we have to do that. We have
to, for us. Having intelligent people with a respected platform making light of
our struggles makes us worthless, less than human. And in that case, those who
would physically attack us cannot be blamed for the way we are seen. And if your
family, work colleagues or maybe even you yourself as a trans-person buys in to
this, how can you see any other option but suicide?
Yes, this is not something that
only happens to trans-folk. It happens in many countries based on gender,
religion, background. But here I am tackling one issue - that that puts me,
myself, in danger.
I come from privilege and yet I
held off when it comes to getting on with my life. For fear of ridicule and
rejection. For fear of physical harm. Putting myself at mental harm as a
result.
I would like to think that I could
have achieved much more so far in my career. With so much on my mind, how could
I really apply myself and focus? I would like to think that there are some
researchers out there wondering why I have such poor output. This is why. And once
I knew what I had to do I kinda gave up. I know, having been in industry as a perceived
male, what females face in some industries. And also what any LGBT people face.
I have been privy to many conversations not meant for me. So industry is out
and I knew I had not achieved my potential in academia which meant that my
career, worked so hard at for so long, was over.
Or so I thought. I was given a
lifeline. I was lucky, so very lucky. The option that came along would not
normally do so. I was fully ready to retrain - even convinced myself that it
was what I had always wanted. Sure, if I went back time to my first university
choice I would change it. But what I do now I can do well and I do think I have
potential. I want to achieve that. I have a life line and now I fully hope to
be able to start clawing back publications, regain my potential reputation. I'll
need help and I hope I have it.
I want to make myself a name in
science and show that a trans* person can do that. That any openly LGBT person
can. I want to look my peers in the eye at conferences, even as an invited
speaker and chair, and show that I have achieved what I can and that being
trans* is not something that will hold you back if you decide not to let it.
Again, not everyone has that
option - my background allows this - but it is time to use my privilege and
lead the way for as many others as I can. I feel it will make a difference. Let's
be honest, I have no visions of grandeur, I'd rather just get on and live my
own life. But it is not possible for everyone - so I need to fight for those
that can't. In my way. I'm not going to spend my evenings campaigning - I just
want to paint my miniatures and play board games. But I would like to show that
I can have a successful career in science and hope that that is enough to help
others.
These are the experiences of
someone with privilege. I read so much depressing information regarding the
trans* population. I read a lot of things that make my heart bleed. I cannot
imagine what others have gone through. But I understand - I know it happens. Over
50% young trans* kids in the UK have attempted suicide - and that is those who
come forward - the ones who are already on the 'winning' side of their mental
health battles. For comparison, it is less than ~5% for cis-folk. And nearly
20% for the LGB population btw. The figures vary from source to source, but the
trends are all rather similar. Murder, well in 2015 we have set a new rate of
nearly 1 trans-person killed every 29 hours worldwide despite being less than
1% of the overall population. Nearly one a day. If you are black, you are far
more at risk - again, I am so very privileged. Yes, this is disproportional. This
is high. This is insane.
So if you wonder why some trans-
folks take any trans* hate, or even just bits of fun poked, very seriously, this
is why. Because we have a lot of baggage - but very real baggage. Even if it is
not mine, it is there in my community. I feel every trans* death in Iraq
equally to those in the states or the UK. Trans* is trans*. We are small, we
need to stick together. And it may be that some trans* folk go way over the
top. Well, this is why. We need to be heard and we are hurting so much that any
comment is emotional. It may seem that some trans* people go 'off' over
nothing. And you are probably right. We sometimes pick the wrong battle. We make
too much out of nothing.
Personally I have just complained
about a poster in the women's bathroom at work. It is a small, meaningless joke
- but our position in the world is far too fragile to not at least challenge
folks and make them think. I should not be offended by this poster that depicts
the cross-dressers from Little Britain but I am. Any joke is too much right now,
when we are fighting to be taken seriously. To make people understand what
transgender means.
Caitlyn Jenner is far from 'woman
of the year' (or even trans-person of the year for me, but I digress...) and I understand
why a magazine awarding her this has caused outrage. But understand why this was an important move:
not for political correctness or any sort of agenda, but from that of making
transgender people be seen as real people.
Yes, I wish some trans* folk
would shut up - they make us look bad. Make us look like we are whining. But know
where this comes from. It comes from fear, repression and hurt. Nearly every
trans* person has hurt in some way. So things do become over-sensitive.
I'd hope that this is
understandable. Please don't attack us. Help us. Once we are on normal murder,
violence and suicide rates then we can start debating the crap that we talk. Heck,
let us get to the point where we can use bathrooms in the civilised world in
peace. Where we have equal rights to those of cis-people. Where we are not
questioned for knowing who we are and where those in power still think they
know us better than we do. Where folks who are sent to prison for making
dreadful life decisions can at least head to the right prison to serve their
well deserved time without fear of rape and abuse. Then you can start calling
out our over reactions.
But let's get to that position first,
please.