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Becoming a Visible Man: Second Edition
Becoming a Visible Man: Second Edition
Becoming a Visible Man: Second Edition
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Becoming a Visible Man: Second Edition

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At least two generations of transgender, nonbinary, and gender-nonconforming people have emerged since Becoming a Visible Man was first published in 2004, but the book remains a beloved resource for trans people and their allies.

Since the first edition's publication, author Jamison Green's writings and advocacy among business and governmental organizations around the world have led to major changes in the fields of law, medicine, and social policy, and his (mostly invisible) work has had significant effects on trans people globally. This new edition captures the changes of the last two decades, while also imparting a message of self-acceptance and health.

With profoundly personal and eminently practical threads, Green clarifies transgender experience for transgender people and their families, friends, and coworkers. Medical and mental health care providers, educators, business leaders, and advocates seeking information about transgender concerns can all gain from Green's integrative approach to the topic. This book candidly addresses emotional relationships that are affected by a transition, and brings refined integrity to the struggle to self-define, whether one undergoes a transition or chooses not to.

Emphasizing the lives of transgender men—who are often overlooked—he elucidates the experience of masculinity in a way that is self-assured and inclusive of feminist values. Green's inspirational wisdom has informed and empowered thousands of readers. There is still no other book like Becoming a Visible Man in the transgender canon.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateSep 15, 2020
ISBN9780826522887
Author

Jamison Green

Jamison Green is an author, educator, public speaker, independent legal scholar, and consulting expert in transgender health and employment discrimination litigation. He serves as a policy consultant for business, educational, and governmental institutions, and is a past president of the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH).

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    There aren’t a lot of books available on the female to male transgender experience. Unlike those undergoing male to female transition, FTM folks seem to be more quiet about their process. I was glad to find this book as someone dear to me has gone through this transition and I long to gain a better understanding of what he has gone through.
    This book speaks to both the larger culture and challenges in the trans community and the more individual ones experienced by the author and his family. I found it interesting and yet heart breaking how each of the sectors of the LGBTQ communities still fight against each other. I so wish we could accept people for what and where they are, not jockeying for position over one another.

    In a small way I’ve never felt comfortable in my body- not gender- or sex-wise, but always vaguely disappointed in its lack of strength and my inefficient shape. When I had my first child and had to have a c-section, it took me a long time to find any affection for that body, especially as I struggled with breast-feeding and such, all things I had been raised to expect a female body could do with ease, or at least without so much of a battle.

    I can’t imagine how very horrible it would be to reject the actual shape and function of my apparent gender, how very lost one would feel, how right it would be to finally match up the bits with the brain, be who you are. This book gave me a bit of a glimpse into this process.

    I recommend it for anyone interested in knowing more about transition and the transitioning community. I have much to learn.

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Becoming a Visible Man - Jamison Green

1.

How Do You Know?

You all know what sex you are, right? That’s how I like to start. To most students I look like a professor, a psychologist, or a businessman. I am short, athletically built, with a full, trimmed beard, a balding head, and a deep voice. I seek out the students’ eyes, as many as will meet my gaze. They are a mélange of ethnic backgrounds, ages, and life experiences, several generations away from the much more homogeneous group with whom I attended college in the late 1960s, and I think how much richer education can be today with so many diverse viewpoints close at hand. That is, provided we are not afraid to listen and give credence to different voices.

Most of the students look blankly at their papers or at the empty chalkboard behind me, but a few stare quizzically at me. Some look at me and look away. Are they afraid? Am I fearful of their judgment, or of their misunderstanding? Can I get through their preconceptions, their resistance, and their various cultural positions that I have no time to explore? I am not their instructor; I’m merely a guest lecturer the instructor wants them to meet. I only have an hour or so with them, and—like everything else—my topic is one that can be explored in so many ways. I can only skim the surface with them. I can only hope to awaken them, to alert them to the possibilities.

Come on, I encourage them. You all know what sex you are, right?

A few students nod in affirmation.

So, how do you know? Without looking down . . . no cheating, now. . . . How do you know what sex you are?

Now some of them start to laugh. Your mother tells you, someone suggests.

And you believed her? I ask, smiling. Seriously, how do you know?

By your chromosomes? someone asks.

Okay, I don’t mean to embarrass anyone, so don’t volunteer information you are not comfortable sharing, but how many people in this room have had their chromosomes checked? I inquire. In over twenty-five years of lectures like this, speaking to many thousands of people, I’ve encountered only three individuals who confessed to having had their chromosomes checked, all for development-related anomalies. This time not one hand is raised. Right, I explain. "It’s rare that any of us knows what our sex chromosomes actually are. Of course, with the advent of DNA-analysis enterprises like 23andMe and AncestryDNA more people are able to get this information, but still, most people don’t definitively know their sex chromosome status. Did you know that one in twenty thousand men have two X-chromosomes, rather than one X- and one Y-chromosome? They don’t find this out until their female partner can’t get pregnant and doctors eliminate her infertility as the reason. Sure, there are plenty of reasons for a man to be sterile, but one possibility is that he has two X-chromosomes. One in twenty thousand men is a forty-six-chromosome XX male; they have no Y-chromosome material (Baskin 2020, 678). That’s a pretty high number for something we are led to believe is impossible. That statistic is from chapter 43 in the nineteenth edition of Smith and Tanagho’s General Urology (McAninch and Lue 2020), a standard urology textbook. And what does that tell us about the Y-chromosome? Not that you need a Y to be male, but that you may need a Y to make viable sperm. Maybe! Because there are two species of small rodent-type mammals, called mole voles, in which there is no Y chromosome, yet they are still reproducing both males and females, still procreating just as other mammals (Graves 2001). So if you can be a man with two X-chromosomes, and at least one in twenty thousand men is, what makes you a man? Some students, particularly males, are scowling now, confused, possibly getting angry. That’s right: it’s all more complicated than we’ve been led to believe.

"We can identify the sex chromosomes in a developing fetus, but geneticists will tell you we have no idea what genes are firing. We especially don’t know what genes are firing during embryogenesis, when the embryo is formed. Our science so far understands certain clusters of gene firing, like those that control the development of limbs or cause the webbing between the fingers to go away, but we do not understand the sequence of gene firings necessary to create an unambiguous male or female result, regardless of what the sex chromosomes are. The fact is, both the XX and XY karyotypes have bipotential; that is, either karyotype can produce a male or a female result depending on which genes fire. There are gene expressions in each pair that can go down what we might call a male pathway or a female pathway. Those gene expressions, which trigger myriad events in the future, and which combine with myriad other expression events to form combinations we cannot anticipate, are the root of what we don’t yet understand about the generalizations we’ve labeled ‘female’ and ‘male.’

"According to the Accord Alliance (a nonprofit educational organization that provides information for people and families affected by disorders of sex development (DSD); see also the website for the Intersex Society of North America), as many as 1 in 150 people have bodies that differ from standard male or female. That means that 1 out of 150 bodies has ‘a congenital condition in which development of chromosomal, gonadal, or anatomic sex is atypical’ (Hughes et al. 2006)

Roughly one in every two thousand births in a hospital in the US involves what’s called ‘ambiguous genitalia,’ where the doctor can’t tell by looking whether the infant is a boy or a girl. One in two thousand births! That’s a pretty high number given the fact that over ten thousand births happen every day in the US. And what do you suppose they do in such a situation? Until fairly recently, the standard has been that the doctors will decide what sex to assign the child, based on what kind of genital reconstruction surgery would be easiest or most effective from the doctor’s point of view. But now this policy is hotly debated. Do you think they get it right every time? Do you think just because your genitals are a certain shape that this tells you what sex you are? Horrified looks cross some students’ faces. So how do you know what sex you are?

By how you feel? someone usually suggests. It seems to be the only avenue I’ve left open to them.

"Actually, that’s a big part of it. Most people have feelings that correspond to the type of body they have. We sometimes think of feelings as something having to do with feeling attracted to another person, but certainly we all have feelings about ourselves, too. We have feelings about how we look, and how our personalities and interests correspond with those of other people with whom we identify. Now, what we’re talking about today is not sexual orientation. I’m not talking about who you are attracted to or what kind of sexual role you like to play. I’m talking about your relationship to your own body.

Most people do feel connected to the type of body they have; that is, generally, the female type or the male type. And people may be attracted to people who have opposite-type bodies, or people who have similar-type bodies, or maybe they’re not attracted to body types at all, but to individual people regardless of their bodies. But when we start connecting only feelings about bodies to sexual response and bringing in very complicated social ideas about sexual behavior it’s easy to become confused about which idea or feeling or belief leads to what other specific idea, feeling, or behavior. So let’s not complicate matters just yet with too much talk about sexual attraction and relationship entanglements, though we certainly need to acknowledge that these are important aspects of our social lives that are strongly influenced by our relationship to our own bodies. What I want to focus on right now, though, is the relationship a person has with their own sense of self, in their body, and their sense of how that body fits or relates in the world. It can help us to understand this if we talk not just about sex, but about gender, too. Sex and gender are not the same things. Who can tell me the difference between sex and gender?

The students are all watching me closely now, and several volunteer guesses; sometimes someone comes very close to the response I’m seeking. Still, it’s likely that I’ll need to explain: "Sex is a system of classification that divides body types based on presumed reproductive capacity as determined typically by visual examination of the external genitalia. There’s a second meaning of the word ‘sex,’ which is that sex is also an activity we can engage in, and that activity has complex social meanings itself. We sometimes use the word ‘love’ as a euphemism for this second meaning of the word sex–having sex and making love. That second meaning leads us right back into sexual orientation, so for now we’re going to discuss sex only as that system of classification of body types.

"The language we use to discuss sex as biology is derived from the study of plants. Our science about human sexuality is still very young. Plant biology? People have been studying plants for thousands of years, and we think we have them down pretty well. But we don’t understand much about human sexuality. We’ve only been studying it seriously for a little over a hundred and fifty years. It’s not as simple as Xs and Ys or innies and outies. Science cannot tell us exactly what events must occur in the development of a human embryo to deliver a completely male or completely female result. Remember, we don’t know, in full scientific detail, what constitutes human maleness or femaleness. We’re not plants that can be classified by the color of our petals or the shape of our leaves. We’re much more complex than the color of our skin and hair or the shape of our genitals. We have social characteristics, too, like gender and sexual orientation, and maybe more characteristics that we don’t yet know about. If we look closely enough at people, we can see that none of these things—sex, gender, or sexual orientation—is the same, nor are they necessarily causal factors in relationship to each other, though they are certainly intertwined. But for now, to recap, sex is a system of classification of bodies that we call ‘male’ and ‘female.’

So, what’s gender? Gender is another system of classification that describes characteristics and behaviors that we ascribe to bodies, and we call those characteristics and behaviors ‘masculine’ or ‘feminine.’ For example, we perceive a high-pitched voice as feminine, and a low-pitched voice as masculine; or we think of fine-motor skills—the ability to do small, dexterous work with the fingers—as feminine, and brute strength as masculine. And, as individuals, we can both express and perceive these qualities, these characteristics or behaviors, so it’s an interactive system, this thing called gender. You may see a very beautiful woman, with long hair and a gorgeous body, and think of her as very feminine, but when all of a sudden she lifts up a park bench and says, ‘not another step closer, or I’ll shove this down your throat’ in a deep, menacing growl, you may realize there’s more to her than meets the eye. So, if you had that experience, what would you think?

She’s really a man, someone will suggest. After all, they may know I’m there to discuss transsexualism. They want me to get to the juicy part. But I haven’t finished laying the foundation yet.

What makes you think that?

Women don’t do those things.

"Well, yes, generally, most women can’t lift park benches, and most women don’t have really low voices. But that doesn’t mean this particular woman is a trans person. It could simply mean she’s a woman who has a low voice and great strength. I notice you said, ‘She’s really a man.’ I think it is interesting to consider why it’s so tempting to conclude there is a deception going on. What makes us so confident that we know what’s real? I see this as a cognitive process: we make assumptions based on what we observe, and when we find our observations were incorrect according to some arbitrary system of categorization, instead of recalibrating our categories, we react with shock, horror, shame, anger, embarrassment, whatever, toward the person or object about which we were incorrect. It can’t be our fault we were wrong in our categorization; it had to be that we were deceived, or we wouldn’t have been wrong at all. I think it’s fascinating that we perceive it this way, instead of saying to ourselves, ‘Wow, she’s strong, and beautiful, and what a sexy voice, and I guess I’d better back off because it seems she means business!’

"So we make assumptions about what is real or possible based on the gender characteristics and behaviors that we learn in our culture. Another interesting thing about these gender qualities is that the category they’re assigned to can change between cultures or change within a culture over time. Occupations like secretary, telephone operator, bank clerk, and tailor were decidedly masculine once. Then, during the world wars of the twentieth century, women took them up. Some of these jobs went through a feminine phase, but now they’re more gender neutral. Another example of this kind of shift occurred in the 1960s and 1970s when some American men began to wear their hair long (after a few generations where short hair had been the fashion), and people thought a man with long hair was trying to be a woman, or at least was expressing himself as a feminine man, whereas now men can have long or short hair and it’s far less likely to be interpreted as a gender statement.

"Changing hairstyles often challenge gender norms. More than a few long-haired men in the 1960s were beaten up because they challenged gender norms. We experienced a culturally similar shift when women began to wear jeans everywhere, not just in the barn. And a man with fine-motor dexterity will be praised for it if he applies his abilities to tying fishing flies, or building model railroads or ships in bottles, or playing a musical instrument, but he’ll be ridiculed if he likes to crochet doilies. We tend to prefer our male-bodied people to have masculine gender characteristics and our female-bodied people to have feminine gender characteristics, and when they don’t, particularly if the dichotomy is highly visible, it can make some people uncomfortable, even angry, because they feel they don’t know how to classify the person they are observing, or the other person’s gender qualities threaten the observer’s sense of confidence in her or his own gender. I find this level of response to gender incongruence fascinating. How is it that someone else’s gender can throw a person’s sense of confidence or solidarity out of balance? What cognitive mechanism is at work here, and what purpose does it serve?

"We learn as young children that behaving according to our assigned gender role means doing expected things based upon conformance to the sex we appear to be. If our sex and gender correspond, that’s not too difficult for most of us, and we assume everyone feels about themselves the same way we do, and experiences similar difficulty or ease in adjusting behavior and appearance to conform to the gender norms of our culture. And if we travel to a new cultural environment, we quickly learn any new gender norms because we want people to perceive us as ‘who we are.’ If those new gender norms went against our ability to internalize or express them, we would experience tremendous discomfort.

"Like sex, gender is also more than one thing. It’s more than the external presentation of gendered qualities. It’s also one’s deeply felt sense of self. That’s what we call gender identity. Gender could be what we call male and female from a social standpoint, without regard to the need for reproduction, and it could be that there are more than two genders. Intersex people potentially demonstrate that there are more than two discrete sexes, even though we tend to classify so many things with these dichotomies of female and male, feminine and masculine.

"Perhaps this computer analogy will be helpful: think of sex as the hardware; gender as the software. In between there is an operating system that allows the software and hardware to give meaningful instructions to each other, so they work together to accomplish tasks. It’s easy to see how that works if a person’s sex and gender are aligned, but what happens if your body doesn’t match your sense of self? Think about that for a moment. Imagine you are exactly who you know yourself to be, you feel great about yourself, you have plans for your future, but when you look down your body is the opposite sex from who you know yourself to be. You know you’re a woman, but you have to dress like a man, you have to behave like a man, because you have a male body. And you guys who know you’re guys, you have all the feelings you know so well, but imagine your body is female. What’s more valid: your feelings and your certain knowledge of yourself, or your body, the thing other people see that signals to them what they can expect from you? Imagine what it would feel like to live with that discrepancy. That’s something like what many transgender people feel, what they have to deal with every day.

"For transgender people, their sense of self doesn’t line up with their body in various ways, or they may be perceived as belonging to one sex or gender when they actually belong to the other, or they don’t feel they belong at all. But people seem to be more closely connected to their gender than to their sex. That’s hard to grasp if your sex and gender are aligned, but not so difficult if you are one of the millions of people who are to some extent in-between. All the evidence of the physical body doesn’t mean much when a person has a gender identity that doesn’t match that body. Gender identity—the sense of self—is stronger than the body and will find a way to manifest itself.

"To return to the computer analogy, one of the things we really don’t know about in people is the interface between the software and the hardware. Take a male person with masculine characteristics: he may actually feel feminine, no matter what he looks or acts like. Or you might see a male person with feminine characteristics and assume he’s gay, but he may very well be straight or bisexual. And he might think of himself as masculine, no matter what you might conclude from observing him. Or he could think of himself as androgynous and still have a prideful sense of himself as male and as a man. You simply can’t tell by looking at someone what their sexual orientation is, or what their gender identity is. You may see aspects of the person’s gender, just as you may see aspects of the person’s sex, as in secondary sex characteristics, but those may or may not be the aspects the person identifies or experiences affinity with, and those may not be the aspects that define that individual as to their gender or their sex by any particular standard. For example, we think of thick body hair as a masculine trait because it is more common for males, but many women have significantly visible hair on their arms or faces. Hair on her arms won’t make a woman feel she’s a man, nor does it necessarily detract from her femininity. If a woman wears jeans it doesn’t mean she has a masculine gender identity. And if a woman is attractive and seems feminine to you, sir, it doesn’t mean she is attracted to men, or even that she thinks of herself as a woman.

"This is very complicated human behavior. We can reduce it to this: if you’re a girl and you want to wear lipstick because you like the way it makes you look and feel about yourself, and you’re not allowed to wear lipstick, you may be able to divert your desire to wear lipstick, but that desire to express that gender-related characteristic will surface somehow, whether by finding times and places where you can wear lipstick with impunity or by finding some other way to express the same motivation. If you’re a girl in a male body, those feelings don’t change just because you’re in a male body. It’s your gender identity that’s in the driver’s seat.

"If you think it’s difficult for you to understand, think of how it feels to be someone like that. While it is true that such feelings may indicate a delusional or dissociative disorder, we tend to think everyone like that is crazy somehow, that the feeling your body doesn’t match your sense of self is always some kind of delusional state, which is not true. Or we tend to blame the person whose gender characteristics don’t match their physical sex as if it’s that person’s fault for making us feel confused. Wrong. It’s our fault for not being secure and sensitive enough to allow that person a vehicle for honest self-expression. I challenge you to consider why it would ever be necessary, except to survive under coercion, to conform to someone else’s notion of maleness or femaleness, either biologically or socially.

I’d like you to think about both sex and gender difference as variations, not as deceit or defects, but as natural diversity that occurs with surprising frequency in human beings. We are not cookie-cutter men who all have penises that look exactly alike, who all feel the same way about ourselves or about women, and we are not all cookie-cutter women who like exactly the same clothes or want to wear the same hairstyle, and none of us focus on our gender or sex all the time . . . there are other things to think about in life. Yet if we don’t find a point of comfort or balance between our gender identity and our social interactions, no matter who we are, we won’t be able to find peace in any aspect of our lives.

Then I tell them: I learned about this because I was born with a female body. If they weren’t paying full attention before, they are now.

Students seem to like the shock factor. Sometimes the instructor will tell the class in advance that they will have a transsexual speaker at their next session, and students are disappointed when they see me because they think the transsexual couldn’t come after all. They think they know what transsexual people look like, and I don’t fit the picture. But rather than confronting them with the nutshell version of my life story, I like to provide a frame of reference, some context for relating to experience that differs from the presupposed, to encourage people to think in new ways about something most of us take for granted, but that some of us struggle with our entire lives.

After all the years I’ve spent thinking and talking about this, I still wonder about the connection between the hardware and the software that I live with, that is the condition of my life, too. It is often difficult for me when students ask, How did you know you were trans? or How did you come out as trans? I always pause in the face of this question and acknowledge that it was complicated.

Coming Out

For me, the process of coming out as trans was less like opening a closet door and more like slowly lighting a series of candles in a dark cave. Each of us, every trans person, has his or her own unique story; there may be some elements that overlap or ring true for some and not for others. Some trans people say they knew from their earliest consciousness; others say they realized it later in life, in their thirties or forties or even later. Yes, there are people who begin transition in their fifties and sixties. Because I was born in 1948, my experience will be different from that of people who are coming of age now, when a language of transgender experience or transness has developed and made certain concepts more accessible. Still, I suspect there are aspects of my own experience of increasing awareness that are somewhat common for many of us, including for some people who do not identify as transgender. The search for identity, community, and self is common to us all.

Older family members tell me that I began to refuse to wear dresses before I was two years old. Like many female-bodied children, I struggled all through my childhood against wearing clothing that designated me as female. I did not have a say in the matter. There were times when I was simply required to dress properly. The tenets of the northern European heritage I received from my reserved, socially and politically conservative parents included proper (read: sex- and gender-role–specific) attire and behavior as a sign of respect for my elders and society. But to me, wearing a dress was a form of subjugation that concretely symbolized my lack of power to assert myself, just as wearing a suit and tie might feel to a feminine, male-bodied child. And when, even though properly dressed, my behavior, bearing, or demeanor seemed inappropriate to the gender role designated by my attire, or when strangers registered confusion as to whether I was a boy or a girl, the blame for their confusion rested squarely on me as though I had a choice in the matter—if only I were more conscientious, I would not so willfully disrupt the social order. To me, on the other hand, the easier course would have been for them to acknowledge the boy they were trying to suppress and let me wear the clothing in which I felt right. Instinctively, I knew the discrepancy would not be so glaring. But although I could resist (often, but not always, successfully) proper attire, I could not find the words to say that I felt like a boy.

My parents, who despite their conservative bent were gentle, loving people, also believed children should be free to enjoy their childhood. They struggled to allow me to be myself while trying to indoctrinate me with a good upbringing. I learned housework and cooking and how to serve guests, and I learned to sit and stand with my legs together (though it always felt awkward), not to roughhouse or climb trees in a dress (though I frequently did anyway). And when we came home from the Presbyterian church we attended on Sunday, or when I came home from school every weekday, I got to change into my play clothes—pants and a shirt that felt infinitely more comfortable—and I could just be myself, but I had no words to say who that self was. I had no words to tell them that I was trying hard to be who they wanted me to be, but it just didn’t feel right.

Notwithstanding my own discomfort with the dissonance between my innate gender identification and society’s gender-related expectations of me, I was lucky. Even though my gender expression was more often aligned with my identification than with my apparent sex, and this caused frustration or irritation in my family occasionally, I have been relatively unscathed by the aberrations of family life. There was no alcoholism, no adultery or infidelity in my family, no divorce, no criminal behavior, no sexual abuse, and no mental illness—all of which have been proposed as causes of transsexualism. Sex role stereotyping and corporal punishment, though present, were not enforced as harshly in my family as in many others I’ve seen or heard about. The neighborhood I grew up in was safe throughout my childhood, and nearly all our neighbors were kind and generous with all the local children. My intellectual development and my physical freedom were both encouraged (though periodically constrained by social convention), and I was always given the message that I was valued and loved, even if I was also sometimes misunderstood. The drama of coming to terms with my difference has been a subtle one, punctuated by occasional moments of stark absurdity and lucid clarity.

The NBC network’s live telecast of Peter Pan starring Mary Martin in March of 1955, when I was six years old, was one of those lucid moments. I clearly remember thinking, during Peter’s first scene in the bedroom as he tries to retrieve his shadow, If she can be a boy, then so can I. And as I watched the performance progress through flying and sword fights and pirates and Indians, I remember watching closely, thinking, And I’ll be a much better boy than she is! Certainly, I would not have been so cavalier with Wendy’s affections, or fearful of taking on the father role. The closest I could come to talking about how I felt, though, was to ask my mother to make a Peter Pan outfit for me. She did. I put my rubber dagger in my Roy Rodgers cap gun holster and flew around the back yard for most of the following summer, saving Wendy and Tiger Lily from evil and leading packs of wild boys on harrowing adventures.

My parents gave dinner parties for their friends every few months, and once, when I was about eight or ten years old, a visiting couple was invited who had moved out of the area when I was an infant. The woman saw me standing next to my father and she said to him, Oh, Ray, your son is the spitting image of you. My father, in a moment of absurd humor only he and I shared, clapped me affectionately on the shoulder and replied proudly, That’s my boy. Then he gently said to me, Go to your room. It was a Saturday and I was wearing play clothes, jeans and a T-shirt, nothing particularly gender-specific by today’s standards. Yet this incident typifies my particular transgender experience: people often perceived me as a boy, sometimes even when I was wearing a dress. Though some people might find it absurd that others would see me as male, for me the absurdity occurred when people interpreted me as female, yet I understood I was absurdly expected to act in ways that would support their beliefs, not my own. Some parents might have told the woman about her mistake after I had left the room; perhaps she would laugh with embarrassment and apologize, and they would commiserate over the difficulties of ill-mannered children. I don’t think my father would have done that, though. I think his goal was to avoid making a guest uncomfortable. That left me hidden, invisible, perhaps due to his fear

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