How Do I Define My Gender if No One Is Watching Me? - Devoid of anyone to signal my gender to ... I felt, suddenly, amorphous and undefined


When the world went into lockdown five months after I started taking testosterone, I thought it would be easier not to see people for a while. Maybe they wouldn’t hear my voice go scratchy or see up close the hormonal acne splattered across my face. Alone in my apartment, I imagined that all my difficulties in being seen and recognized as transgender-nonbinary would evaporate. No one would gender me except myself; my pronouns would be right there in the text box on my Zoom screen.

So I was surprised by how much my gender instead seemed to almost evaporate. No longer on the alert for how to signal a restaurant’s waitstaff that neither “he” nor “she” applied to me, or for whether colleagues and neighbors would use the right language — devoid of anyone to signal my gender to — I felt, suddenly, amorphous and undefined. It was as though when I had swapped my Oxford shoes and neckties for fuzzy slippers and soft sweatpants, I, too, had lost my sharply tailored definition.

After I podded with two trans friends, the only people I saw from closer than six feet were also nonbinary, neither men nor women. Among us, not only the once ubiquitous binary, but also any gender expectations, had vanished.

Where did my own gender reside, then, if not in sending signals of difference? My friends and I had long joked, “Gender is a social construct!” every time one of us needed shoring up after a messy encounter with the expectations of the gender-conforming heterosexual world. But without that world, we now added a rueful punchline: “Too bad there’s no more ‘social’!”

I would have imagined this new expansiveness would be freeing. Instead, it was at first disorienting. With the gender binary all but gone, what did it mean to be nonbinary? How do I define my gender when I — accustomed to how visible my gender usually makes me — am no longer being watched?

Wanting to understand how others were adjusting to the pandemic change, I reached out to Rebecca Minor, a licensed clinical social worker who works with trans youth. “What’s really struck me,” she told me, “is that removing the peer gaze has allowed for more gender experimentation.”
Ms. Minor is in private practice and estimates that 85 percent of her clients are transgender. She works with teenagers, who are at an age when they spend endless hours watching and being watched. Thanks to Zoom school, she told me, “the peer gaze isn’t entirely gone” — but now it can be controlled. “It removes that feeling that someone sitting in the row behind me might be snickering or looking at what I’m wearing,” she said. It removes, in other words, the policing of gender.

To be sure, Ms. Minor’s clients, who are predominantly white, have resources that have protected them in the pandemic. They have supportive families, health care and economic stability. I, too, am white and thus privileged. Like them, I live in the liberal Northeast. For them, as for me, the time at home has been something of a reprieve.

Ms. Minor told me about the change in one client, a young, white, trans girl who had been struggling in school both socially and academically before the pandemic. “What we’re seeing is someone who finally isn’t having all of their space in their head taken up by worrying about their safety, worrying about other people’s perceptions of them,” Ms. Minor said. In her place was now a star student who had been missing.

A similarly liberating shift happened for Tygra Slarii, a 29-year-old Black performer at a Minneapolis bar, The Saloon. Before the pandemic, Mx. Slarii came out as a woman and had gender-affirming breast augmentation. “That’s what it seemed like everyone was pushing for me to do,” Mx. Slarii said, because people kept asking: “So when are you going to have the surgery? When are you going to get your boobs?”

When Minnesota issued shelter-in-place orders, the extended pause gave Mx. Slarii time to question, and explore the complexity of, gender — and come out again, this time as nonbinary. “My body isn’t a tool for marketing my transition anymore,” Mx. Slarii told me. “I don’t think cis people understand how much their input weighs down on trans people, especially when it comes to transitioning.”

When, during the pandemic, Mx. Slarii pursued a second gender-affirming surgery, a Brazilian butt lift, it was an entirely different emotional experience. This time, the surgery was no longer a means of selling a narrative to be believed and seen; now Mx. Slarii’s body was simply their own.
That said, in recent months, trans youth have been under terrifying legislative attack. And as a group, trans people have been hit hard by the pandemic. In January, researchers at Columbia found that many lost access to gender-affirming health care. The pandemic has exacerbated social inequality and injustice across the board; 16.8 percent of trans respondents reported job loss. It is a population already economically and socially marginalized.

Each time another devastating statistic about trans pain emerges, I remember that trans pain is not the birthright of trans people, but it is foisted on us by a world that perennially refuses to let us define ourselves for ourselves and that too often cares about our visibility only as spectacle, not as recognition. Even we ourselves are not immune from this influence. We all internalize the narratives we grow up with.

So let’s also talk about joy. When the world reopens, I suspect that I will be perceived differently — my voice, now lower, will send different signals than it once did; my face now changed by hormones will be seen anew. I have been transformed by this time alone, in which I have had to shore up who I am without the gaze of others defining it for me.

We have all had to find our own paths over this year; we all learned more about ourselves. And have had to ask: Who are we, when no one is looking? Who are we, without what once both held us back and held us up? Whom do we wish to be?

I asked both Ms. Minor and Mx. Slarii what they hope we carry forward as a society from this pandemic time, and to my surprise they gave the same answer. What they wish for on this year’s International Day of Transgender Visibility is us to be able to see one another, and ourselves, with a more compassionate and nuanced eye. Not as what society tells us we must be, but as who we are.
To do that, I think, would be to truly emerge into a world made new.

Alex Marzano-Lesnevich, an assistant professor of English at Bowdoin College, is the author of “The Fact of a Body: A Murder and a Memoir” and the forthcoming “Both and Neither.”

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Surprisingly, comments are enabled. Even more surprisingly, the Times Picks are (at least at this writing) almost universally condemnatory.
 
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Albeit, not they one they are trying to make.

If no one is around to recognize your gender, do you have a gender?
See the thing is about Gender Theory is that it is fundamentally necessitates the existence and total control of a society. In the absence of that society, what is a gender?
Nothing.

So when this genderspecial is exposed to a situation where they can't interact with others to "validate" their gender, what do they have?
Nothing.

Of course instead of realizing this and coming to the conclusion that THEY are the social construct, not the dreaded cis-hets and their silly breeding; the writer of course uses this for victim points then talks about other genderspecials doing dumb gender shit.
 
perfect way to sum up the difference between trannies with gender dysphoria and trannies who just want constant unwavering validation from the outside world. if you have gender dysphoria you transition because you want to feel at peace with yourself, how other people feel about you isn't a factor. those types seem to be vanishingly rare however, displaced by depressed lonely people who feel like transitioning is a last resort to giving their life clarity and purpose. to them there's no point in transitioning if they aren't gonna get attention for it because their underlying problem isn't with their gender, it's with the fact that they feel the world has shut them out and they have no place in it.

i feel sorry for most of them because the discourse and the most vocal trans rights advocates have lied to them and made it seem like being trans is this super common thing that can explain why they feel so lost and miserable. this plants a seed of jealousy towards the opposite gender because of their perceived advantages, leading vulnerable people to think if they just transition to the opposite gender they'll inherit those same advantages. it never works though because nobody in their right mind thinks transitioning works that way. they remain lonely and miserable except even more disconnected from reality.
 
displaced by depressed lonely people who feel like transitioning is a last resort to giving their life clarity and purpose. to them there's no point in transitioning if they aren't gonna get attention for it because their underlying problem isn't with their gender, it's with the fact that they feel the world has shut them out and they have no place in it.
Lmfao no. They want all of that "validation" and whatnot because they're fucking power-hungry, attention-whoring narcissists who correctly identify that "going trans" or "nonbinary" is a free ticket to never-ending asspats and adulation from a horde of slavering retards. The bonus is that it also comes with undue social power in today's age where being a tranny is akin to having an infinite-use "get out of jail free" card.

Seriously. This article is just fart-huffing horseshit from a narc who's having asspat/social control withdrawals. I'd sooner feel sorry for a cockroach or a pubic louse than these clowns.
 
perfect way to sum up the difference between trannies with gender dysphoria and trannies who just want constant unwavering validation from the outside world. if you have gender dysphoria you transition because you want to feel at peace with yourself, how other people feel about you isn't a factor.
I don't buy it. Currently, we're told that suicide (or suicide attempt?) rates of post-ops are usually attributable to the "failure" of society to recognize their gender identity, and that those rates drop dramatically when their community is affirming. At first glance, that sounds like propaganda, but it would make sense, seeing as there's no good way to "feel" their gender if they're constantly reminded that they're not actually that gender by the outside-- and that's on top of the fact that the SRS and HRT won't ever give you any good approximation of your desired sex's function.

Also, AGPs also transition because they want to "feel at peace" with themselves, with other people not necessarily factoring in. AGP's aren't afflicted with what's typically understood to be gender dysphoria, though.
 
Lmfao no. They want all of that "validation" and whatnot because they're fucking power-hungry, attention-whoring narcissists who correctly identify that "going trans" or "nonbinary" is a free ticket to never-ending asspats and adulation from a horde of slavering retards. The bonus is that it also comes with undue social power in today's age where being a tranny is akin to having an infinite-use "get out of jail free" card.

Seriously. This article is just fart-huffing horseshit from a narc who's having asspat/social control withdrawals. I'd sooner feel sorry for a cockroach or a pubic louse than these clowns.
i mean what you're describing exists but i find it more common in depressed internet addicts who feel isolated and thinking becoming a tranny is the cure to their problems. there's also the fetish types who just get off on the sexual thrill of being called the opposite gender. either way my point remains the same, they don't have gender dysphoria, they're just weirdos looking for a rush of dopamine.
 
i mean what you're describing exists but i find it more common in depressed internet addicts who feel isolated and thinking becoming a tranny is the cure to their problems.
All I really have to say in response to that, is that it's not mutually exclusive from what I described and I would even go so far as to say it's that specific kind of person who ends up being one of these narcs. Though I'll remark that there's also that weird "egg" culty shit where they essentially groom vulnerable people into thinking they're one of them, which in all likelihood is probably just another facet of the desire for control of someone else for these sick bastards.
 
I don't get to see my girlfriend today or tomorrow, not until monday. Am I really a man if I'm not fucking, mashing my genitals against a cis female's? Would I be considered "ace" for the next couple days? What kind of accessories do I need for my ace lifestyle? Or would I be incel? I think I've read what kind of accessories I need there (but is a silver toyota ok? Don't have the cash for a bmw)
 
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