- Joined
- Jul 15, 2014
I found an editorial by Julie from the New York Times—apparently the folks were running a fluff series of editorials on "transgender experiences." It discusses some of the details of Julie's whole "male but agender" deal.
Source
Preview said:"I am a trans male, but I identify as agender. (I also now identify as queer rather than bisexual.) Unlike most transmasculine people, I don't bind my breasts and am not seeking top surgery. It's society that has a problem with my breasts, not me."
Julie said:I didn't always know I was trans. Raised as a girl in the 70s and 80s, I was allowed relative freedom of gender expression; Hot Wheels cars and Barbie dolls, pants and dresses (though I did prefer pants). I was never a tomboy; I couldn't even climb a tree.
Other clues from my past might or might not explain my current agender identity. Frustration with my erratic menstrual cycle, coupled with the knowledge that I never wanted to get pregnant. Identifying as bisexual even though I was primarily attracted to men, as I couldn't imagine myself as straight. Difficulty making friends with women, yet not quite being accepted as "one of the guys".
I was depressed about my body and my social life, but had no idea that I wasn't a woman, because I didn't know I had any alternative. I was dimly aware of the existence of trans women, but in my youth, trans men and nonbinary people were virtually unheard of, at least in the USA.
By my 40s, I was fed up with binary gender roles, finding them arbitrary and oppressive. After a lot of reading and introspection, I finally realized that I was not a woman, and that I was wired for a conventionally-male body. But I could not bring myself to say that I was a man. The word literally stuck in my throat.
Could I somehow be male, but not a man? Yes, I decided, I could. Two years ago, at the age of 43, I chose a new name that reflected my values of peace (Pax), nonviolence (Ahimsa), and gender-neutrality (Gethen, from the book The Left Hand of Darkness). I requested the pronouns they/them/their. A few months later, I began testosterone therapy, and soon after had my sex legally changed to male.
I am a trans male, but I identify as agender. (I also now identify as queer rather than bisexual.) Unlike most transmasculine people, I don't bind my breasts and am not seeking top surgery. It's society that has a problem with my breasts, not me. The parts I'm most dysphoric about are inside my body, and hormone therapy is keeping them inactive.
It took me until middle age to discover my authentic self. Every day is still a challenge to live it. But at least now I know who I am.