So i had this party this weekend with my long-knowing friend who recently turned to pursue a relationship with a trans woman. More on that
here.
The party was great, but they decided to go back home. I suggested to join them, so i could have a chance on talking with my friends trans partner. She appreciated this notion.
Back at home, we had some talks and then my friend asked if i knew that his partner was trans. So i said i heard this, yes. They felt at comfort. So i talked with his trans partner on the trans topic. I felt the position regarding this was simple: No matter who you are or what you are, in the end you are still a human being. In regards to my friend i said that i really do not care who he dates, even if its an octopus (Okay you get my drift). I felt his move with her was progressive, because he typically is a guy heavily favoring straight women. My friend appreciated my stance, and his partner visibly did so too.
I actually brought up the whole ERA talk about how people shouldn't refer to women as
females. To my surprise she agreed with this stance, and also agreed with the notion that they are people and that these folks aren't pushing for trans acceptance. She told me that she has felt a woman since she was 6-7 and that in November she is going to get surgery to get proper female genitals.
My friend thanked me for listening to it all and so did she. I do not want to make it a bigger thing than it already is - There is no need to put the lights on this so vividly. After all, in my eyes trans people are
accepted in society when people view them as
normal, not as
special.
Felt like sharing this part and to have some proper points to talk over in this thread!
Ya but I don't care about peoples feelings, though if you think transgender is going to make you happy then good for you.
That is a real simplying statement to make. People who are trans (usually) know for years and years on end that they feel something is
not right. Similar to gay people, they have to deal with coming out of the closet. In many places, US in front, its still a thing to come out as gay. Try to be in a trans's shoes for a few seconds: Imagine how its like for them to come out, especially in the US.
If you think coming out as gay is already a struggle, imagine how it is for a trans person.
I feel this short sightedness really helps nobody here but rather attempts to establish a provocative screen of hypocrisy and naivety, as shown by the rest of your post. You do realize a statement like the bolded can easily be thrown back like a boomerang, right? If you struggle with depression or feel injured, for instance.
Should i, as an
stranger, care about your feelings then when i see you suffer? You seem to imply that you don't when it does not revolve around you. I am more of the view to care instead. Why? Because its within our DNA to be selfish (as you display), but its also within our DNA, albeit to a lesser degree, to express empathy and sympathy.
Heroes get their title because in the heat of a life changing moment, they decided to
act, to express empathy and do something.
I am not going to say everybody is like that - A lot of people simply would stand still and do nothing, believing somebody else would help out. This is called the
bystander effect and a
diffusion of responsibilty. This is the situation where i feel you are in: Are you going to be a bystander and continue to proclaim you aren't caring about personal situations and that you are a very
mature (sic) adult or are you going to be a
hero, and display some
common courtesy in regards to a gender that might not be yours to be, or even something you can get behind, but from which you can
emphatize that for people adhering to this gender, it is, indeed, a daily struggle for them?
But I'm not going to call you a female. Just like how if I got a surgery to be a lizard man, no one would take me seriously.
I am not buying into this comparison, it feels to me like you are taking the piss at transgenders and/or demonstrate child-like naivety towards this topic. Do you think a lizard man is a proper equivalent to a trans person?
See I have more self esteem then most people, and I don't care what people think.
Displaying arrogance in a topic where people are trying to discuss sensitive situations that you obviously never have to go through is
misplaced arrogance first and formost. You seem to miss the
atmosphere of this thread, which isnt about boasting how amazing you are for talking garbage towards trans people.
Honestly, what is your
intent with that language? Because as of right now you come across as someone who talks trash at a burial and proclaim how you outlived the soon-to-be-buried. Or, TLDR -
Your expressions are done in poor taste.
If you want to be transgender you should also don't get butthurt, and care about what people think of you.You shouldn't have such low self esteem about your self.
Easy for you to say if you never reflected on this in the first place.
You shouldn't care what people think, and stop being insecure.
The fact that you need to be so needlessly provocative tells me that the insecurity issues are more apparent at your own character than with the people you try to accuse as
insecure.
Ever thought of cooperating with things you are clearly unaware of? There is no crime into expressing a desire to know more about a topic you have just proved yourself to be quite unknowledgeable about - Reverting to act like a hardliner to make up for your clear inexperience regarding this topic.
Ill be curious if you will, or that you decide to be a
bystander. Or as the Matrix would say:
The problem is choice.
5 days ago he took his life. I don't have any proof for any of this, maybe i'm just projecting; but I think it's because it's extremely difficult to move past being rejected during your formative years. Psychologically speaking you adopt a certain set of coping mechanisms that stay with you at the behavioural level, and I think it's extremely hard if not nearly impossible for some people to change them. You have to be strong.
The reason why i'm posting this here is because there are some things I want to say that I know I can't or shouldn't say on Facebook, as it just wouldn't be appropriate.
I think those people in High School all played a part in his eventual demise, and the thing that pisses me off the most about it is these same people who treated him so poorly are now mourning his death and are going to go to his funeral. These people who 10 years prior picked on someone because he was different are probably even oblivious to their actions. They think they're good people, progressively flying their rainbow Facebook profiles like it means something, but they can't undo their past. I won't go into details, but to say they treated him like shit is putting it lightly.
Firstly, i am sorry that this happened. I think its very sad that people end up losing their lives trying to be who they want to be from the inside out.
I can't speak for those High School people, nor judge them, but i do agree that people
buy off their guilt when they do things like these. Even when they negatively contributed to someone's life, they feel it makes everything okay if they pay their respects only after the fact - And not make things up when such a person was still alive.
It is, in a different way, the
bystander effect in optima forma - Other people are
truly mourning over a loss and do something with it, and others are just
sympathy mourning along the way. Do they care? I doubt it. If they did, they would have atleast attempted to understand the now deceased's POV when he/she was still alive.
So in that sense i understand your anger. You see this happening in life aswell - How often people do not look after you when you feel down or how they never come to an appointment because reasons. Certainly in our day and age,
real friendships, real bonds, are more scarce than ever. People usually don't realize how good they have it until something terrible happens to them. Then they will see
which friends care, and which don't. Often you read how big friend groups are often decimated and reduced to a handful, which should show you how many people
geniunely care for your issue.
Here too, is the modified
bystander effect in effect. They feel that as long as
others care about your incident,
they don't have to. Sadly, its also the reason why most friendships then break down. I assume that the people who don't care, do feel guilty about it, eventually. But why couldn't they have shown empathy when it was needed?
All in all, it says a lot about people when big turnarounds in someone's life (or death) are met by indifference. It is how Chloe Sagal, a trans game developer, came to her demise. People stopped caring. And although Sagal seemed to be a notoriously difficult character to begin with, she could have been helped.
Everyone always can be helped.
I am sorry for your loss,
I'm new be nice
.
PSA: I wrote about this
earlier, but it does not hurt to put it here aswell.
If you are thinking of hurting yourself, please get help right away! Go to the hospital emergency department - if you are thinking of ending your own life, it is a medical emergency. If you need help figuring out where to go, a suicide hotline can help.