My Deepest Trans Lesson

I recognized I was trans at the age of 15. But I spent a decade after that being "not 100% certain". I tried in that time to think my way to certainty. I had a psychologist who I thought was helping me to find certainty (but she was actually treating me for a personality disorder). Around and around I went, and I got nowhere.

Then I read a book called In Search of Eve. It was 1990, and I don't know how a copy of that book ended up in my university library in South Africa. It changed my life because it destroyed the certainty delusion. The book presented transition as a ritual that didn't simply express an identity--instead, the ritual shaped and reinforced the identity. I could think till my brains dripped out my ears and it wouldn't help. I had to DO.

It's like a seed can only find out it's a daisy by growing and flowering. Or it can sit in the seed packet forever, wondering.

And this is why I am so angry with the transphobes and their "reasonable people" enablers, throwing obstacles in the way of trans kids to grow and learn and reinforce their identities. Transition is a positive feedback loop that saves people's lives.

Disclaimer: I am autistic and struggle to interpret my internal state. Other trans people have different experiences.

#trans

@SecondUniverse …how can a psych treat you for something without your consent/awareness? (This is not questioning you, but questioning them) gah!
@pewterbaw the diagnosis of Schizotypal Personality Disorder was wrong but not baseless. The psychologist couldn't see past my neurodivergence to the issue I actually wanted help with. The diagnosis of PSD wasn't shared with me, until after I transitioned and the psychologist could see it wasn't just another delusion. They didn't feel an obligation to be straightforward with me because they felt I was irrational and needed to be managed.