Hey, if you are #trans and began transitioning in the 2016 - 2019 era, can you reply and let me know!

There are apparently way more of us here than I realized, and I would like to be closer friends with those that remember the before times and trans twitter and the discourses and the excitement before we all got burnt the fuck out. 😅

So, for those of us in the 2016 - 2019 cohort, how would you describe the experience or what it was like transitioning then? What are community or culture moments that stood out to you at the time? What are touchpoints for trans subcultures in the era?

I sometimes think of it as the post-“trans tipping point” cohort, given that 2015 was the supposed “trans tipping point” but did genuinely represent a moment of increasing visibility and acceptance in media and in-person communities in many places. We also had much easier access to trans healthcare as WPATH and health systems/insurance companies lowered the gatekeeping barriers to accessing HRT and other care (though surgeries were still being fought over frequently). It was also maybe the peak of certain trans social media spaces and discourse, and Trans Lit in the English speaking world was beginning to finally break out of being a niche area of literature to something cis people also read and engaged with.

@JoscelynTransient

I would not consider my experience to be typical.

I was department chair. I had to be the face of the department; I felt horribly visible during a time when all I wanted to do was to hide from the world. Even COVID didn't provide a respite in this situation.

Also, for much of this journey, I felt horribly alone. I was navigating this with almost no allies, trying to figure out a way to transition without blowing up my life. I was from an older generation, one that was very much influenced by earlier iterations of the WPATH standards and of older flavors of DSM; it all felt like a very delicate balance, to transition without wrecking everything. Combine this with events going on at work (I could wax poetic about what it was like as Chair) and the combination nearly killed me. It wasn't until late 2021 / early 2022 that I finally started to find community and really came into my own. It was amazing how rapid and how beautiful the changes were from that point, but those first couple of years were really rocky.

@NicolaElle still glad we found each other during a rough spot in both of our lives 💜