Jump to content
  • Welcome to the TransPulse Forums!

    We offer a safe, inclusive community for transgender and gender non-conforming folks, as well as their loved ones, to find support and information.  Join today!

Passing too well


Guest ThePhoenix

Recommended Posts

Guest ThePhoenix

Okay this will be trying to articulate something for the first time, so please bear with me.

When I transitioned, the single thing I wanted most of all was to become passable so that I could be accepted authentically as a woman among women and lead an ordinary life that was not dominated by being trans*. I achieved the passability, though not the normal life. And as far as passing goes, I am starting to feel like I should have been careful what I wished for.

For example, today I had a routine HRT follow-up with my regular HRT doctor who has been with me since the beginning. Her medical assistant brought me into the exam room and talked with me on the way in about one of her colleagues who is pregnant and how she (the medical assistant) was sure I knew what that was like. Then the doctor came in and by the end of the appointment, I reminded her that she should probably order a check of hormone levels before the next appointment. She got a bit flustered and said she completely forgot about me being trans*. So we've got my trans* HRT doctor forgetting about me being trans* while I'm there for an appointment because of being trans*. Call me crazy, but that seems like a pretty extreme form of passing.

I have come out to both trans* people and cis people, while I was in the midst of doing trans* activism projects, only to be called a liar and told I am not trans* at all. This happens more often than not and I've had to find creative ways of outing myself at trans* support group meetings so that people realize I really am one of the club, I really do have trans* related issues to talk about, and something to add, and it really is okay to talk about this stuff in front of me, etc.

I realize this probably sounds like a nice problem to have. In some ways it is. It still makes me giggle. But another feeling is starting to emerge as well.

I have suffered a lot for trans*ness. I've lost my legal career because of it, and so far more than a quarter of a million dollars in salary alone. I've come close to being assaulted on the street for failing to pass as a guy while presenting male (my work wouldn't allow me to present female) and for campaigning on the community's behalf. I've lost my entire family as well. I've been fighting off homelessness for more than a year so far. I don't have much to lose.

I guess I am more marked by my experience than I realized. Because now, when people find they can recognize so little trans*ness in me, it is becoming more and more like a new form of invisibility and being unseen. It's like there is something about me that goes unnoticed, unacknowledged, and disregarded because it isn't seen. And that is starting to bother me.

Can anyone else relate to this?

I do recognize that this is the type of problem many people might wish to have and would not consider troublesome at all. But I would ask that people withhold that judgment. I'm being real here and my problems are problems too. I have a really hard time finding places to discuss them because of the "oh you're so lucky, I wish I had your problems" I encounter.

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

I do not wish for your problems but instead just wish to live as myself in peace. I ay pass or not, i'm never sure since i spend most of my life with people who have always known me. They certainly know i'm trans*. I prefer to pass in life as it simply makes it easier to live in peace. I don't know how i would react in your situation. For me it's easy i can always remove my wig and the baldness is either from a cancer treatment or maybe i've a recent T survivor, she's obviously trans* I also know that in a way i feel a kind of special position in being myself and being honest about my past when i care to share it. I can understand the frustration i would feel if folks wouldn't believe me. Strange it isn't something i'd consider lying about. The is a certain pride i feel in being trans* even though it lives under cover as it can. It's like being a turtle with it's head tucked in most of the time unless the coast is clear.

Hugs,

Charlize

Link to comment

When I went out on my own the first time, I was hit on all day. It still happens from time to time. It's nice to see that people view me as a person going about and enjoying life. I think your life has become normal. you've gone through some tough life experiences but your still standing. Being authentic will scare and drive away some folks. You are affecting people in different ways. Perhaps there is someone you may not know is dealing with the same issues you are. When they see how well you are handling them (I know it isn't easy), it gives them hope.

:)

Link to comment
Guest noeleena

Hi,

Different time and different place. I doubt some of us would say we dont have issues and detail to go through maybe not in the same way and how those issues affect us , how those issues relate to us and who we are as people,

Psychologically and Emotionally, the issues we go through can break us or make us ,I cant say i have expreanced what youv gone through my life has been very different , yet none the less , I know from what i,v been told from people i know we all have something to offer and how we go about it can help others

So thanks for sharing .

...noeleena...

Link to comment
Guest Kayla Grace

I believe I see what you mean. You just want to be noticed and acknowledged as different, is what it sounds like. Which I can't say I can relate to ... I'd love to swap positions with you, pass for a female too well. But that's just who I am. I'd rather not be identified as trans, because it's not who I am.

I am a female. I am a trans only because I'm in transition. From what it looks like, you want to be known as trans.

My point is, once your gender identity and gender sex are the same, go out and live your life as that gender! You didn't transition because you felt like it, you transitioned because you HAD to. You suffered losses, paid your dues, and now it's time for you to use what you paid and waited for, for god knows how many years.

Many who get noticed often get noticed because they are confident, and living their lives the way THEY want to. If it makes YOU happy, who cares if others notice.

That's just my two cents

Natalya <3

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Transitioning is a very complex and individual thing -just as our emotional and psychological needs are individual and complex. I have also experienced people who know my history starting to forget that anything was ever different even when they have known me for a long time. My daughter (and best friend who shares my home as we co-parenting my grandchild) even gets uncomfortable with any way I step outside the male role and say or do something rooted in my past. I'm an artist and may comment on clothes or nails, even feminism, in ways that are not masculine but when I do she is clearly uncomfortable. She snapped when I checked something in a mirror -whether the compression shirt looked okay with a tee before I went outside-that she wished I wouldn't do that because it was too feminine. Yet she is the most accepting person I know as far as gender roles. I've thought about it-why she and my friends seem to want to move past trans man to just man- which is inherently true but doesn't always reflect my long past which will always be part of me.

I think it is because we want people to fit categories and patterns. Have read that it is one of the basic human drives really and has played a huge part in our evolution as a highly intelligent species. The dark side of that is the need to keep people in understandable roles and categories. Plus I told them I am a man and can hardly complain now because they see it that way. Culture and socialization is a powerful force. Both have thousands of messages about gender which most people never think about or question. The people around us begin to apply those messages and norms to us because there are none for trans.

My take would be to maintain your trans identity within the community and circle of acquaintances and let it go outside. Because seeing you as trans does not inform the people you meet about who you are and what your journey has been. It's getting better, but being identified as trans still far more mis-informs than informs people in general about who we are and the journey we have made.

Personally I will always think of myself as transgendered because I have transitioned in appearance and gender role from one gender to another. It is not who I am but it is my history. However I don't go around sharing any other aspects of my history unless I have a reason and I am not going around sharing that one either. Living as a man in a man's world tells people how to treat me-modified by what kind of man I present myself to be of course.

That said, how you want to be seen and live your life is your choice and what you feel is as acceptable and legitimate as anything I may feel. I have noticed that after almost 4 years in transition I am still evolving and suspect I will continue to do so as long as I live.

Johnny

Link to comment
Guest ThePhoenix

I much appreciated Johnny's post as well. Thank you for that.

Alas, I do have one big issue that must be solved before I can lead a normal life. That is the question of employment. It is unfortunately crucial to survival. Part of why I have always been passing obsessed was my hope that I could keep employment by stay

Link to comment
Guest LizMarie

Have you considered relocating? Certain cities are much friendlier to trans people than others.

Also, is your legal paperwork in order? Do you have a female name and gender marker on state identification? If so, you can get a passport and thus bypass the entire birth certificate issue since a passport is equal in weight legally to a birth certificate.

Such documents would allow you to apply for new work as the woman you are without ever having to reveal your trans past.

Link to comment
Guest ThePhoenix

Have you considered relocating? Certain cities are much friendlier to trans people than others.

Also, is your legal paperwork in order? Do you have a female name and gender marker on state identification? If so, you can get a passport and thus bypass the entire birth certificate issue since a passport is equal in weight legally to a birth certificate.

Such documents would allow you to apply for new work as the woman you are without ever having to reveal your trans past.

Yes, I've considered relocating. Sadly the legal profession is among the most conservative industries that exist. It's bad anywhere. Plus I do not have funds to relocate. And relocating now would be a questionable decision since I am just waiting on the federal government's interminable background investigation so that I can begin a different career.

Yes, of course my paperwork is in order. One benefit of being a lawyer is that part was easy for me. :) Unfortunately, those documents actually do not make it so easy to apply for other work without revealing trans* status. There's still the matter of employment history and references. There's the tendency of most employers to Google new employees (dear "friend" of the trans* community Cathy Brennan has been known to write about me on a couple of her websites). Being a lawyer makes it very possible that someone would do an electronic court record search to see what cases I have handled. That would lead to finding my name change records.

So no, having updated documents doesn't solve this problem. I don't think it does for anyone. Stealth is very difficult no matter how well you pass. :)

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Though it has been awhile I am very familiar with the mindset in the legal profession. My dad was one of the founders of the American Academy of Trial Lawyers and on it's board till health forced his retirement. I grew up knowing people like Melvin Belli, Scotty Baldwin, Percy Foreman and others. That was a different generation of course but I suspect a lot of the same culture still prevails. And while many, if not most of the lawyers were very conservative there were also quite a few who were not. My dad was traditional in some ways but very liberal in most. We had a lesbian commitment ceremony (there was no way a marriage was possible of course) at our home over 50 years ago. They were friends of the family and other lawyers attended the ceremony as well. Unfortunately my dad had passed away before I had my epiphany and transitioned but I know he would have accepted it though been concerned about the impact on my life.

What counted with my dad was talent and hard work. It would have trumped anything else when he was hiring for his firm. I'm also aware of the great differences between the different types of law practice and realize some may be more difficult than others with trial lawyers perhaps being more mavericks than many others but surely it would be worth researching firms around the country and finding one that was accepting and liberal in your field of law? Or a liberal company that needs a lawyer in your field?

There is also a tendency among us to anticipate more rejection and problems, more barriers, than we actually find. Living in this small ultra conservative, hillbilly-redneck community I feared hate mail, burning crosses on the lawn and universal rejection. In the 3 1/2 years I have been transitioning here I have instead met with universal acceptance. Only one comment has even to be said within hearing of my extended family and the person apologized. So maybe it would not be as bleak as it seems. I'm not saying there may not be real challenges and hurdles- just that it may not be as bad as you anticipate.

But only you can decide if it is worth the risk or not. Wouldn't do any harm to do some research on possibilities for finding a liberal firm or company where you could practice and not have to face the worry and fear of going stealth. I agree that as things stand with access to virtually anything about anyone going stealth is really not feasible for most people. Especially when you need to provide a history and credentials.

You mentioned a new career - will it be possible to transition in that career?

Johnny

Link to comment
Guest ThePhoenix

What counted with my dad was talent and hard work. It would have trumped anything else when he was hiring for his firm. I'm also aware of the great differences between the different types of law practice and realize some may be more difficult than others with trial lawyers perhaps being more mavericks than many others but surely it would be worth researching firms around the country and finding one that was accepting and liberal in your field of law? Or a liberal company that needs a lawyer in your field?

That's what I've been doing without the success since a year or two before before I transitioned and lost my job. You run I to a bunch of problems besides just transphobic discrimination. There's also the fact that I'm licensed in only two jurisdictions (Maryland & DC) and it is not practical to just start pursuing admission in other states. And there's unemployment discrimination. And there's the fact that it is exceedingly difficult for anyone to get a job as a lawyer now, no matter who you are or how great your credentials.

Trust me, I'm neither lazy nor stupid. I've been working this problem for a long time. It's been a year or two since anyone last came up with an idea I have not already tried several times or a person I have not spoken to.

There is also a tendency among us to anticipate more rejection and problems, more barriers, than we actually find. Living in this small ultra conservative, hillbilly-redneck community I feared hate mail, burning crosses on the lawn and universal rejection. In the 3 1/2 years I have been transitioning here I have instead met with universal acceptance. Only one comment has even to be said within hearing of my extended family and the person apologized. So maybe it would not be as bleak as it seems. I'm not saying there may not be real challenges and hurdles- just that it may not be as bad as you anticipate.

This is true. But things like what has happened to me do still happen to people. You can lose everything. The odds of that are less than ten years ago. But it still happens to people.

But only you can decide if it is worth the risk or not. Wouldn't do any harm to do some research on possibilities for finding a liberal firm or company where you could practice and not have to face the worry and fear of going stealth. I agree that as things stand with access to virtually anything about anyone going stealth is really not feasible for most people. Especially when you need to provide a history and credentials.

You mentioned a new career - will it be possible to transition in that career?

Well, in my case that is kind of moot since I have already transitioned. But what I can say is that the new career is in the U.S. Department of State representing the U.S. abroad. Their first ever transitioner was in 2011. I'm the first ever to go through the recruitment process as an open trans* person, so I am being viewed by some as a test case.

Since I would be abroad for prolonged periods of time, I have put trans*ness all over the paperwork at every stage and talked about it a lot. I want to know if trans*ness is a problem ahead of time rather than finding out while I'm stationed at some isolated post abroad for several years and having real problems because of it. I have breezed through the selection process with no complaints at all. I've had some bumps in the clearances. But so far those have been pretty minor. Based on my experience so far, I think I would recommend the State Department as a pretty good place for a trans* person. I won't say it is the absolute best possible place. But it seems way better than most places. But I also add the caveat that my experience may not be representative of everyone given the response people have to me that I described in the original post.

The question now for me is whether I can get the last clearances done before I lose my home. They are s l o w and I've been doing what I can to speed them up. But I seem to have exhausted what I can do at this point.

Link to comment
Guest noeleena

Hi.

Concerning work and how people see you seems to be an issue ,

For my self no issues and i carryed on as i have done for over 46 years as a builder and joiner, plus other work related trades,

im just accepted for who i am regardless of what i wear or how im seen , short;s and tee top my pinny and shoes or boots , you see its not about clothes , its about who you are as a person , i work with many people ran my own show for years in the public all the time and even now though im retired i dont need to work i do for friends and could work every day for people,

Im accepted as normal, a trades do my job and most who wont me to work for them are women . and i was told its nice to have a woman on the job instead of males, so there you go,

i still have my earings in lippy and thats it ,and im just noeleena to every one,

How you deal or work with people and get on may be an issue for some i dont know , comes down to your attitude and interacting with others, personality , you know some times one needs to look at them selfs , any way if no issues,

Oh by the way , look at it from my side, say i get a big job would you work for me could you wear shorts a tee top, boots and do a days work on the sites, i dont wear makeup even when im out with friends no need, so could this be about a wont to look like a or how a woman dress,s on a building site,

or..... oh no i wont to only look like a woman ......my answer i dont look like a female yet i am one or would i look more masculine , spos i do and who cares, im still who i,v allways been or am . hey i can be preaty rough looking on the sites, and grubby, dirty and our daughter Kaylyn did , we both did when she worked for me. and yes i paid her well,.......3 work sites,

...noeleena...

Link to comment
Guest ThePhoenix

Noleena, I am very happy that you have encountered no problems. However:

How you deal or work with people and get on may be an issue for some i dont know , comes down to your attitude and interacting with others, personality , you know some times one needs to look at them selfs , any way if no issues,

This appears to suggest that what happened to me was my fault because it "comes down to [my] attitude and interacting with others" and that I need to look at myself as the problem.

For your information, before transition, the situation was such that my boss invited me to join his family for Thanksgiving dinner and was talking about me as a potential successor for him once he retired. Once I transitioned, falsified documents started showing up in files, and I started hearing things like "remember how I told you how good the work you did was? Well, I changed my mind." And while I was in mid-transition, a great deal was said to me about how difficulty it would be to have me around because of my transition, how my transition meant I should not be allowed to do anything where people might see me, and how I was "pushing the limits of weird."

Once I transitioned, I did not get fired. Instead, I got tortured so badly that it severely damaged my health and I finally had to resign on the advice of my physician. Had I not left, it is no exaggeration to say that it might have killed me. Two-and-a-half years later, I think I am finally recovered. And when I left, I did pursue a legal claim. And I'm not allowed to say exactly how it went, but I will say that they ended up paying some pretty big bucks for what they did. They didn't do that because I just had a bad attitude.

I could go on, but I hope I don't need to. I am absolutely sincere in saying that I am glad you did not go through what I did. I would not wish for what happened to me to happen to anyone. But you are one of the very lucky ones. Take a look at the stats on this sometime. Workplace problems are the rule. It's unusual to have none. And this stuff is very real. To try and blame it on me, especially when you know nothing about the situation, is really pretty insulting and I take serious exception to it. I also think it is pretty inappropriate on a support forum.

Link to comment
Guest N. Jane

I can relate.

As a child and an adolescent, I couldn't pass as "male" and was called queer, Sweetie, and, worst of all "it". I was miserable and deeply depressed by my late teens.

When I transitioned and had SRS at age 24 (1974) my gender was rarely (if ever) questioned again and I found out what life was like as a normal woman. Aside from dealing with gender discrimination in the work place (which every woman had to do), it was the life I wanted.

I prefer to keep m ancient history buried - I don't deny it but I also wont talk about it - but there are times it has to be discussed and the reactions can be funny, like when a nurse asks "When was your last period?" or "Is there any chance you could be pregnant?"

I had enough grief as a child and I prefer not to be "different", or at least not for that reason.

Link to comment
  • 1 month later...
Guest ThePhoenix

Since I would be abroad for prolonged periods of time, I have put trans*ness all over the paperwork at every stage and talked about it a lot. I want to know if trans*ness is a problem ahead of time rather than finding out while I'm stationed at some isolated post abroad for several years and having real problems because of it. I have breezed through the selection process with no complaints at all. I've had some bumps in the clearances. But so far those have been pretty minor. Based on my experience so far, I think I would recommend the State Department as a pretty good place for a trans* person. I won't say it is the absolute best possible place. But it seems way better than most places. But I also add the caveat that my experience may not be representative of everyone given the response people have to me that I described in the original post.

Unfortunately, I must now retract my earlier recommendation of the State Department as a trans* friendly employer. In my case, the Department has violated its own procedures to revoke my job offer on ridiculous grounds.

Instead of finishing the clearances, they skipped them and went straight to the final suitability review. The final review panel revoked my offer and accused me of fraud, dishonesty, and intentional false statements based on a failure to disclose some financial information even though I actually disclosed that specific information twice.

They also cited the fact that I lost my previous job for being trans* and have had financial issues as a result. This, they say, constitutes "criminal, dishonest, or disgraceful conduct." That is, of course, absolutely ridiculous.

If they had followed the usual process and said that I never disclosed the information, then I'd probably assume someone just lost a few pages from the file. I'd send them a copy of my previous disclosures and assume that was that and the mistake would be fixed. But I have a hard time seeing good faith error when they skip steps in the process and accuse me of criminal, dishonest, and disgraceful conduct based on nothing more than my being poor. Sooooooo... cancel the recommendation of the State Department as a trans* friendly employer.

Link to comment
  • Admin

That is really awful, Phoenix. I am so sorry that you got screwed, especially when this administration has been going out of its way to show how trans friendly it is.

You could take the matter to the Transgender Law Center (a California non-profit, but one which will take cases from elsewhere) or find other legal or regulatory bodies, but I'm not sure you would want to work for those folks after what they've done.

Things are getting better, but not nearly fast enough. I hope that you can find something else, and quickly. Have you considered the non-profit arena, or places like the Human Rights Campaign? Some may need top notch legal talent.

I know a transwoman in Boston who was a lawyer and a judge, who transitioned during a campaign for an elected judicial seat. She lost, and then lost her job. I think she had to switch careers. So your experience is, unfortunately, not unique. I wish you the best in your search.

HUGS

Carolyn Marie

Link to comment
Guest LizMarie

Things like this are one of the reasons I am leery of changing jobs at all, especially so soon after going full time. My current employer is very supportive with the sole exception that their health care policy won't cover trans surgeries without extensive appeals so I'm making plans for Thailand eventually. But that's my fear, that even applying to a supposedly trans friendly employer could backfire and I end up unemployed entirely.

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Who's Online   6 Members, 0 Anonymous, 102 Guests (See full list)

    • Betty K
    • Adrianna Danielle
    • VickySGV
    • Timi
    • KayC
    • MomTGDaughter
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.7k
    • Total Posts
      768.4k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,024
    • Most Online
      8,356

    JamesyGreen
    Newest Member
    JamesyGreen
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. Alscully
      Alscully
      (35 years old)
    2. floruisse
      floruisse
      (40 years old)
    3. Jasmine25
      Jasmine25
      (22 years old)
    4. Trev0rK
      Trev0rK
      (26 years old)
  • Posts

    • KymmieL
      Well first day is over and now getting ready for bed soon. Work was OK.   Don't know why but I am feeling down. I am heading to bed. Good Night.   Kymmie
    • Adrianna Danielle
      Boyfriend and I our time at my place.Both admit our sex life is good,got intimate for the 2nd time and he is good at it
    • Abigail Genevieve
      Thanks.  I will look those up in the document, hopefully tomorrow.   I always look at the source on stuff like this, not what someone, particularly those adversarial, have to say. 
    • MaeBe
      LGBTQ rights Project 2025 takes extreme positions against LGBTQ rights, seeking to eliminate federal protections for queer people and pursue research into conversion therapies in order to encourage gender and sexuality conformity. The policy book also lays out plans to criminalize being transgender and prohibit federal programs from supporting queer people through various policies. The project partnered with anti-LGBTQ groups the Family Policy Alliance, the Center for Family and Human Rights, and the Family Research Council. Project 2025 calls for the next secretary of Health and Human Services to “immediately put an end to the department’s foray into woke transgender activism,” which includes removing terms related to gender and sexual identity from “every federal rule, agency regulation, contract, grant, regulation, and piece of legislation that exists.” The Trump administration proposed a similar idea in 2018 that would have resulted in trans people losing protections under anti-discrimination laws. [Project 2025, Mandate for Leadership, 2023; The New Republic, 2/8/24] Similarly, the policy book calls for HHS to stop all research related to gender identity unless the purpose is conformity to one's sex assigned at birth. The New Republic explains: “That is, research on gender-nonconforming children and teenagers should be funded by the government, but only for the purpose of studying what will make them conform, such as denying them gender-affirming care and instead trying to change their identities through ‘counseling,’ which is a form of conversion therapy.” [The New Republic, 2/8/24] The policy book’s foreword by Kevin Roberts describes “the omnipresent propagation of transgender ideology and sexualization of children” as “pornography” that “should be outlawed,” adding, “The people who produce and distribute it should be imprisoned.” Roberts also says that “educators and public librarians who purvey it should be classed as registered sex offenders. And telecommunications and technology firms that facilitate its spread should be shuttered.” [Project 2025, Mandate for Leadership, 2023] Roberts’ foreword states that “allowing parents or physicians to ‘reassign’ the sex of a minor is child abuse and must end.” Echoing ongoing right-wing attacks on trans athletes, Roberts also claims, “Bureaucrats at the Department of Justice force school districts to undermine girls’ sports and parents’ rights to satisfy transgender extremists.” [Project 2025, Mandate for Leadership, 2023; TIME magazine, 5/16/22] Dame Magazine reports that Project 2025 plans to use the Department of Justice to crack down on states that “do not charge LGBTQ people and their allies with crimes under the pretense that they are breaking federal and state laws against exposing minors to pornography.” [Dame Magazine, 8/14/23] Project 2025 also calls for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to repeat “its 2016 decision that CMS could not issue a National Coverage Determination (NCD) regarding ‘gender reassignment surgery’ for Medicare beneficiaries.” The policy book’s HHS chapter continues: “In doing so, CMS should acknowledge the growing body of evidence that such interventions are dangerous and acknowledge that there is insufficient scientific evidence to support such coverage in state plans.” [Project 2025, Mandate for Leadership, 2023] Going further, Project 2025 also demands that the next GOP administration “reverse policies that allow transgender individuals to serve in the military.” The policy book’s chapter on the Defense Department claims: “Gender dysphoria is incompatible with the demands of military service, and the use of public monies for transgender surgeries … for servicemembers should be ended.” [Project 2025, Mandate for Leadership, 2023]   …summaries of what’s within the rest of the document re: LGBTQ+ concerns. A person can believe their gender is fixed but incongruent with their physiology, but the authors and Trump (by his own words) just see the incongruity of an “expressed gender” that conflicts with what was/is in a person’s pants.
    • Mmindy
      Good catch… I took care of it.
    • Sally Stone
      I'm tired of the two-party system.  It has degraded to a system where there are only two diametrically opposed views, neither of which supports me.  I have conservative views regarding big government and government spending but I have very liberal views when it comes to protecting the rights of individuals.  And just elections of the past, I am stuck with two choices, neither of which I support. With only two parties, each with agendas that are off the left and right scales, I am not adequately represented.    Finally, I'm okay with party affiliated politicians running for office using their party views, but once elected to office, they are obligated to support the entire electorate not just the electorate members that voted for them.  Plain and simple, our government system is broken and dysfunctional.  I'll step down from my soapbox now.     
    • Sally Stone
      Thanks Mae.  She was an amazing friend and I grew to love her like a sister.
    • Sally Stone
      I did Ashley.  Non-rev travel was one of the major factors for taking the job.  At the time, US Airways had the best non-rev policy in the industry.  It cost $10 to fly coach and $25 to fly first class.  We flew first class whenever there were seats available.  
    • Abigail Genevieve
      You should have a moderator fix what you meant to write as "birth certificate".  Ooops.   I've gone over that verse and am wholly and completely dissatisfied with the SBC exegesis of it, so much so that it was one of the things that helped me break out of a mindset of guit.  Sometime I may strut by stuff as a Hebraist and show what it really means.
    • Abigail Genevieve
      I found this   — 450 — Mandate for Leadership: The Conservative Promise Goal #1: Protecting Life, Conscience, and Bodily Integrity. The Secretary should pursue a robust agenda to protect the fundamental right to life, protect con- science rights, and uphold bodily integrity rooted in biological realities, not ideology. From the moment of conception, every human being possesses inherent dignity and worth, and our humanity does not depend on our age, stage of development, race, or abilities. The Secretary must ensure that all HHS programs and activities are rooted in a deep respect for innocent human life from day one until natural death: Abortion and euthanasia are not health care. A robust respect for the sacred rights of conscience, both at HHS and among gov- ernments and institutions funded by it, increases choices for patients and program beneficiaries and furthers pluralism and tolerance. The Secretary must protect Americans’ civil rights by ensuring that HHS programs and activities follow the letter and spirit of religious freedom and conscience-protection laws. Radical actors inside and outside government are promoting harmful identity politics that replaces biological sex with subjective notions of “gender identity” and bases a person’s worth on his or her race, sex, or other identities. This destructive dogma, under the guise of “equity,” threatens American’s fundamental liberties as well as the health and well-being of children and adults alike. The next Secretary must ensure that HHS programs protect children’s minds and bodies and that HHS programs respect parents’ basic right to direct the upbringing, education, and care of their children.   https://static.project2025.org/2025_MandateForLeadership_CHAPTER-14.pdf   First, that is not much, if that is all that is of concern.  Secondly, I have seen all sorts of anti-Trump slander, including the Steele dossier and the lawfare he is now undergoing, to be cynical of any criticism against him, and indirectly this document.    He deserves some of what he is getting, but not all.  Thirdly, I bolded one statement of concern.   I don't think gender identity is subjective.  "Radical actors" is name calling, and there is a lot of that going around.  Maybe I am not seeing everything of concern or reading this right, but i would discuss with the author of this document concerning this.
    • Willow
      Good evening   well I finally finished reading my textbook.  Yeah.  But I still have a lot more to go for the class.     My endocrinologist always asks me about lactation.  And yes I have had some very small amounts of leakage but not on any regular basis.  I figure I blocked the discharge Duce when I pierced my nipples with scare tissue.  But who knows.  I also get asked about mammograms.  I e had my first or baseline and this fall I will need to schedule my second.   As someone in the midst of studying the Old Testament, I can say that I haven’t found any mention of pending damnation for being transgender or intersex.  The closest it comes is a verse that says men should not wear women’s clothing.  Now I don’t know each and everyone’s particulars, but I know I meet the medical definition of female gender, and even in Ohio, a State that until recently refused to allow birth certificates to be changed, I meet the criteria.  Therefore I can only conclude I am not a man wearing women’s clothing.  But there is a somewhat different scholarly explanation of that law that it should not be taken as literally as the haters want.  Mostly men should not pretend to be women to ex ape from their enemies. Or tried to hide from God.     willow
    • Abigail Genevieve
      Well, the left wing has been doing that.    I read a few things while trying to find out what the problem is and liked what I read.  But I am a conservative.    Is there something specific in there that is of concern?  Does it promise somewhere to erase trans folk? That would be problematic.
    • Ivy
      It's a plan to basically completely take over the government by the right wing.
    • Ivy
      I'm actually in Asheville tonight.  Some of the people in the support group invited me for dinner after the meeting.  We're going to get together again tomorrow again. It's been nice, 4 trans women and 1 trans man, together ar a restaurant.
    • Abigail Genevieve
      I found https://www.project2025.org/policy/   I will have to read it.  I have not.  What is of concern?   The link provided earlier goes back to this forum.
  • Upcoming Events

Contact TransPulse

TransPulse can be contacted in the following ways:

Email: Click Here.

To report an error on this page.

Legal

Your use of this site is subject to the following rules and policies, whether you have read them or not.

Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
DMCA Policy
Community Rules

Hosting

Upstream hosting for TransPulse provided by QnEZ.

Sponsorship

Special consideration for TransPulse is kindly provided by The Breast Form Store.
×
×
  • Create New...