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!

Stealth Vs. Openess


Guest praisedbeherhooves

Recommended Posts

Guest praisedbeherhooves

I don't really talk about my transsexuality a lot. f I meet another transgendered person, I will admit to it so we can I guess compare notes. Sometimes if the subject comes up I'll mention it but I don't want to flaunt it. I don't think it defines me as a person. I'm just a guy. The female body is just a result of something that went horribly, horribly wrong while I was in the womb, just like how I have cerebral palsy only I hate the female body much more than the cerebral palsy. I've noticed some transgendered people are very open about it in order to educate people. On the other hand, some never mention it because of fear of violence or simply consider it private. How do you people feel?

Link to comment

I am much like you but going in the opposite direction and unless someone brings it up i don't usually talk about it, currently i am transitioning where i live so being stealth is kinda out of the question.

Paula

Link to comment
Guest (Lightsider)
I don't really talk about my transsexuality a lot. f I meet another transgendered person, I will admit to it so we can I guess compare notes. Sometimes if the subject comes up I'll mention it but I don't want to flaunt it. I don't think it defines me as a person. I'm just a guy. The female body is just a result of something that went horribly, horribly wrong while I was in the womb, just like how I have cerebral palsy only I hate the female body much more than the cerebral palsy. I've noticed some transgendered people are very open about it in order to educate people. On the other hand, some never mention it because of fear of violence or simply consider it private. How do you people feel?

I am to the point that it really is none of any ones business but mine. So you can say i am stealth. However if it gets out some how I am trans...it does not bother me. I can take a lot heat and I can stand up and be counted when the time comes.

Link to comment

I prefer to educate people, but in a polite and civil manner. It's one thing to flaunt it and shout "I'M TRANSGENDER!!!!!!" and another thing entirely to be open about it and to acknowledge and speak up about it where appropriate. That's my way of doing it, anyhow.

Link to comment
Guest Leah1026

In this age true stealth is impossible. Unless you transitioned back before computers, somebody will know.

As a result most people live in some degree of assimilation.

I live fairly assimilated. A fair number of people at work know (transitioned on the job), but very few elsewhere. And even the people at work who know don't remember how I looked before. The advantage of having transitioned almost 4 years ago combined with FFS.

Link to comment
Guest Martin

As far as people I actually interact with go, my family knows, my health professionals know, my close friends know, 2-3 administrators at my college know, a few of the people in one of the non-trans support groups I attend know, and the people in trans groups I go to know). However, my dog trainer doesn't know, my classmates don't know, my teachers don't know, the people I met on the street or in stores don't know, etc. I consider myself mostly-stealth because I usually interact with more people who don't know than who do know.

Link to comment

I'm basically like Martin except for the family and the support groups. The minimum number of people who need to know know, but only one person knows beyond that. People who need to know are: people who need to know so I can get paid, people who need to know so that I can get healthcare, my roommates, my therapist, and one of my ex-girlfriends. I also told a close friend. He didn't need to know, but I really needed to talk to someone and he was willing to be that person.

I'd say I interact with many many more people who don't know than do on a day-to-day basis.

Link to comment
Guest ~Brenda~

There is a transwoman where I work. Some people knew her before her transition. I do not personally know her because we work in different departments, but we have run into each other. All, I can say is that when we bump into one another, she looks at me intenlty, knowingly. I know too, but niether of us speak. We sort of nod and continue about our business.

That may change one day.

Brenda

Link to comment
Guest NicolaiAE

I usually try and answer questions my friends throw at me. But I don't really try to stealth (I'm still a teen) and usually when I give my birth name everyone automatically thinks I'm a guy, no matter what. I'd rather people just think of me as a guy rather than a transgender, seems less complicated to me.

-Nicolai

Link to comment
Guest Emily Violet
I prefer to educate people, but in a polite and civil manner. It's one thing to flaunt it and shout "I'M TRANSGENDER!!!!!!" and another thing entirely to be open about it and to acknowledge and speak up about it where appropriate. That's my way of doing it, anyhow.

im pretty much the same way but i dont really consider myself transgender im a girl

Link to comment
Guest CharlieRose

I'm trans to a point where it is a part of my identity. I'm queer. I have to face it. I'm ok with setting off people's gaydar, and I don't care if people know I'm trans unless they call me she. (Which I noticed happens a lot. I really need to come up with a good comeback, or at least the cajones to say, "Dude, I'm a guy." when people get confused)

I'm also an artist and eccentric in a lot of other ways, so I guess people wouldn't be *that* weirded out by it. And my understanding of gender has been changed a lot by me being queer, so that's going to show up in my work. It has already, in some ways.

I'm kind of just eccentric and my own person in general, my weird idea of my own gender and sexuality go along with that. But, yeah, I know I'm a transguy and I'm ok with it. No offense to some of you guys, but I think for *me* it would be silly and slightly deluded to think I'm just a regular guy.

Link to comment
Guest AllisonD

I'm stealth, except for coming out in this forum last month. I outed myself to my best friend (other than Donna, of course) of 10 years just the other day 'cause when he was over he saw a directions sheet to my new endo that highlighted the fact he claims expertise in MTF TS HRT. I mentioned to him that I am trans and asked him why he never brought it up. We have had intimate conversations on other topics before, it would not have been out of line. He replied he didn't know. I think he lied to protect my feelings, he's like that. But he never asked a question and has never brought it up since.

I always assume people read me on sight. They don't actually seem to tho. I just feel it is safer for me so that on the ocassion that I get blind-sided with a direct question I am prepared to answer calmly and truthfully. I have been approached by 3 trans-women who wanted some advice, so they cleary read me. Although in each case they were very tentative about how they approached me, as if worried they might have guessed wrong.

It did come up once in a prior company, where a co-worker I was socially somewhat close to asked me, like out of the blue, "So, I assume you had to have a lot of psychiatrist support for what you went through. Did you find it helped?" If I didn't always assume everyone knows, this would have stopped me cold for a moment while I recovered my composure. As it was, I was able to reply in stride, that yes, I had had years of time with the shrinks and not one of them was of any use whatsoever with anything to do with my essential identity (which is the truth, by the way). Of course, he was fishing. But I didn't mind, showed him I didn't mind, and he never mentioned it again.

So to answer your question, I am very open about it and do not mind questions, but I don't volunteer anything first.

Allison

Link to comment
Guest Zenda

Kia Ora,

I'm in a similar position to Allison...I call it 'semi stealth' I'm comfortable with who I am but don't broadcast it[wear the 'T' shirt]...No body to date has asked me directly about my gender status,[unless that is I've told them of my past] from what I gather most are unaware or if they do have their suspicions-they keep them to themselves... :rolleyes: People who know don't care and people who might care don't know...And personally I really don't give a ssssshhhhit... :P

Metta Jendar :)

Link to comment
Guest julia_d

I was stealth for a very long time.. wore the girl shirt for at least 10 years online and in life. Only recently have I felt the need to come out and be more open. Now here's an interesting little bit of info from my laser clinic.. which is being funded by the PCT (wow) They have me down as 100% female.. they have funded because they are obliged to help women with disfiguring facial hair problems. I guess I changed my name so long ago and in a different region that all they can see is Miss PP .. There must be some cutoff point where PCT funding managers can't see past. Possibly like the tax records they become invisible after 10 years.

So anyway.. I outed myself at the end of last year having been successfully passing for a long time. It's a part of my growing.. I am learning things.. instead of running now when challenged I stand my ground "No ****" or "you don't say" are 2 good comebacks.. My particular favourite is "wow.. I thought there was something odd going on when I looked in the mirror the last 20 years!".. kind of kicks their sniggering back at them XD

Link to comment
Guest N. Jane

I transitioned a LONG time ago when stealth was the accepted way and, in general, doctors didn't do surgery on people who couldn't do stealth. It was only the exceptional few who were outted by the media.

I realized after transition that I had always been a girl in every way that really mattered so I never considered myself trans but simply cured. Aside from a couple of doctors, no one in my daily life knows nor do I care to talk about it. I like it that way.

Link to comment

i hate the term stealth i think it implies we are trying to fit in some were we dont belong assimilation fits better blending in hitting the point were you can conduct your self in social circles naturally with out any one being the wiser

in my life 97-98ish % of my friends are genetic boys and girls and the % that are trans and that i hang out with regularly are so close to being gentic boys and girls that you cant even tell they are transgendered this web site is the lion share of my contact with the trans community i dont go to meetings or rallies im not an activist i use the womens rest rooms and locker rooms when i have a gym member ship

i hang out in straight bars clubs go to red neck biker and ghetto bars too i have been to gay bars twice once for my boyfriends aunts birth day and another time cause a trans friend refused to go to a straight bar with me both times it was fun but i feel so far outta place in a gay club because i dont identify really with being gay or trans so i wind up feeling like an alien and also hanging out with genticly male or female people that dont know that im trans forces me to grow as a female even more

also i find that when people know your trans they stop treating you as a woman/man and start treating you like a transsexual i accdentally slipped up and told my best friend that im trans though she does accept it fully she has changed to some degree toward me like she was having a pool party at her house which i had been over a few tims and swam in her pool before she knew but she ask if i was comfy being around abunch of people in a bikini or goes out of her way to tell me when we are going out that she found a bar thats trans friendly *sigh*

so to make a beginning to be long story short i keep it as under wraps as i can and find my self being very embarassed when it gets out

Sakura

Link to comment
Guest Ryles_D

I don't really have the option of stealth- but I don't think I'll be telling anyone what I used to be. I don't mind people guessing, but I'd rather not have anyone say "Well, I don't like nay of the gender neutral junk so I'll just call you by your birth sex".

I agree that it is very difficult to truly be stealth these days, and it's probably too bad- but hopefully it's getting better to not be stealth, too. I think some transwomen would get married, and throughout the entire marriage their husbands would never find out that they were anything but cis- which sounds impressive and good, but I think at least one had to give up her children to be that stealth, so it's not without compromises.

The only problem I can see with stealth is that you rid the world of "this is what a transsexual looks like" and limit visibility to people who are still undergoing transition- when they probably don't pass well. And that isn't a reason not to go stealth, far from, it's just too bad that the people in the best position to advertise that we are normal, every day people can't do so without risking so much.

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   7 Members, 0 Anonymous, 57 Guests (See full list)

    • Lydia_R
    • FelixThePickleMan
    • Abigail Genevieve
    • Mike P
    • VickySGV
    • awkward-yet-sweet
    • Betty K
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.8k
    • Total Posts
      770.2k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,103
    • Most Online
      8,356

    his-mom
    Newest Member
    his-mom
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. Ale975
      Ale975
      (27 years old)
    2. BillieB
      BillieB
      (65 years old)
    3. BrokenDays
      BrokenDays
      (34 years old)
    4. Bryson
      Bryson
      (25 years old)
    5. Jolie
      Jolie
  • Posts

    • Lydia_R
      I'm a tracker and I've paid for 100% of my transition costs out of pocket.  Counseling was a huge, huge part of my transition and well worth my money.  Not to be uppity about all of this.  I'm just sharing information I have because I have it and it may be useful for others.  Here is my analysis of my spending on transition over the last 2.5 years:   Medical Doctors and Blood Draws: $2,397 Counseling: $3,800 Medications (brand name): $2,702.85 Medications (generic): $485.39 Total: $9,385.24   I picked up on the internet early in transition that transition is a consumer activity.  I tend to agree with that.   This year (Jan - May 18th, 2024), I've spent: Medical Doctors: $102 Medications: $241.52 Total: $343.52   So I'm on a much more sustainable path with it.  I'm pretty happy with where I am with it, although I do still desire surgery and am nervous about how that will all unfold.  But my doctors have me on this steady state thing.  I could seek out other medications, but what I'm doing is good enough.  Oh, I'm missing something....  I did a bunch of electrolysis that didn't appear to have any effect.  I've always enjoyed shaving and I use pink shaving cream now (I've got some lipstick blond in me).  It's good enough.  Not sure if I'll do electro or laser in the future.  The need to shave my body has become less and less.  Before HRT, I was shaving my body weekly or even every 5 days.  Now it is more like 2-3 weeks.  Everyone's body hair is different.  My beard is very coarse and stiff while my body hair has been somewhat minimal and light.  It's nice to have smooth legs and not have to shave as much.   Counseling was $200/session.  I tried one or two counselors before I found one who resonated with where I really was.  When I was prescribed HRT, I didn't fill the prescription until 4 months later.  I had to take some time to decide that I really wanted to take on that lifetime financial commitment.  And of course the possibly negative health consequences too, but I think I was actually thinking more about the finances of it all.  Maybe 51%.   I did a lot of work to revitalize my career before jumping into medical transition.  I started counseling 3 months before I got the best paying job of my life.  The pressure of wanting to transition was so great that I couldn't wait any longer.  She was coming out.  Even though I had very little money, I splurged on some nice dresses and a full length mirror and then started counseling.  Sometimes you just have to move forward and hope for the best.  Other times it is better to wait and do some hard work.  The grace of it all..
    • Ivy
      And when the pressure is released it sucks in heat.  I had a regulator leaking and it was covered with ice.  It's how a heat pump works as well.   Why do they always pick names like this?  It's like the exact opposite of what it really is. I hate politics so much.  But I still have to follow it.
    • Lydia_R
      Wonderful!  This reminds me of a discussion I had with my brother a decade ago.  I said that things expand when they get hotter.  He said, no, they expand when they get colder.  And I had to think about that for a while.  The weird thing is that H20 is special in that when it reaches freezing, it expands.   The pressure makes the cold and then we see the condensation.
    • KatieSC
      I used to have a really good therapist, however, she does not accept health insurance reimbursement fees as they are too low. I had to pay 130 per session. When she decided to jack the rates to 185 per hour, I cut bait. Without a doubt, counseling is very helpful. What concerns me greatly is that we are a vulnerable population. Unfortunately, we can easily be targeted for some pretty high fees. How many of us have been in the situation where our healthcare provider, surgeons, or counselors, have required cash payments? We get jammed as well by the health insurance companies as they often will not pay for items that could be essential to our well-being. It is my contention that our chances of being targeted for violence, death, or harassment, go up when we cannot easily blend in with the female population.    For those of us that are MTF, some of us are blessed with more feminine features, and many of us are not. We get the whammy of a larger skeleton, bigger hands, bigger feet, a beard, a deep voice, and masculine face. It takes a lot for some of us to be able to blend in. My belief is that the better we blend in, the better chance we have of not being targeted. In this, electrolysis, facial feminizing/gender affirming facial surgery, voice/speech therapy with voice feminization/gender affirming voice surgery, and body contouring are all potentially lifesaving. Unfortunately, many of the insurance companies deem the procedures as cosmetic, and yet there is no cosmetic that fixes all of these issues.    If you pay your money, you can get anything you want in this world. The sad reality is that for us, many of these procedures would enhance our lives tremendously, yet we face ongoing battles with our very existence. Yeah, an empathetic therapist helps, but is it just the concept of reasonable empathy at a reasonable cost? When my therapist jacked her rates to 185 per hour, I said enough is enough. Your mileage may vary.
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      I don't think the temperature matters as much.  Think about how gases like CO2 are stored in cylinders, and they are basically the same in summer or winter.  Any gas becomes liquid under enough pressure.  What does matter is the strength of the pressure vessel.  If exposed to excess external heat, pressure increases and can burst a tank or a pipe.  Household propane tanks are often painted white or silver and have safety release valves, because sunlight can heat a tank enough to cause a significant increase in internal pressure, even though the contents remain liquid. 
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      It has been a long week, and I think this weekend is going to be pretty busy.  The high school is having their graduation later today.  Although we don't have any grads in our family this year, my husband is going because he's involved with the school.  And tonight there's the torchlight ceremony for the county cadets who are finishing their program, and the reading of assignments for the new seniors.  One of my stepkids will be a senior this year.  She's talented, and will be assigned a squad leader position.  My husband is really proud of her, and she's well-liked by her peers even though she's very quiet and serious.    I might get to go on a trip to Texas this week.  The storms that hit Houston caused a lot of electrical damage, so no doubt the utilities in that area will be ordering stuff from my husband's company.  When the big hurricane hit Florida in 2022, we made several trips there with badly-needed equipment, and the entire transportation department was involved in the first convoy.  When he travels, I usually want to go along, since 1-on-1 time is kind of rare for us. 
    • Mmindy
    • Lydia_R
      Maybe surface tension?   I was in a political debate yesterday and it got way too focused on social stuff and I just had to steer the conversation back to how natural gas transitions to a liquid under pressure.  One of the people I was debating had a career working in that field and it was a good opportunity to expose stuff like that.  He mentioned that it isn't just pressure, it is temperature too.  So then I mentioned how the lines are running underground and asked how that played a role in it.  He came back saying that natural gas is a liquid under pressure.  I guess I didn't get a straight answer on that, but it did move my thinking one step down the road.  Perhaps I should have been more direct with him and asked him at what temperature and pressure.  Is there a chart?   I feel people would be better off if they paid more attention to the objects in their environment instead of focusing on some of the things that we hear so much of in the news.  People are pretty clueless as to how much trigonometry plays a role in so many things in our society.  Even land surveyors don't really use it anymore because programmers locked it away in a function.  Much like how cascading style sheets (CSS) is a wrapper for math.  I wonder what former president Trump thinks about all of that?  He must have some knowledge of how his buildings are constructed, right?  There certainly is a part of me that thinks he is just putting on a show about all of this.  Perhaps I'm wrong though.  All kinds of people in the world.
    • Jani
      Me as well.  I can use my left hand for many tasks though.
    • Jani
      Hello Jennifer and welcome back.  I find New England to be a great place to live.  I have a number of acquaintances and friends in Maine and I love the state.  It seems you are doing well.     Hugs,  Jani
    • MirandaB
      Oh, my "maybe this person is an egg" story is the (male presenting) piercing person and I discussed body hair removal methods, he says he doesn't want any hair except on his head, which is what I said during a couple hair removal sessions before and just after the egg cracked.     
    • Karen Carey
      I, too, am lucky.  Here in the UK I have a great therapist, a fully supportive GP, and a psychiatrist and endo who look after me and my needs.  I found the therapist on Psychology Today.
    • Lydia_R
      Over the last few years of being on this site and going through medical transition, I've come to own the M->F identification.  Funny, I made a typo of M->T.  It is a curiosity if I'll ever put Gender: Female on this site.  It is my intention to be there someday.   Right now, because of career stuff and a high stress event with an electric hair clipper last fall, I'm feeling much more masculine than I would like.  I think that once I make some decent headway with my third career, I'll settle into a more feminine feeling.   I never really considered gender very much.  I certainly always used a feminine appearance as my presentation goal. I think that when I was young, I briefly had the idea of transitioning, but I convinced myself quickly that medical transition would be a bad outcome, so I put all those feelings and ideas in the closet for decades.  I'm still very apprehensive about medical transition.  I've always taken health to be a high priority for me.  I wrote a book last December about my fears of it all and my conclusion ultimately is that sometimes there is more to life than being a pillar of health.  It's important to take some chances if that is where your heart takes you.
    • Lydia_R
    • Lydia_R
  • 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...