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  • Hi, welcome to Gender Analysis. The termpassingis typically used to describe whether or not

  • a trans person is perceived as noticeably trans. For a trans woman, topassis

  • to be seen as a cis woman in everyday life, and vice versa for trans men. Most people

  • tend to assume that passing is or should be a goal for every trans person, and it’s

  • easy to see why. Some of us do find it necessary to look like cis people of our gender, because

  • that’s what it takes to relieve our dysphoria. In other cases, the changes that we need in

  • order to feel comfortable just happen to push us more in the direction of passing. And when

  • people don’t know were trans, it can eliminate some of the insecurities that can

  • arise when people do know, like wondering if they really see us as our gender or theyre

  • just humoring us. More than that, being visibly trans in public can be dangerous. In a study

  • of over 6,000 trans people in the United States, those who were seen asvisually non-conforming

  • were more likely to be harassed in retail stores, hotels and restaurants, and they were

  • more likely to be attacked when using public accommodations such as restrooms. Practically

  • all of us have faced the fear or the terrifying reality of being heckled by strangers just

  • because of what we look like. Passing isn’t just about aiming to reduce our own dysphoria

  • it’s also about keeping ourselves safe from everyone else.

  • All trans people should have the choice to express their gender in the way that’s most

  • comfortable for them, but there are many such pressures that limit our choices, and passing

  • can have more to do with cis people’s comfort than our own. Pediatric endocrinologist Norman

  • Spack pioneered the usage of puberty blocking drugs for trans teenagers in the US, allowing

  • them to experience a puberty that’s appropriate for their gender. This can be a lifesaving

  • treatment for trans kids, and it can help reduce their need for future procedures to

  • remove unwanted masculine or feminine features. Yet in a 2013 TEDx talk, Dr. Spack used one

  • of his patients as an example of how his treatment can make trans people physically nonthreatening

  • to others in restrooms:

  • "There was a bill that would block the right of transgender people in Maine to use public

  • bathrooms, and it looked like the bill was going to pass, and that would have been a

  • problem, but Nicole went personally to every legislator in Maine and said, 'I can do this.

  • If they see me, they'll understand why I'm no threat in the lady's room, but I can be

  • threatened in the men's room.' And then they finally got it."

  • A trans person obviously doesn’t become more or less of an actual threat to anyone

  • based on how masculine or feminine they look. But when this treatment is advertised as a

  • way to give us a body that cis people are more comfortable around, that’s just legitimizing

  • their restroom-related fears and working within them. It leaves that particular prejudice

  • completely unchallenged. This isn’t the only instance where cis people have unwittingly

  • revealed how much theyve internalized media stereotypes while trying to express support

  • for trans children. In the 2012 book Far from the Tree, one mother said: “She won’t

  • have testosterone ravaging her body. … So shell never get an Adam’s apple or facial

  • hair. Shell never look like a man in a dress.” That particular phrase, “a man

  • in a dress”, seems to turn up over and over:

  • "I don't know that she would have survived male puberty. You know, how's she going to

  • prove to someone that she is a girl? At best, you know, she would have been shaving every

  • day and been the man in a dress, and that might be great for some people, but it certainly

  • wasn't who she is."

  • "They were making a transition in their 40s, 30s-plus... And especially in the case of

  • the male to females, they weren't looking particularly female. ... If people said 'man

  • in a skirt', a lot of them would have conformed to that..."

  • Now, are we really supposed to believe that women who transition after puberty all look

  • likemen in dresses”? How much of this comes from an actual understanding of what

  • it’s like to be transand how much of it comes from cis people whove watched

  • Mrs. Doubtfire and Drag Race too many times?

  • Even if we do want to look just like cis people, there are so many factors that can make this

  • difficult or impossible. For instance, an early treatment protocol isn’t even available

  • to most trans people: puberty blockers for trans youth were only introduced in the late

  • 1990s in the Netherlands, in the mid-2000s in the US, and in 2011 in England. There are

  • still only a handful of dedicated gender clinics for children in the US, and these treatments

  • often aren’t covered by insurance companies, assuming that a child’s parents are even

  • willing to help them transition. And this is a moot point for many of us, since not

  • everyone is aware that theyre trans from an early agefar from it. A 2009 study

  • in the UK reported that the median age of trans people first seeking treatment was 42

  • and rising. In adulthood, there’s only so much that transitioning can do for us in terms

  • of appearance. As a group, we display the same wide range of physical masculinity and

  • femininity as cis people, and as many trans people say: your mileage may vary. It’s

  • important to remember that gender dysphoria can happen to anyone. This may seem obvious,

  • but not everyone who transitions is going to end up looking like Laverne Cox or Andreja

  • Pejic. There are still limits to what modern medicine can do, and there are aspects of

  • the skeletal structure that can’t be changed after puberty, such as height, shoulder width,

  • hip size, hands and feet. When so much of this comes down to biological chance, it’s

  • simply unrealistic to expect that every single one of us will be indistinguishable from a

  • cis person of our gender. As for what is possible, surgical aspects of transitioning can cost

  • tens of thousands of dollars out of pocket, and are rarely covered by healthcare plans.

  • Facial feminization surgery for trans women consists of a number of different procedures,

  • and can easily add up to anywhere from $10,000 to $40,000. Chest surgery for trans men can

  • cost $8,000 or more, and vaginoplasty for trans women can cost $10,000 to $20,000. Given

  • that 14% of trans people are unemployed, 44% are underemployed, and 15% had a household

  • income of less than $10,000 a year, these procedures can often be totally out of our

  • reach. When’s the last time you had $40,000 just sitting around for facial surgery?

  • Putting aside the practical aspects of passing, consider what it means when this is treated

  • as something we should all aspire to. I don’t want to shock anyone here, but maybejust

  • maybebeing expected to be completely invisible isn’t always good for us. That

  • attitude has wide-ranging implications for our personal comfort as well as our place

  • in society. For instance, look at how dramatically the stakes of passing were portrayed in a

  • recent article in The Atlantic about voice training for trans women:

  • If she slips up, the $100,000 she has spent to shed every trace of masculinity will count

  • for nothing.”

  • I’ve heard from so many people who were worried it wastoo latefor them to

  • transition, because they felt that at their age, they would never be able to pass. Some

  • of these people were in their 30s or 40s. Some of them were teenagers. But all of them

  • were under the impression that there was no point to transitioning if they didn’t end

  • up looking just like a cis person of their gender. They didn’t take into account every

  • other possible benefit of transitioning, like how much this can relieve our dysphoria and

  • improve our mental well-being and physical appearance regardless of whether we pass or

  • not. But when this is treated as all-or-nothing, so many people will feel like their only choice

  • is nothing, when they could have had so much more. It’s never too late for that. The

  • exclusive focus on passing is not newhistorically, this attitude has wrapped our lives in a shroud

  • of secrecy and isolation. In the 1988 book In Search of Eve, many trans women stated

  • that living as a woman required an almost total separation from anyone who knew them

  • before they transitioned. For some of them, this meant avoiding family, giving up friends,

  • quitting their jobs, concealing their history of work experience, and starting fresh at

  • entry-level positions in other fields. Gender: An Ethnomethodological Approach by Kessler

  • and McKenna describes how trans people in the 1970s would construct entirely new biographies

  • all the way back to their childhoods, just to conceal the fact that they hadn’t always

  • lived as a woman or a man. For these people, passing meant having to abandon some of the

  • most important parts of their lives. This pervasive concern over passing also serves

  • to keep trans people separated from one another. In Search of Eve cites a common belief that

  • going out in groups with other trans people makes us less likely to pass, and that passing

  • is therefore much easier for individual trans people. And a 2014 study of 536 trans people

  • found that a fear of being outed by association was one of four major barriers to their friendships

  • with other trans people. The social distancing due to anxiety over passing extends further

  • than our circles of friends. In Search of Eve reports that some trans people were opposed

  • to any news coverage about what it’s like to be trans. They felt that this would inform

  • a wider audience about certain physical features that are common among trans women and trans

  • men, making it more difficult for them to pass. Some even believed that trans people

  • who did come out, like Christine Jorgensen and Renee Richards, “were indirectly threatening

  • othersability to pass by sensitizing the audience”.

  • This openness and widespread awareness may actually serve a useful purpose. Polls have

  • consistently shown that personal familiarity with gay people is linked to greater support

  • for gay rights. But while 65% of Americans report having a close friend or family member

  • who’s gay, only 9% have a close friend or family member who’s trans. A 2012 study

  • found that exposure to a lecture on transgender topics, as well as a speaker panel of trans

  • people, was associated with a significant reduction in transphobic attitudes. Clearly,

  • outness has its benefits, both for us and for the rest of society. Passing demands invisibility,

  • but how can we advocate for ourselves if were never supposed to be seen? How can any of

  • us share our experiences or serve as role models for people who are thinking about transitioning,

  • if we can’t even say what we are? How could I even do this show if I were trying to pass?

  • At its core, the very idea of passing contains an incredibly toxic suggestion. Whenpassing

  • as a womanactually meanspassing as a cis woman”, it implies that people won’t

  • really see you as a woman if they know youre a trans woman. But why does that have to be

  • the case? If someone knows youre trans, why should that keep them from recognizing

  • your gender? There’s no reason why this should be impossible. Countless cis people

  • are entirely capable of recognizing our genders even when were out about being trans. I’ve

  • come out to four doctors since 2012, and three of them still asked me about my periods. I’m

  • pretty sure they don’t think I’m a guy. But the glorification of passing completely

  • rejects this reality. It rejects openness. It rejects community. And worst of all, it

  • rejects hope. When passing teaches trans women that if they can’t look like cis women,

  • theyre really just men, it’s pushing them away from being themselves. It’s closing

  • off a world of possibilities for them. It’s telling them to throw away their dreams. Passing

  • is a very personal concern, and the way we present ourselves is a decision for each of

  • us to make, based on our own needs and goals. Everyone will have their own answer, but the

  • question must still be asked: Is silence always worth it?

  • I'm Zinnia Jones. Thanks for watching, and tune in next time for more Gender Analysis.

Hi, welcome to Gender Analysis. The termpassingis typically used to describe whether or not

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B1 中級

性別分析04.關於 "過關 "的一些建議 (Gender Analysis 04. Some Advice on "Passing")

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    Amy.Lin 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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