1) If you have flu do you identify with it? What about cancer? You hope it passes up soon so you can be you, not someone who is defined and temporary disabled by the sickness.
2) Actually transgenderism is mostly negative, because stigma from society. I doubt transpeople would commit anywhere as close suicides without it.
3) Okay I want to come clear with one thing. Do you think that people who have undergone transition and thus are gender they desire aren't "suffering" from transgenderism anymore, that they are cured since they are now right gender and not the gender that caused it?
1) No, but I do have a disability and thus identify as a disabled person. Besides, no true transgender person I've ever known identifies as such. I have a really close friend who is transgender (though I suppose she's technically transsexual now that she's fully transitioned). She never identified as transgender as something to be proud of and wear as a badge of honor. She identified as a straight woman born in the wrong body (the body of a man). "Transgenderism" was just a label that the doctors put on her.
Now she's just a woman. She doesn't bring up her transsexuality if she doesn't have to. As far as she's concerned she's a real woman now and as far as I'm concerned I think she's a real woman now too.
I know this is just one single example, but still.
2) No, you're completely wrong. Transgenderism is mostly negative because it seriously f*cks with your head. Where I live there isn't much of a stigma towards trans people at all (only towards those who are obnoxious about it and invent new labels to feel special). My transsexual friend rarely got treated poorly because of her transgenderism, her parents are loving, caring and supportive parents and she has plenty of friends who supported her through her transition. Yet that didn't change the fact that my friend was severely suffering before her sex-change operation. She's still mentally unstable and she still goes to therapy, but she's doing a lot better. Her transitioning definitely helped.
3) That's entirely different on a case-by-case basis. Some transgender people become normally-functioning productive members of society after their transitioning (my friend is one of those), some are still struggling with their disorder even after the sex-change and in some rare cases the sex-change operation only makes things worse.




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