Ten years ago I posted a question as to how many transgender people there are. The answer is unknown and unknowable, for various reasons but mainly because no-one agrees on what constitutes transgender or even male and female; because the overwhelming majority of gender variant people are in the closet, totally unknown even to the internet, only to themselves; and because often gender variance occurs for a while in someone's life rather than throughout it.
Suppose we stop assuming, because of lack of evidence or through prejudice, that trans is or is not X number of people and take the opposite standpoint: what if everyone is actually trans? Perhaps the gender binary is an illusion caused by social and reproductive expectations for many people, especially those promoted by the aggressive people who usually dominate societies, and most of the remaining population simply fall into line for simplicity's sake. If left to their inherent sense of self, would people actually feel totally masculine or feminine as is claimed? We don't know, any more then we can claim that there are clear male and female forms. I've made more than enough references in my blog over the years to trans people going back to ancient times and arising in all cultures and locations. Transgender is very much a thing.
Supposing you took a significant random sample of people - I'm talking tens (ideally hundreds) of thousands, not the usual trans studies that involve a few dozen or maybe a few hundred out-and-proud trans people - and actually asked them honestly, privately, anonymously, without fear or favour or ability to be traced, how they felt about their own masculinity or femininity, what the answers might be. We have very little information on this and all discussion of trans people is either from haters or from the tiny number of trans people who are out and those who study that tiny minority.
I hear it said that sex is all about reproductive organs or gametes, completely ignoring intersex conditions. I hear it said that genes don't lie: it's XX for girls and XY for boys, completely ignoring the mixup of conditions like Turner's Syndrome (X) or Klinefelter's syndrome (XXY). Stangely, no-one seem to point out that, on that basis, all boys have one girl chromosome, which should surely give us the two sexes of female and transgender? I hear it said that trans people are simply mentally ill; apparently, threats and abuse seem to be the proposed cure. I hear it said that transgender ideological terrorism is converting people to believe that they are something they are not. And so on and so forth, anything to try to pretend that trans people don't actually exist or shouldn't. I said I would not transition and the reason is that I don't trust states not to turn against beneficiaries of previous government policies. Having said that, I thought it unlikely that trans policies would be reversed in my lifetime and yet, when you look at Russia, the USA, Britain, Hungary and other places, maybe my caution was well founded.
So as my short contribution to Transgender Awareness Week, leading up to Transgender Day of Remembrance on November 20th, I'd just like to ask the haters what on earth they're talking about as the evidence for there being a gender binary is laughable. How about if everyone is trans apart from the outliers, those naturally very masculine or feminine people? Could it be that you haters are simply too scared to admit or embrace who you perhaps really are, that is someone not at the extremes of a gender spectrum?
So as many rich and powerful people in the public eye focus on trans bashing to draw attention away from their own corruption and incompetence, banning a handful of trans sportspeople from participating here, encouraging conversion therapy there or turning a blind eye to transphobic violence, I rest assured that this current game of trans Whack-a-Mole can never work in the long term because nature just keeps creating trans people and most of them are invisible and out of reach.
Tomorrow we remember those who tried to live authentically but died for it.
Sue x

Sue, this is a powerful piece. I really appreciate the way you open up the question of what gender even is, and how much we still don’t know because so many people are silent or unseen. Your “what if everyone is trans?” thought experiment really cuts through the noise and exposes how shaky the supposed gender binary actually is.
ReplyDeleteYou also capture the current climate so well, the fear-mongering, the political opportunism, the hostility, and the heartbreaking reality that some people don’t survive trying to live authentically. Yet there’s hope too in what you say: that trans people have always existed and attempts to erase them will never succeed.
Thank you for writing this for Transgender Awareness Week, and for the reminder of who we’re remembering tomorrow.
Lotte x
Thank you, Lotte, I appreciate your comment. Stay safe, stay fabulous and know you have love and support from family and friends. Sue xx
DeleteIs everyone trans? I dunno. I nearly always just come back to this quote (from Patrick Califia): "The best we can do is speak our own truth, make it safe for others to speak theirs, and respect our differences." ❤️
ReplyDeleteThanks, Jonathan. Another topic of mine is if someone can have their "own" truth or if truth is necessarily objective and linked to, even synonymous with, reality. My issue here is that no-one has ever conducted a proper, scientific, objective look into trans people because the majority are invisible and uncontactable. So how about assuming we're all trans; that's just as valid a position based on the same level of low evidence. Sue xx
DeleteI don't know if everyone is trans. But I do know there are a helluva lot more people on the transgender spectrum, than we know about. And if everyone who was in some way trans was identified, it would be a real eye opener. It might even reduce the prejudice and stigma of being trans, when suddenly everyone realised that so many were trans, from world leaders, to billionaire business people and A list celebrities, all the way down to relatives, neighbours and friends. But of course, that would probably involve some kind of mass outing, and having witnessed some gay activists attempting to out closet gay celebrities in the 1990s, then I know that doesn't work, practically and definitely not morally.
ReplyDeleteDee xx
Interesting take. Honestly, if people had been allowed to explore their own gender without all the fear and performance, I think my whole journey would’ve looked a lot different. Might’ve even felt a little less alone along the way.
ReplyDelete