
Being trans isn’t just about surgeries.
Oh, for sure. I definitely am more comfortable with myself, my labels, and my preferences now. But when that egg first cracked, I felt like I wasn’t worthy of the label because of some criteria. That’s why I mentioned that there isn’t really a right way to be trans or enby, it’s often different from one person to the next
I got your message, but I can’t seem to get the reply through.
Here’s what I wrote back:
I think you get to define that the way that fits best. Calling it gender euphoria can be understandable by a large audience. We called medical treatments “gender affirming” when they were still gate-kept for cis people. Breast reconstruction or testicle implants, laser hair removal, and hormones for elder individuals, for just a small list. But, let me challenge the idea in a different way. If a person loses a body part that is intrinsically linked to how they experience, or want to experience the world, what should we call it when they can get that function back? A cis man who has surgery to return function to his penis could feel gender euphoria. I actually know someone who had an adult circumcision who explained it that way. On the other hand, an amputee can experience euphoria when they’re able to hold their child again, or a hearing impaired child when they hear their mother’s voice for the first time. Plastic surgery often has the same effect.
For me, I feel dysphoric about the female parts of my body, despite the fact that I’m still fem presenting. And likely always will be. It’s my body that’s wrong, not my presentation. So, I think for me it is gender euphoria even tho I don’t have a gender in my head