Sebastian Barr offers twelve suggestions on how to talk to trans friends about their experiences and identities as trans people.
Brennan:Ā [to Booth]Ā You seem uncomfortable. Does his size make you self-conscious? Booth:Ā Bones. Brennan:Ā It’s a condition: skeletal dysplasia. Pseudoachondroplasia or S.E.D. congenita? Booth:Ā Bones! Brennan: What? Radswell:Ā Dr. Brennan, I can see that you’re a straightforward person. And as much as I appreciate that quality, what you’re asking me is neither your business nor relevant.
(Season 2, Episode 6,Ā The Girl in Suite 2103)
I am turning into a bit a of a āBonesā junkie. In just two sick days Iāve cleared through the first 25 episodes. Today I was watching an episode in which Dr. Brennan asks a little person, Mr. Radswell, some inappropriate questions about his condition and he politely but firmly reminds her she has no reason to ask. Couldnāt help but draw some parallels to my own experiences.
There is a lot of curiosity about people who are atypical. Being trans seems to draw out a kind of curiosity similar to what Dr. Brennan displayed in her interactions with Mr. Radswell. For example, in a comment on my introductory piece for Autostraddle, someone asked me if Iād had āthe surgery.ā My piece had nothing to do with surgery and certainly did not directly solicit questions of this nature. And yet, I was not surprised to have been asked. This type of inappropriate questioning is incredibly common. People ask all sorts of invasive questions.
They are curious. And to a large degree, rightfully so. Until recently, the media has presented us as all but non-existent. And when learning about gender and sex in schools, most of us donāt hear one word about any sort of gender- or sex-variance. So we humans are an uneducated mass when it comes to trans issues. We meet someone who has at one point volunteered their trans status and hereās our opportunity to learnĀ everything.
Ah, except that person is a person, not a textbook.Ā And to borrow from āBones,ā what we are asking is neither our business nor relevant to our relationship with that person.
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A lot of non-transgender people have asked me what is and isnāt appropriate to ask trans people. I think the relevancy test is a good place to start. As much as you might want to know when they started hormone replacement or how their parents are handling āitā or what kind of surgery they want to get, if the answer does not impact your relationship with them, donāt ask the question. And to be honest, that means most questions are off limits in most every situation.
Here is the exception: if someone invites people to ask questions. I like to be as open about my transition and about trans issues as possible, because it is an opportunity to be an education resource for people who otherwise might not have one. It means you have to have a thick skin and I think it is completely acceptable to not be as open as I am. But there are plenty of trans people who are.
So letās say you are a non-trans person and you are with someone who is out about being trans and is knowingly open to questions. You have some things you want to ask. Here are some guidelines to follow.
ā¦āā¦
1.Ā Ask permission to ask questions.Ā Even if you think you know they are comfortable answering, they may actually not be or maybe not in that setting, and it is just rude and pretty off-putting to not ask. Say, āHey do you mind if I ask you some things about your transition? Iāve been a little curious ā feel free to not answer or say no.ā
2. Avoid private and personal questions.Ā Even a so-called open book like me doesnāt want to discuss my sex life with most anyone. If you really want to know about trans men and sex, ask in general terms ā i.e. āAre many trans men āstone butchā in bed?ā vs. āAre you stone butch in bed?ā BIG difference.
3. Do not ask questions that in any way challenge the trans personās gender identity or expression or could obviously lead to dysphoria.Ā Do NOT, for example, ask if a trans man will grow to be āaverage male heightā or if a trans woman is uncomfortable with the size of her hands. Iāve gotten, āAre you ever going to look your age?ā Ouch, honey.
4. Phrase your questions in a way that affirms a trans personās gender.Ā And avoid anything that defines the trans person in terms of who they once āwere.ā This is pretty simple, actually. Instead of asking if someone is āstill legally female,ā ask what the steps are to becoming legally male and if they have completed them.
5. Avoid comparisons to non-trans peopleĀ and never use the term ārealā in distinguishing between transgender and non-transgender people. āCisgenderā or ānon-transā are the only appropriate ways to signify non-trans status.
TRY GOOGLE FIRST!
6. If it is a general question, try Google first.There is a lot of information on the internet and an open trans person should not be a stand-in for your own research.
7. Do not ask what the personās birth name was.Ā There is absolutely no reason for you to need to know this and it is likely something this person wants distance from. It is a particularly offensive question when phrased, āWhat is your REAL name.ā After all, SebastianĀ isĀ my real name and has been since I started asking people to use it.
8. Request specific permission to ask questions relating to genitalia, even if you’ve already received general permission to ask other personal questions. āAre you comfortable discussing your genitalia?ā Chances are they arenāt. After all, do you want to talk aboutĀ yours? But some people are and I acknowledge that there is definitely education needed on the topic so I am not opposed entirely to asking questions, as long as you get extra permission first.
9. Be wary of your phrasing.Ā If you arenāt sure how to talk about trans issues, you need to announce that in the beginning. Be open to correction and donāt get defensive if a trans person is offended by something you say. As a heads up, donāt refer to a trans person as their previously-assigned gender ā donāt say āwhen you were a girlā to a trans man for example. A more accurate and safer route is ābefore you transitionedā or āwhen you were living as a girl.ā
10. Be aware of your setting.Ā These are private conversations. Donāt approach someone at a crowded party or in algebra class and expect them to have a trans chat with you.
11. Be sensitive to the personās comfort level throughout the conversation.Ā If theyāve given you permission but are obviously growing uncomfortable discussing things, donāt press. Be grateful for the information youāve gained and change the subject.
12. Respect the personās privacy.Ā Unless this person stated otherwise, the personal information they gave you is not for you to share with the world.
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This post was originally published at AutostraddleĀ
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Original illustration for Autostraddle.com provided by and copyrightĀ Michelle Mishka ColomboĀ 2011
About Sebastian Barr
Sebastian Barr is a first-year doctoral student in University of Louisvilleās Counseling Psychology program. Prior to graduate school he consulted with schools on gender and sexuality diversity as a part of Team Finch Consultants. Today, his research primarily focuses on transgender identity development and trans* issues in counseling, and in his free time (ha) he watches The West Wing and tweets @NotQuiteDrBarr.
Good article! Thank you for this. May I ask where the picture is from?
Guest
Schala
13 years ago
I’d add “bio/biological” and “genetic” to equate with “real” in your 5th point. And woman-born-woman, woman-at-birth or female (and vice-versa, though I suspect “man-born-man” is less used) to signify non-trans. I have to tell people, in lengthy hard-to-understand-easily terms that I’m female, even though it said “male” on my birth certificate (and still does). Simply because the brain’s seat of identity has primacy over the male/female divide for most practical/social and legal things. It only could potentially matter for medical or reproductive stuff what gonad type I have (and what gonad type I *had*, if I have them removed, is… Read more »
Good article! Thank you for this. May I ask where the picture is from?
I’d add “bio/biological” and “genetic” to equate with “real” in your 5th point. And woman-born-woman, woman-at-birth or female (and vice-versa, though I suspect “man-born-man” is less used) to signify non-trans. I have to tell people, in lengthy hard-to-understand-easily terms that I’m female, even though it said “male” on my birth certificate (and still does). Simply because the brain’s seat of identity has primacy over the male/female divide for most practical/social and legal things. It only could potentially matter for medical or reproductive stuff what gonad type I have (and what gonad type I *had*, if I have them removed, is… Read more »
Btw, my tested T levels pre-transition were straight in the middle of the normal adult male range, so it’s very unlikely to be hypogonadal stuff.
good post
though there should perhaps be a trigger warning for the name “Brennan” š
Thanks for the post! It’s a nice addition to this almost exclusively cis-gendered site.