Polite, clueless, or indifferent?

I assume, like I guess most girls here, that I'm a good judge about the extent to which I pass for a genetic female in public.
And I may well be, on the average. But I have time and time again been wrong about specific individuals. I live by the four rules for TGirls:

- Assume everybody knows
- Act like nobody does
- Don't volunteer the information
- Don't lie when asked about it, even in an indirect way

A few times a year some situation comes up where I feel a need to "disclose my medical history" for various reasons. Some recent examples:

- Some presumably straight man I have met and befriended for non-romantic reasons asks me out in an obviously romantic context
- I'm about to start sharing living quarters with someone for a longer period than a couple weeks
- I'm about to enter into a contractual relationship with somebody where the economics of the situation might be negatively impacted by bad publicity around my medical history
- A recent acquaintance in a private setting comments on the fact that I'm taller than most other women

As I am explaining it in my standard way... "... at this point, it has become important to me to make sure that you realize I wasn't born female" I gauge the surprise on their faces. My success at guessing ahead of time whether they already figured it out or not is abysmal, going in both directions. Seems like almost everyone I think has figured it out, hadn't, and everyone I think is clueless about it had me pegged from day one.

It's an example of the symmetry of the world. We don't tell them what our chromosomes are and they don't tell us whether they know we're unusual in this sense. Often, we never know whether the people around us are polite, clueless, or indifferent. It matters not. In over two decades, my gender has been an issue less than a handful of times.

But please, don't sell yourselves short. In spite of rule #1 above, don't automatically assume everyone will always read you at the moment they first meet you. To maximize your personal happiness you need to get into a frame of mind where your birth gender isn't an issue for you *either*. We all deserve better than losing peace of mind over a fear that people around us know what we are and think less of us because of that.

- Moni

Click Like or Love to appropriately show your appreciation for this post: