When i first read that passage, i seriously wondered if somebody had reformatted a Halimede tweet. I don’t want to dunk on Serrano too much here, i’ve taken a lot of good input out of her works, but this is one of her takes that has aged poorly. Like, seriously, i am so fed up with that view of being trans. The one that always, always without fail, centers suffering and pain and misery, that can only frame our joy and our thriving in contrast to the damage that has been inflicted on us, the one that can never let the past rest.
I am not like this. And it’s beginning to become a problem.
You see, i like being in community with other trans people. I’m at home there, i’ve made friends there, found lovers there. It’s where i belong. As long as i stay within my own bubble. As soon as i step out of it, i immediately get bombarded with unsolicited trauma dumps, dysphoriaposts out of a 4chan hellhole and a trainload full of internalized transphobia. Everything is a trigger for me. I cannot safely navigate most trans spaces anymore because the people there just drag me down. I logged in yesterday after a long hiatus and looked into the trans megathread and the first thing i had to do was block a user for her unspoilered loathing of the trans existence. I don’t know how to handle this anymore. I used to be the kind of woman who writes big effortposts about self acceptance and how to figure yourself out and how to begin navigating systems of medical gatekeeping, but the further i go along in my own transition, the further i am removed from making these early experiences myself, the less i have it in me to unpack all that needs to be unpacked when baby trans yell their pain into the void.
And that’s eating at me. It makes me feel guilt, it makes me feel like a failure to my community. My second puberty feels as if i get to sit at the table with the pretty, cool and popular girls, giving fashion advice to the prom queen while i’m leaving the most vulnerable trans people out in the rain, the ones that would need my experience and my encouragement the most. But when i try to be there for them, i harm myself. I can’t say it otherwise, it is burning me out to expose myself to that kind of pain. It feels as if i’m walking backwards into a darkness i have escaped from. How do i deal with this? Do i retreat to my wonderland of privileged, happy women and girlthings or is there a way to move beyond the triggers and face the misery of others without becoming miserable myself? Because that’s what i would need if i wanted to keep helping my siblings.
Sorry if this is ignorant, but I suspect that a lot of marginalised groups are gonna feel like this. I suspect that there’s a lot of back and forth between self care and doing what you can for the community. It’s not your fault that the world traumatised trans people, and it’s probably not your responsibility to fix other trans people. Do what you can when you can.
You might feel an urge to care for younger people at you get older and get more experience navigating bullshit. In the meantime, there’s no need to break your mental health right this second. You have many decades on this earth in which you can offer support to young struggling people, there’s no rush.
idk, on one hand i’ve only been out for two years and still have plenty of time to grow into a community elder, otoh my passport says i’m 45 years old. It says a lot of demonstrably wrong shit, but i think that number might actually be correct. Which brings up the question if this is about me failing as a maternal figure.
There’s actually this saying that trans girls looking for support should look for a sister, not a mother. Because somebody who is too far ahead of them will struggle to relate to their problems. Maybe that’s just true. Maybe we should model our support networks on how we develop and not on cishetnormative family units.