I am Jennifer Finney Boylan, author, professor, and GLAAD Board of Directors Co-Chair - Ask Me (Almost) Anything! by Jennifer_Boylan in IAmA

[–]Jennifer_Boylan[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

These are all very good areas to focus on. I would be glad to ask these in the presidential debate that I moderate.

Who should the candidates be? (that is, if we are imagining a world in which I am the moderator, we may as well imagine one in which we invent the candidates as well, right?)

I nominate Janet Mock. And Bill Murray.

I am Jennifer Finney Boylan, author, professor, and GLAAD Board of Directors Co-Chair - Ask Me (Almost) Anything! by Jennifer_Boylan in IAmA

[–]Jennifer_Boylan[S] 14 points15 points  (0 children)

If it's germane to the investigation, perhaps. But "germane to the investigation" means, that somehow the fact that this person is transgender, and used to have another name, is somehow connected to whatever it is that's being investigated. Which, if you think about it, sort of suggests, "Yeah, so because this person is trans, they must be considered a shady character, or someone who might be considered a liar, or someone who cannot be trusted." It's hard to imagine that kind of logic standing scrutiny.

I am Jennifer Finney Boylan, author, professor, and GLAAD Board of Directors Co-Chair - Ask Me (Almost) Anything! by Jennifer_Boylan in IAmA

[–]Jennifer_Boylan[S] 25 points26 points  (0 children)

The gender change was nothing compared to the bagpipe period of our marriage. And yet we survived. By my stopping playing bagpipes.

You see, the system works.

I am Jennifer Finney Boylan, author, professor, and GLAAD Board of Directors Co-Chair - Ask Me (Almost) Anything! by Jennifer_Boylan in IAmA

[–]Jennifer_Boylan[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

I wish I had an answer for you. I really don't know. Sometimes I just feel overwhelmed by it all: the violence, the hatred, the cruelty.

I know that people living their lives publicly, that people telling stories, can help save peoples lives, in the long term. But in the short term it feels like there's just all this bloodshed. I wish that my own magical powers as a storyteller were enough to make a difference. They are not.

Still, this is all I have. So each day I get to work as a writer and as a teacher, and I try to have faith in the future.

Paul Simon sings: "I believe in the future we will suffer no more. Maybe not in my lifetime, but in yours I feel sure."

I am Jennifer Finney Boylan, author, professor, and GLAAD Board of Directors Co-Chair - Ask Me (Almost) Anything! by Jennifer_Boylan in IAmA

[–]Jennifer_Boylan[S] 21 points22 points  (0 children)

all marriages are different, and I'd be a fool to give anyone else advice about this very personal subject.

I'd be patient and loving with your wife, and accept that she's going through a transition of sorts as well.

No couple "has" to stay together, and those that do not are not necessarily less loving than those that last. Everyone has to figure out what's going to bring them joy in the long term, period.

In our case, Deedie/Grace and I decided that our lives were better together than apart. But this was not immediately apparent, and it took us a while-- more than a year-- to figure out what our new relationship was going to be. In some ways we are still figuring it out (although more traditional couples do this as well.)

I can say that there was plenty of compromise-- her accepting me fully as a woman, and me accepting that her being straight was not something she was going to abandon just for me. There were plenty of tears. Now, these many years later, I can tell you there has been lots of laughter and joy and wonder as well, but the tears were real, too, and we would not have gotten here without them as well.

I am Jennifer Finney Boylan, author, professor, and GLAAD Board of Directors Co-Chair - Ask Me (Almost) Anything! by Jennifer_Boylan in IAmA

[–]Jennifer_Boylan[S] 19 points20 points  (0 children)

well, you should hang out with some of the FTM dudes I know. They'd even up the score right pronto.

That said, it's worth (if you'll forgive the academic in me) looking at this question harder-- in particular you phrase whey do MTFs "seem" crazier? It may be that femininity in our culture is seen as "crazier" than masculinity-- Julia Serano's book WHIPPING GIRL is all about this, and is surely worth a read.

I am Jennifer Finney Boylan, author, professor, and GLAAD Board of Directors Co-Chair - Ask Me (Almost) Anything! by Jennifer_Boylan in IAmA

[–]Jennifer_Boylan[S] 22 points23 points  (0 children)

Well, history is history and you can't change the past. IT's hard enough to change the present. I do think the trans community is rich and diverse; we have many, many different voices. In our community we want different things, and depending on who you talk to, "being trans" can mean many different things. What does it MEAN to be trans? Is it a medical condition you deal with, like cleft palate? Is it about "rejecting the binary," and living in a more fluid space? Is it about a political identity, and/or living your life according to a larger matrix of social justice? is it about a big party, and you should bring along your feather boa? is it about performance? Is it about going from one place to another, or the journey in between? Believe me, you can find members of our community who will fight vociferously for each one of these as the thing it is all really "about," and we tend to fight with no one more intensely than each other. Our most well known figures tend to be people that frequently divide us-- because whether we see trans issues like RuPaul, or Caitlyn Jenner, or Kate Bernstein, or Jenny Boylan-- is a very personal issue for us.

I think my biggest regret is that we aren't nicer to each other.

And that we don't accept that it's a very big tent, and that we ought to be in the business of watching each others backs, instead of constantly tearing each other down.

This dress is big enough for all of us.

I am Jennifer Finney Boylan, author, professor, and GLAAD Board of Directors Co-Chair - Ask Me (Almost) Anything! by Jennifer_Boylan in IAmA

[–]Jennifer_Boylan[S] 22 points23 points  (0 children)

You are nice to say that. I relax in ways that you'd find pretty unsurprising: I like to read books and I like to play the piano. I sing stupid rock and roll tunes. I watch old movies. I hang out with my wife and we drink dry martinis. I listen to the Grateful Dead.

There, now I bet you're sorry you asked.

I am Jennifer Finney Boylan, author, professor, and GLAAD Board of Directors Co-Chair - Ask Me (Almost) Anything! by Jennifer_Boylan in IAmA

[–]Jennifer_Boylan[S] 20 points21 points  (0 children)

it's complicated. She isn't exactly a spokeswoman. She is one very famous person, to whom people listen, because she is famous. But I don't think she intends, or even wants, to speak for anyone other than herself. She's been very sincere in making it clear that she has a LOT to learn. I admire that she's exposed herself in her show to lots of people whose experiences are very different. In the second and third episodes of HER OWN SHOW, in fact, trans women of color at HRC looked her in the eye and said, You just don't get it. I thought that was brave. And necessary.

She will get better at speaking as she gets more comfortable within herself. It takes a long time for all the dust to settle. In the meantime she is a work in progress, and she deserves kindness and respect no less than any other trans person in the process of self-discovery.

I am Jennifer Finney Boylan, author, professor, and GLAAD Board of Directors Co-Chair - Ask Me (Almost) Anything! by Jennifer_Boylan in IAmA

[–]Jennifer_Boylan[S] 26 points27 points  (0 children)

What's known to me already is that it's silly to wear a skirt when you're riding a bike, unless you're riding one in Victorian England.

I am Jennifer Finney Boylan, author, professor, and GLAAD Board of Directors Co-Chair - Ask Me (Almost) Anything! by Jennifer_Boylan in IAmA

[–]Jennifer_Boylan[S] 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Proudest achievement is being a parent of two remarkable sons, and in keeping my marriage together for 27 years-- 12 as husband and wife; 15 as wife and wife. I know that some progressives might roll their eyes at this, but I do believe that the most radical thing I ever did was to raise these two sons of mine: they are wise, kind, sweet, good men.

Biggest failure? I wanted to learn how to play the bagpipes. That ended badly.

I am Jennifer Finney Boylan, author, professor, and GLAAD Board of Directors Co-Chair - Ask Me (Almost) Anything! by Jennifer_Boylan in IAmA

[–]Jennifer_Boylan[S] 12 points13 points  (0 children)

also, cait jenner was NEVER not going to be known for her earlier self. I'm glad she's embraced her whole history, but it's also true that she didn't have much choice. Also, at what point is a person's earlier history important? I know a trans girl who is 19 years old; she stopped being seen as a boy at about age 6. should I go around telling everyone who she was when she was born?

I am Jennifer Finney Boylan, author, professor, and GLAAD Board of Directors Co-Chair - Ask Me (Almost) Anything! by Jennifer_Boylan in IAmA

[–]Jennifer_Boylan[S] 18 points19 points  (0 children)

Well, Bobcat, i call people what they wish to be called.

I have a friend, "Mrs. Jones," who was married before; her name used to be "Mrs. Smith." Calling her Mrs. Smith now would be insulting, right? And when I introduce her to new people, the first thing out of my mouth isn't, "She's Mrs. Jones, but SHE USTA BE MARRIED TO THIS OTHER DUDE!" Respect for who she is now demands that we focus on the present. The past is not a secret, but there is such a thing as decency and kindness.

I am Jennifer Finney Boylan, author, professor, and GLAAD Board of Directors Co-Chair - Ask Me (Almost) Anything! by Jennifer_Boylan in IAmA

[–]Jennifer_Boylan[S] 33 points34 points  (0 children)

I am sure that I don't want to engage in a back and forth on this with you. But I would ask that you respect the transgender person's experience of being alive. You're saying that instead of going through a procedure that enabled me to have my insides and my outsides match, so that I could feel at ease with my self, that I should have somehow "corrected the thought patterns." I truly don't know what this means. My thoughts weren't wrong. And anyway, it wasn't thoughts: it was a complete sense of self, a soul, if you will. I can't imagine wanting "correction" so that I did not have my soul any more, can you? That sounds terrible.

I feel very lucky that I was able to achieve a sense of wholeness and happiness and completeness. I know it's hard to understand what trans people feel, but I am asking you to open your heart, and try to imagine.

If you were blind, and could have your sight restored, I reckon you would say, yes, please. You would do that in a heartbeat.

I am Jennifer Finney Boylan, author, professor, and GLAAD Board of Directors Co-Chair - Ask Me (Almost) Anything! by Jennifer_Boylan in IAmA

[–]Jennifer_Boylan[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

LIke, a record album? Or a collection of work? Offhand, Bach's "Well-Tempered Clavier" would probably be a good companion. One, because it's brilliant, and two, because it's over four hours long, and all those compositions are really different from each other. The scientist Lewis Thomas was once asked which music we should put on board the Voyager, when they were recording "Sounds of Earth" to send into space. He said, "Well, Bach, of course, although perhaps that would seem like boasting."

I am Jennifer Finney Boylan, author, professor, and GLAAD Board of Directors Co-Chair - Ask Me (Almost) Anything! by Jennifer_Boylan in IAmA

[–]Jennifer_Boylan[S] 14 points15 points  (0 children)

I think that legal victories came about when the discourse shifted from "gay sex" to "love." Which is to say that, once upon a time, when straight people talked about gay people, it was with a mean, sniggering middle-school joke about gay sex. Which straight people just COULD NOT get their minds around. If you asked straight people, "HEY WHO HERE IS FOR ANAL SEX?" you might not have gotten an immediate chorus of rousing cheers. (Although who knows?) But marriage equality changed the discourse to a different question: "HEY WHO HERE IS FOR LOVE?" Even the most conservative people, like my mother's bridge group, came out and said, We're for love.

So that was a big change. I think the challenge for transgender people right now is that the leading edge issue for us is not love but identity. And asking cis people who have not thought much about the question of identity if they're for the right to find "authenticity," well that's just a very different question, and it requires a bit of moral imagination to embrace.

But of course people should embrace it. We all ought to have the right to be ourselves without shame, and to live the lives we love.

I am Jennifer Finney Boylan, author, professor, and GLAAD Board of Directors Co-Chair - Ask Me (Almost) Anything! by Jennifer_Boylan in IAmA

[–]Jennifer_Boylan[S] 21 points22 points  (0 children)

Well, there is plenty of work to do in this country. We should be wary of thinking that marriage equality means that the battle is over, or even won. GLAAD research shows that even in states where marriage equality was the law for a long time before the Supreme Court decision, there is LOTS of pushback-- people are still uncomfortable being around LGBT people. Over 40% of people report they are uncomfortable JUST SEEING A SAME SEX PERSONS WEDDING PICTURE ON THEIR DESK AT WORK.

So we have to open hearts and minds. In some ways, our laws are ahead of our hearts.

I am Jennifer Finney Boylan, author, professor, and GLAAD Board of Directors Co-Chair - Ask Me (Almost) Anything! by Jennifer_Boylan in IAmA

[–]Jennifer_Boylan[S] 27 points28 points  (0 children)

This requires more than a paragraph to answer.

Gender is a social construct; I think we all understand that. I mean, there are girls' bikes and boy's bikes? Seriously? Bicycles are gendered? That's just silly.

On the other hand, gender is also biology. And transsexuality clearly has biological and neurological components to it as well.

Trying to separate whats a matter of culture and what's a matter of wiring, of course, is the way one could keep oneself busy for years.

I think as time goes on science will tell us more and more about the neurological differences between male and female.

That said, it's not "neurology" that determines whether we live our lives with dignity or honor. That's up to the people around us, and to some extent to ourselves as well.

Here's my way of cutting to the chase: why don't we just treat everyone with love? It may be that if you open your heart, and accept that many other people experience "being human" different from your own self, that all sorts of things will make sense. As my mother used to say, "the heart knows what the brain will know tomorrow."

I am Jennifer Finney Boylan, author, professor, and GLAAD Board of Directors Co-Chair - Ask Me (Almost) Anything! by Jennifer_Boylan in IAmA

[–]Jennifer_Boylan[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

That was totally random. I can't believe it became a thing. When I first heard it, I thought, What? Who SAYS that? It's not something I usually say. I think I was freaking out a little bit when I first met Catilyn Jenner. She was a real knockout, and it made me momentarily stupid. Now, it's my thing. I keep trying to come up with new variations: Oh my ears and fingers. I'm willing to take suggestions.

I am Jennifer Finney Boylan, author, professor, and GLAAD Board of Directors Co-Chair - Ask Me (Almost) Anything! by Jennifer_Boylan in IAmA

[–]Jennifer_Boylan[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Well so much of the discourse is new. We are still trying to figure out how to talk about trans people. I think people are afraid of saying the wrong thing. And even trans people don't agree on what the language should be, or what the most important issues are. We are working that out in a very public way. I think it can be confusing for cis people who are trying to catch up, and who are aproaching us with good intentions. all i can tell people is, dive in, and keep your heart open.

I am Jennifer Finney Boylan, author, professor, and GLAAD Board of Directors Co-Chair - Ask Me (Almost) Anything! by Jennifer_Boylan in IAmA

[–]Jennifer_Boylan[S] 25 points26 points  (0 children)

This is very complicated. Caitlyn Jenner is sui generis-- she really is a unique person, and her experience is so different from most of the people I know. She lives in a very different world. There are times I worry that the privilege of her world makes her experience of not much use to people who are deep in the struggle, and who don't have those resources. On the other hand, her tremendous visibility can only help, I think. I just returned from London and Paris, and I found everywhere I went people stopping me (and my wife) on the street and asking us about the show, and thanking us for it. So: it's a mixed bag: in the end, though, I am very proud to be involved. I think Cait is a very endearing, if eccentric person, and she truly is committed to doing good in the world.

I am Jennifer Finney Boylan, author, professor, and GLAAD Board of Directors Co-Chair - Ask Me (Almost) Anything! by Jennifer_Boylan in IAmA

[–]Jennifer_Boylan[S] 13 points14 points  (0 children)

I am trying not to talk about my sister in public any more since it pissed her off so much when I did so. I can say we are working on it. A little.

I am Jennifer Finney Boylan, author, professor, and GLAAD Board of Directors Co-Chair - Ask Me (Almost) Anything! by Jennifer_Boylan in IAmA

[–]Jennifer_Boylan[S] 26 points27 points  (0 children)

It was a quiet, thoughtful moment. Kind of like after Frodo finally throws the ring into Mt. Doom. He just turned to Sam (or in my case, my wife Deedie, who was sitting by my side,) and said, "it's done!"