home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Xref: sparky soc.women:19972 alt.feminism:4741 soc.men:19612
- Newsgroups: soc.women,alt.feminism,soc.men
- Path: sparky!uunet!paladin.american.edu!darwin.sura.net!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!uwm.edu!news.mr.med.ge.com!dspalley!kranitz
- From: wendy@sundown.mil.wi.us
- Subject: Re: Self Appreciation (was: Re: Elle MacPherson causes rape?)
- Message-ID: <1992Nov19.184216.12972@mr.med.ge.com>
- Sender: news@mr.med.ge.com
- Nntp-Posting-Host: dspalley
- Organization: Nowhere
- X-Newsreader: TIN [version 1.1 PL6]
- References: <Bxyx23.Hz5@apollo.hp.com>
- Distribution: usa
- Date: Thu, 19 Nov 92 18:42:16 GMT
- Lines: 61
-
- Peter Nelson (nelson_p@apollo.hp.com) wrote:
- > In article <celeste-181192142820@128.158.16.248> celeste%express@freedom.msfc.nasa.gov (Celeste) writes:
- > >> How do those who hold this view square it with the opinions
- > >> of posters like the above? Transexuals will frequently claim
- > >> that they "feel like" a member of U sex in a V body. Indeed,
- > >> interesting philosophical questions are raised by just asking
- > >> what it means to "feel like" a member of a certain gender.
- > >>
- > >> I am a male. I am physically attracted to females, which makes
- > >> me heterosexual. I have a variety of personality characteristics
- > >> and might feel happy, sad, driven, angry, elated, wistful, melan-
- > >> choly, silly, and so forth at various times. Yet despite all
- > >> of this I'm not sure what it "feels like" to be a man. That is,
- > >> I can't associate any of these feelings with "maleness" and
- > >> obviously I don't know what it "feels like" to be female, either.
- > >> So why/how does the above poster think she (he? --what's the
- > >> correct pronoun?) does?
- > >>
- > >If you don't "feel" a disonace between your gender and your body,
- > >then you are not a transsexual. Feeling like a women in a male
- > >body is like describing colors and color harmony to a
- > >blind person.
- >
- > I think this answer is a cop-out. I can feel a dissonance,
- > for instance, between an occasional self-image as young,
- > athletic, and graceful, and the physical reality of being
- > 40-ish, a little paunchy, and klutzy. The point is that
- > I can describe both the reality and the image and extract
- > the "dissonance", i.e., the places they don't match.
- >
- > If an MMPI (Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory --
- > a standard psychological test) were to be administered
- > to transexuals and non-transexuals, what differences would
- > it reveal? Would the MMPI for biologically male transexuals
- > be more similar to non-transexual biological females?
- >
- >
- > ---peter
- >
-
- Peter,
-
- First, the dissonance that Celeste mentions is significantly stronger
- the the "occasional" dissonance you mention. It is almost unbearable.
- In my case, I sometimes feel like trying to rip my brain out of this body
- and find a female body to put it in. It is more like PAIN and HURT.
-
- Now, with reapect to the MMPI. As part of my evaluation I was required
- to take the MMPI-2. The MMPI-2 is an updated version of the MMPI that
- has been updated, especially in the area of gender. Stereotypes that
- could be used to force the test to show male or female associations were
- removed. There are also scales, apparently, to determine whether one is
- fudging the answers. I scored exceedingly high in femaleness (over
- 80 percentile) without fudging. Most biological females would be expected
- to score high like that also. The rest of my test results were what would be
- expected from a biological female or very close. Whether this applies to anyone
- else, I don't know. I am also trying to describe what my therapist told me, and
- hopefully I haven't misstated anything.
-
-
- Wendy
-