The hardest part about nursing my child as a trans person is
that doing so forces me to come out to anyone who sees it happening. If I nurse in public, people come up to me
and ask what I’m doing. I guess they think that because I’m doing it where they
can see it, this means that I am willing and available for questioning. It
doesn’t occur to them that Jacob and I are nursing because we need to, because
he has hurt himself or is very tired and I need to calm him down. If I nurse in
front of a guest in my home, I feel obligated to explain a bit of our
backstory.
Those of you who follow me on Facebook might have noticed
that I’m rather dog-obsessed these days. We have a rowdy ten-month-old puppy
that was having major behavior problems until he recently was diagnosed with a
thyroid condition. I hired a professional trainer to come to our home and work
with us. Of course, she could only come during Jacob’s usual nap-time, when he
nurses a fair bit.
The trainer began her evaluation and then Jacob woke up
crying. I brought him into the living room, and as I sat down to nurse him, I
said something horribly awkward like, “Uh, we’re a bit of an unusual family.
Ummm… I’m transgender. I was born female but took testosterone. Anyway, so I
birthed him myself and I still nurse him.”
The trainer was wonderful about it. She said, “Oh, that’s
fine. Now I want to show you how to teach Tadoo to accept a muzzle.”
Unfortunately, I found this trainer difficult for unrelated
reasons, and located another one who was a better match for us in terms of our doggy
issues. She, too, was only able to work with us at a time when Jacob was
exhausted and badly needed to nurse. I could choose to either nurse him, or not
hear a word the trainer was saying to us due to continuous crying. I said another explanatory spiel and started to nurse him in front of her.
The trainer said, “Oh, I’ve seen everything, don’t
worry. I used to work as a nurse. A guy [sic] I used to work with was trans [a
trans woman]. He [sic] and I got along
really well.”
Then came the questions.
“How much milk do you make?”
Fairly innocuous. I didn’t mind to answer that. I explained
that since I had chest surgery, I don’t have a full supply.
“Oh! I thought you’d gone the other way. I don’t know as
much about female to male.”
Then she said something like, “When are you going to go all
the way?” or maybe it was, “when are you going to complete your transition?”
Ian, my partner, told her that bottom surgery wouldn’t be
very good for our hopes of having another child. I mumbled something about the
risks of such a major surgery and then tried to get her back onto the topic of
dog training.
There was so much in what she’d said that made me
uncomfortable. I personally knew the woman that she had worked with, and I knew
she would be horrified at the trainer’s use of male pronouns for her. Further, I don’t
think of my transition as incomplete, but there would be no way to explain that
in brief to someone who believes that gender is firmly binary.
There was something eerily familiar to me about her
questioning. After her visit I remembered that medical professionals have asked
me those sorts of questions, and she was indeed a retired nurse. In a clinical
setting such questions are difficult because I can’t tell whether the
practitioner needs to know the answers to take care of my health concerns, or
if they are simply being curious (and inappropriate). I feel like I am supposed to respond fully.
Why did I feel that I had to tell my dog trainer I am
trans before nursing my child in front of her? It certainly doesn’t help
normalize what I’m doing. If it is normal, then why do I need to explain it?
Coming out to her started a conversation that I didn’t want
to have and led to her asking questions that made me uncomfortable. My
intention was to share this as one piece of information and to get it out of
the way, but that was not what happened. That said, I don’t believe that coming
out to someone should give that person a right to ask intrusive questions. If a
new acquaintance tells me, for instance, that she is a single mother, I do not
respond by asking her, “What happened to your husband? Did he pass away, or did
he leave you, or did you split up?”
My New Year’s Resolution: I am going to stop doing
preemptive explaining in this sort of situation. I am going to do what I need
to do, what is best for my child, and if someone is curious or confused about
it, I will hand them a card with my blog on it, where I have laid everything
out. I want to be an advocate and an educator, but I don’t need to continually
open myself up to personal questioning in my day-to-day life. I will be brave
and strong, and I will let go of my inner transphobia, embracing my own
normalcy.
The trainer was excellent with our dog, by the way, and we
have been making great progress.