Project Willow wrote:Okay, first off, there should be nothing inherently derogatory about labeling something a mental illness. Mental illness should carry no shame or stigma. Our whole culture is so off base in regards to this, it deserves a book level response.
The problem IMO is with the term “mental illness.” I think it
is inherently derogatory, not because there’s any shame in being damaged, but because it misrepresents the reality of what causes self-destructive behaviors, subtle and extreme. First off, what’s invariably being addressed when people talk about mental illness pertains to the psyche, not the mind. And how is a mind supposed to get ill anyway?—illness is a term that was coined to address physical symptoms, so to superimpose a biological map onto a psychological one and assume that there’s going to be an exact fit is, frankly, kind of insane. The way the body gets ill and why, and the way to treat physical illness, may have very little in common with psychological imbalances.
If someone at this thread called me mentally ill because of something I said which they didn’t understand or agree with, I would be pretty upset. If someone suggested that my psyche was out of balance due to trauma, I would probably just say,
No shit, Sherlock! To one degree or another we are all out of psychic balance due to traumas in our past. And since psychological trauma has a direct effect on one’s experience of one’s body and one's sexuality, then to suggest that transgenderism relates to psychological trauma—at least some of the time— oughtn’t to be terribly controversial, much less equated with prejudiced discrimination. Especially as we could say the same about homosexual and heterosexual behavioral patterns too (speaking as someone sired by an alcoholic who self-medicated daily with sex)! It’s all a matter of degrees.
But since no one wants to talk about trauma or psyche, it now seems to be a toss-up between slapping a label of “mentally ill” and proscribing the latest pharma-cure, or creating new ideological/lifestyle choices to be celebrated and championed. In either case, big bucks are being made, and accountability and understanding is being avoided.
Project Willow » Thu Nov 26, 2015 3:55 am wrote:It may be a mental illness, it may be an outgrowth of hyper-aggressive neo-liberal capitalist binary gender-specific marketing strategies (and backlash to second wave feminism), it may be a product of environmental estrogen mimicking substances affecting in vitro development. The point is, WE DON'T KNOW. Meanwhile, children are being hormonally medicated, and possibly sterilized, which should raise the hackles on anyone who has half a brain or half a conscience.
slomo » Thu Nov 26, 2015 4:01 am wrote:So there is something I want to say about this, and I don't know whether it belongs here or in the Jack Donovan thread. The real issue that cuts across all the filaments Guruilla has just listed above is
compassion. Maybe it's because I'm becoming more Buddhist in my old age, but the reason we can't talk to each other, here to some extent, and in society to a much greater extent, is that we resist really listening to the other person and imagining what it's like to walk in their shoes. It's tempting to go down some reality tunnel and ignore everything outside (I definitely do this from time to time, we all do it), but this inability to listen is what creates all the monstrosities documented in this thread and elsewhere.
Nothing to add to these, just wanted to highlight them and amplify the signal of happily cogent responses.
slomo » Thu Nov 26, 2015 4:58 am wrote:Ironically, we are pretty much in agreement on the trans issue. I have deep reservations about it,
especially as a cultural force, even as I have empathy for the individuals who genuinely believe themselves to have gender identities that are at odds with their bodies. I think they're probably misguided, but it is ultimately none of my business unless they happen to be making demands upon me and my own personal space. And if they are people with whom I otherwise have common interests, I'm not going to let my personal opinion about their gender dysphoria impact my interactions with them in other areas of life.
This pretty much expresses my own feelings at an up-and-up personal level.
I also wanted to address the comment by Project Willow (hi!) about everyone hating women. Since it’s such an obviously contestable, not to say incendiary, remark, I’m sure she didn’t mean to imply that men, women, and children everywhere, without exception, consciously hate women. But if it were rephrased just a bit, into something like, “Everyone has deep, often unconscious fear of and rage against women, then I would have to agree. But especially men. The question is, why? And the answer is pretty straightforward (I think): we all had a mother!
(What follows is a bit gonzo in terms of psychology, so pls. forgive the over-simplifications).
Every child (not counting those born in test tubes) begins as an outgrowth of the mother’s body, literally one with it and her. Birth, which can range from mildly (and unavoidably) traumatic to cripplingly, even fatally, so, is physical separation but not psychic. In a healthy development process, they say, the child remains psychically enmeshed with the mother for around two years, after which time the child needs to psychically dis-enmesh from the mother and begin to experience itself as a separate individual. Traditionally, the father’s role is to facilitate this process. I am having, as usual, a difficult time putting this into words, so I’ll quote a previous attempt:
A child first becomes aware of itself via the mother’s gaze. The child is like a mirror receptacle of the feminine presence. Rudimentary self-awareness begins with being the passive object of the mother’s love (in a healthy bonding, that is; more often the object of her desire, emotional neediness, and rage). This is supposed to develop into autonomy—an acting self—which requires moving away from the mother’s gaze, away from being a merely passive receptacle, towards being an independent agent, an outgoing, creative self. . . . For this to happen, there needs to be an intervention, a “divine” or fatherly presence. Why? Probably because it is in neither mother nor child’s emotional interest for the child to separate from the mother’s psyche. And unlike the emergence from the womb, there is no physical determinant as to when the right moment to separate arrives.
A male child who remains psychically bonded to the mother never develops a self independent of her influence.http://www.emptymirrorbooks.com/beat/va ... -sons.html
To be psychically bonded to the mother, for a male at least, is to be forever on the verge of annihilation—being swallowed up by the (m)Other. Since the original object of desire is the mother, annihilation anxiety becomes especially real whenever the male’s sexual desire is activated (we’ve all seen
Psycho, and
Dressed to Kill). Men become violent towards women as a way of asserting and reinforcing, not just their feeling of power and control, but of their own separateness and
identity.
So what about men who want to turn into women, what’s that about? Is it a way to possess the mother-object by turning oneself into it? And/or an unconscious but quite literal enactment of being possessed by the mother?
Shamans used to dress as women, and though I don’t know, my guess is that it had to do with usurping the feminine (procreative) power while, and by, rejecting femaleness as a separate/outside/biological trait. I think PW is essentially correct in that we live in a world that depends on a profound rejection of femaleness and the corresponding distortion of everything that is masculine—since neither can exist without the other. Where I’d disagree is in assigning any sort of blame, or even accountability, to men over women, or any particular loss of freedom or power to women, over men. As sexes, we are both equally damaged by this imbalance, and both equally responsible for it. That's equality!
I’m off the map now, so this is probably not altogether coherent; but since PW’s cry to remember the female seems every bit as central to this thread as the question of what it means for gender (and even sex) to be erased, and/or for men to start demanding to be seen and treated
as women—and to be turned
into women, not by magic but by science—it seemed worthwhile to try and look at how, and how deeply, these two things
are interconnected.
Another valuable resource on this is Lloyd de Mause, who has written a lot about the Killing Mother, eg:.
New Guinea mothers are so violent while using their children sexually that the children regularly blame themselves as they are hurt by them:
Mother twist penis, tight, tight…Hurt, hurt, inside. Cry, she not listen… Mother not like my penis, wants to cut it off… [Wounds himself with a sharp stick.] …Now it hurts here, outside, not in penis. Look, blood. Feels good…
Good to be a girl, no penis.Because of the constant brutal abuse, all schizoid tribal personalities are so insecurely attached they are extremely uncertain about their genders, and most of their adult lives replay the early gender anxieties produced by their parental incest/rejection experiences. http://psychohistory.com/books/the-orig ... in-tribes/
It is a lot easier to fool people than show them how they have been fooled.