"Definition" is perhaps too strong a word; if our gender is ambiguous, then so is the rest of our existence. These definitions are approximately correct, but they are soft around the edges. Sorry, but that's the only kind of definitions you'll get from anyone!
Support is what we're here for. Yes, there are community issues to talk about, and those are important as well, but these are secondary when someone comes in with a specific problem.
This is a serious question for many transsexuals. The fear is always that if one is honest, one may be denied treatment, that it is more important to "say the right things" than to say the truth.
My purpose was to attach a human face to what--for some people--was previously just a label; it is harder to discriminate against a person than to discriminate against a label.
Right now the gender community is about where the gay community was around the time of Stonewall. At that time, homosexuality was formally classified as a mental illness, and there were clinics...
I'm definitely not a "trans activist", but I do believe that feeling forced to "pass" can be much more stressful and exhausting than not worrying about passing. Passing can be equivalent to shame, silence and the "closet".
I have to go on a business trip, early tomorrow morning to a city where I have no friends and I can hope for no more than toleration, with a colleague who tolerates me. So I can't sleep, of course.
Access to hormonal therapy and plastic surgery (including SRS) is a critical need for transgendered and transsexual persons. Access has been limited since 1979 by the Standards of Care...