There's a lot of "I don't understand" going around in our time. White people acknowledge "I can never understand" the experience of black people, for example, but nonetheless "I stand with you." It's a challenging dynamic. On the one hand, it is surely never possible to fully understand another human being. On the other, I think we should take responsibility for trying to increase our understanding by listening to one another's experience.
That's a long way of saying I came to Diane and Jacob Anderson-Minshall's memoir as someone who admits she doesn't understand the first thing about transgender people and their experiences. Jacob is only one person (albeit a journalist who interviewed hundreds of other trans people and conveys some idea of their diversity), so I didn't expect to finish this book "getting it." But I wanted Jacob's perspective, not only on his transition but on other aspects of life as an individual and a couple. And I wanted Diane's perspective as a lesbian-identified woman who found herself in a marriage with someone coming out as trans.
Somehow they made it work. My highest admiration is for any couple, anywhere, who manage to stay together and in love through thick and thin, over many years. It's hard! It's hard whoever you are and however you identify. Clearly, Diane and Jacob had an unusual set of challenges, as individuals and as a couple. But Jacob's transition was not the only big challenge; they also spent time foster parenting, for instance, and have important insights from that experience. One that I appreciated was Jacob's comment about what it means when someone says a child has "gender issues." Usually, it means simply that the child is playing, dressing up, or otherwise behaving in a way that doesn't seem masculine/feminine enough to the adult who is talking. Sometimes the child will grow up to be gay/lesbian/bisexual; once in a while the child may turn out to be transgender. These observations are borne out by data too.
I appreciate Jacob addressing many of the things I have also puzzled over, given that, like me, he identified as a lesbian feminist for many years. I'm sure that there are many people who cannot understand same-sex attraction at all; that's never bothered me, as it doesn't stop anyone being accepting and supportive.
I enjoyed being with Diane and Jacob Anderson-Minshall on this very personal journey. They continue to identify as queer and as a queer couple (they also note that this term does not work for a lot of other people, and why it does work for them). Do I understand now? I'm not sure that's the question. The question is, how am I going to be compassionate and stand by other human beings? On this whole big beautiful QLTBG spectrum--or anywhere else.