I really wish I could read some books where I could finish the book not feeling incredibly conflicted. I found some of this book illuminating and validating. Some of it I really struggled with because Yves seems to apply the same gendered black and white thinking that others apply to them, to others. I really struggle when trans people vouch for not being gender normative, but then appear to be default gender normative about other people and not acknowledge that.
I don’t regret reading this book, I just regret finishing it just before bedtime. As a person with multiple chronic illnesses, the last chapter was a little enraging as it felt like they were saying that trans healthcare is the only healthcare in Australia with waiting periods or where you have to wait months to see a doctor and they might be running late, or your results may not have come in. I deal with different aspects of the healthcare system every day, and hearing them be so frustrated by delays in getting access to care, but then by their own admission saying they might not even use the T that they went to the appointment specifically to get? That was hard to swallow. I understand that having the choice is important, and that maybe once you have the choice, you realise you might not actually want it, and that is valid, but complaining about how important it was for you to get this care but then openly admitting that you might not actually use it? I kinda wish they had kept that to themselves. It smacks of privilege. As someone who had access to important endometriosis surgery delayed due to lockdown, and having to deal with daily fatigue and pain because of that, it made it hard for me to have empathy with the author.
It also frustrated me when they got annoyed about people having IVF delayed by COVID being big news, and how more of a spotlight should’ve been put on trans healthcare being delayed. I definitely was frustrated by the lack of understanding in the general public of what ‘elective’ surgery was at the time when all elective surgeries were being delayed by COVID, and know that delays to elective surgery can absolutely result in people dying. However, this isn’t exclusive to trans healthcare, and to be fair, as long as a trans person isn’t suicidal and isn’t going to go through puberty soon, hopefully they will eventually get the healthcare they need without it altering the course of their life too much, while the people going through IVF might never get the chance to have a child because COVID delayed them past the window where it was possible. (I say this as someone who doesn’t want to have kids, and who generally gets frustrated by the overemphasis societally on having children being most important thing you could ever do. However, I’ve watched many people I love go through IVF and it is bloody heartbreaking and my heart was going out to those people when we were going through lockdown and COVID healthcare delays.)