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Two
things more than anything deter many transsexual women from
transitioning - their family (parents, wife, children, partner ...) and
their career. Sadly money does matter, and there is no doubt that
the careers and income of many transsexual women suffer badly from the
moment they transition. While a few successfully transition in the
same job, most either change jobs when they transition, or will do so
soon afterwards. Unfortunately the new job is rarely an
improvement or step upwards compared with their old job as a man, and
thus income is often reduced at a time when outgoings have often
increased greatly (medical bills, cost of a new wardrobe, probably
setting up a new home, possibly having to start paying alimony,
...). A bitter reality is that is often necessary to
down-grade one's career aspirations after transition - and this must be
considered when deciding whether to transition. When transitioning, three main options exist:
Transitioning
in Your Old Job Although most women who choose this route do so with their eyes wide open, a few transitioning woman go down it with their expectations totally wrong. In extreme cases, they seriously seem to seriously think that they can take hormones for a few months, take a couple of weeks off for surgery in Thailand, and then arrive back at the work as a stunning buxom girl who will have her male colleagues lusting after her! The reality for many girls attempting option 1 is that it is rarely successful, too many days end in a mixture of tears and anger - while work social events where drink loosens tongues are soon avoided rather than sought. A woman's previous male identity is often a nearly insurmountable obstacle for some work colleagues to mentally overcome, no matter how broadminded they consider themselves to be.
Transitioning
and a New Job The temptation is to go even further and try to hide your transsexuality (option 3). But when choosing between options 2 and 3, be totally realistic. Going stealth without a lot of prior preparation and practice means you that may be quickly out'ed as [sadly] VERY few transwomen are totally convincing and passable right from their transition day. One good approach is just before your full-time transition ask your friends and family (my mum was ruthless!) to be totally honest with you about your ability to pass, if they say it is "great" then brutally test and verify it at every en-femme opportunity - shopping, in bar's, while travelling, sports events, meetings or conferences, during a weekend break, etc. - getting any stares, furtive glances or strange looks? A few early bumps can pay big dividends later.
The
Past is Hard to Hide
There are dozens, if not hundreds, of identity related items that need to tackled in the months around transition - with varying probability of success. For example, in the UK it is possible with some effort to get formal academic qualifications (i.e. ranging from GCSE Certificates to PhD Scroll's) changed over in to a new name, but it can often be impossible to get vocational qualifications and training course certificates changed - sometimes the only solution is to take the course again, or at least re-sit the exam(s). Even if you think you have done a thorough job on the name changes, it is all to easy to be quickly caught out by say: a background check for a security clearance, the need to provide an old P.60 (a UK tax certificate), your old (male) NI Number on a document, a problem with a reference who didn't immediately recall your new name, an enquiry about your pension plan, an unexpected encounter with an old colleague who knew you as a man, etc, etc. However the kind of positions that don't involve a danger of being "outed" are hardly likely to pay too well - and may not met your financial needs. And this is before we consider the issues of discrimination (intentional or unintentional) against transsexuals, and the fact that women are often simply paid less then men in similar positions.
Even with option 2 (openness about your transsexuality), there are many factors to consider related to the type of job you are applying to. Some are sexist and it may be illegal for potential employers to consider them, but the fact is that they do. There is no doubt that whether or not you admit to being a transsexual, the chance of being employed once you get an interview depends upon factors such as:
These factors apply to all women, not just transsexuals, studies have shown that "beautiful" women earn more and marry better than their less attractive sister's. Numerous books and internet websites provide advice for job seekers that is specifically tailored to women. Career
Stereotyping
And a slightly more recent report lists the occupations of 32 transsexual women as:
"Office ..." presumably includes Secretary, and "Store Proprietor" or "Salesperson" includes includes "Shop Assistant" in UK parlance. "Show Business (Actress)" probably includes the jobs of Dancer and Show-Girl. To the list of jobs in the tables, even the briefest survey of the internet reveals that we should also add other jobs such as Promotions Girl, Hostess, Female Model, Female Companion and Female Singer.
We should also not forget the kudos still associated with the often less than glamorous job of Air Hostess (aka Cabin Crew and other politically correct titles these days). For example, to mark her 'graduation' after SRS, one British 20-something transsexual applied in 1994 with unexpected success for a position as female cabin crew with a Middle Eastern airline. Intended just as a bit of fun, after passing her wings course she was always about to resign but eventually stayed 3 years, doing everything from cleaning sick in the toilets to lap dancing an Emir on his private yacht. In the late 1990's the Dutch airline KLM admitted that it certainly employs transsexual women as female Flight Attendants, but said that it couldn't give the exact number as it doesn't identify the condition in its staff records. However KLM is no longer unusual, in 2001 Air France had a well publicised case of one of its stewards becoming a stewardess, while in recent years British Airways has made it quite clear that it won't discriminate against suitable and qualified job applicants because of their current or former sex or sexuality, and it also has an agreed policy that transsexuals may remain in their job during their transition and surgery - indeed any discrimination may be illegal in the UK.
The first part of this article seems to show that transwomen are very likely to choose feminine image jobs, indeed statistically it's perhaps more likely than for genetic women. Unsurprisingly secretarial and other office jobs top the list in the two surveys, being the occupation of about 19% of the participants, but the number of hairdressers and beauticians is an astonishing 13%. However my personal impression is that this last percentage may well be correct, a truly remarkable number of young transsexual women seem to start their working career as a woman in these two areas. I also have the impression that the surveys underestimate the size of the category "Housewife", and that worryingly the sex trade industry and prostitution may not be honestly represented.
"Nurse" comes surprisingly low in the ranking (at most 4% of participants), but there are big obstacles to this career for transsexual women unless it was already begun as a man. In the UK at least, State Registered Nurses undertake long and expensive professional training, and in practice state (i.e. NHS) supported hospitals and universities prefer trainee nurses to start at age 17-18 - i.e. straight from school or college. In theory there is no upper age limit, but in practice 29 seems to the absolute limit - which is less than the typical age (30 something) of a British transsexual women at the time of her transition. The rather old but still interesting book "Man & Woman - Boy & Girl" by John Money & Anke A. Ehrhardt (1972), shows a similar employment picture for transsexual women to that given above. For reasons of her own, Janice Raymond in her notorious book the "The Transsexual Empire" also points out, and indeed emphasises, the fact that many transsexual women want to work in what can only be considered stereotypical female jobs. It thus seems that many transwomen are working in - and many many more are actively seeking - jobs that largely rely on youth and physical beauty for initial success: model, show-girl, actress, ... even prostitute. For every transsexual woman that manages to make a viable living as say a photographic model, far more will be disappointed. The reality is that most transsexual women are at a disadvantage when competing for these jobs with often younger and prettier and just as determined to succeed genetic "girl-girls".
However it easy to over-emphasise the situation in the manner of Ms Raymond. It is perhaps essential to point out that many transwomen are undoubtedly very realistic about their career and work prospects, and also that many of the youngest and most passable 'transgirls' have no interest (like many 'XX' girls) in becoming a model, actress or a mini-skirted "personal assistant". Vocational
Qualifications
The motive is usually financial, many pre-operative woman advertising themselves in the small ads or on the streets becomes a reluctant but very lucrative option at a time when their normal day-time career is faltering and outgoings are soaring, and it thus allows savings to be quickly accumulated towards their surgery. Because of the financial attractions of the trade, and the potential loss of earnings after SRS, surgery is often deferred. Indeed it is uncertain how many of the numerous "shemales" with often simple low-cost low-quality breast implants and occasional hormone injections that ply this trade (e.g. thousands from Africa and South America in Europe) can really be regarded as transsexual, many probably revert to leading a "gay" but clearly male life-style as age catches up them.
There's much heated debate about the topic, but it's really impossible to deny that there are many instances of non-transsexual gay men living as a pre-SRS 'shemale', often working in the sex trade. Some such men eventually decide to go all-the-way and have SRS (often but not always regretted), while others stop taking female hormones when they reach a certain age, get any breast implants removed and transition back to living as a man.
Sports and
Pageants There are also potential developments in terms of the beauty pageant circuit, which can briefly offer a young girl a living and form the platform for her later move in to acting, promotion work, PR, and other [female orientated] careers where glamour is required and a title such as "Miss Delux Soap 2003" on the CV can help considerably. Currently most beauty pageants and contests bar transsexual women by vaguely (perhaps deliberately vaguely) requiring that their entrants are "natural born women", or something similar, and the entrants signature on the entry form confirms that they are such. However the ever increasing recognition of transsexual women as legally women, combined with the fact that few major competitions still disbar contestants from having cosmetic surgery as enforcement had proved to be impossible, makes a high profile challenge inevitable if transsexual women continue to effectively be excluded by the organisers from the likes of Miss Universe and Miss World. Rumours that Miss France 2001, Elodie Gossuin, was a transsexual were totally unfounded, but the odds that one day soon the tall and leggy winner of a major beauty pageant will be a transsexual woman are very high - if it hasn't already quietly happened. My
Experiences
Unemployed yet again, I now completely revamped my CV, cutting it down and removing from it details and references that would bring out my former male past, and instead emphasising employment by several companies which handily no longer existed, and post-transition references that I knew to be safe. Unfortunately this also reduced my "value" on the job market and it took several months of job hunting before I was finally offered a reasonably paying (although less than a third of what I had been earning only a year before) administrative position at a local college, which prompted me to quickly have my orchidectomy after many months of differing. Starting work in May 2002, I thankfully had no problems integrating in to the nearly all female office environment - my ability to "pass" had vastly improved compared with when I first transitioned. But unfortunately my boyfriend was told by his company that he would be relocated in early 2003, and in December I resigned from my new job and moved yet again. After a couple of months just sorting out the house, I began a part-time job as a Shop Assistant to earn some "pocket money" - a type of work currently easy to get in Ireland with few questions asked. There is no doubt that without the financial support of my boyfriend, my standard of living would have declined enormously since my transition. |
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Copyright (c) 2004, Annie Richards
Last updated: 13 November, 2003