People whose gender identity or expression does not conform to the sex they were assigned at birth are transgender. While individuals may be assigned to a sex at birth based on how they present biologically, their sense of their gender may differ. A trans man is a man who was identified as female at birth, and a trans woman is a woman who was identified as male. ( Transsexual is an older term that referred to trans individuals who sought or undertook intervention to change their bodies.)
The Lives of Transgender Youth
For many adolescents and young adults, the journey to confidently declaring their gender identity and beginning to live as the gender that suits them ends in positivity, greater self-confidence , and higher self-esteem . But the path to that point often involves intense mental and emotional stress. Questioning one’s own identity, and reckoning with the ramifications of the conclusions, can upend one’s previous beliefs, and re-entering life as a different gender may lead to a loss of friendships and the jeopardizing of family connections, as well as bullying and discrimination, often violent, at school and in the community.
Research suggests that as many as two-thirds of transgender adolescents have had suicidal thoughts, as compared to 13 percent of other teens. But the presence of supportive others in a young transgender person’s life, especially parents, can make a significant difference: For example, 64 percent of transgender teens who felt supported by parents reported having high self-esteem, as opposed to just 13 percent of those who did not.
People can become aware of their transgender identity at any age. Some become conscious of their identity as young children, and many who become aware of it in adolescence or adulthood can look back at early experiences of not feeling that they fit in with others from the gender to which they were assigned at birth.
Many transgender individuals experience not just a sense of discomfort but intense dissatisfaction with their assigned sex or sexual characteristics, or the roles they are expected to play as presumed members of one gender or another. These feelings of gender dissonance can lead to depression and even suicidal ideation without an outlet to share them or support from family or friends. Some quickly and readily embrace their trans identity; others may not find such gender resonance until they encounter others who have had the same experience and with whom they can identify. But at any age, trans people may struggle with their identities, and may experience confusion, shame , or guilt , especially if their family, peer group, or community is not supportive of identities along the gender spectrum.
Explore More About Transgender
For a comprehensive understanding of transgender, read our complete guide: