Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of figures and tables
- Notes on contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Foreword
- Foreword: Trans ageing
- Introduction: Trans ageing and care – a review of the terrain
- Part I What do we know about older trans people’s lives and care needs? Messages from research
- Part II Perspectives from practice: views, attitudes and practices of healthcare and welfare professionals
- Part III Making care practices more inclusive: perspectives on improving care and support for trans people in later life
- Conclusion: Looking ahead for enabling trans-inclusive and affirming practice
- Index
Foreword: Trans ageing
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 January 2025
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of figures and tables
- Notes on contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Foreword
- Foreword: Trans ageing
- Introduction: Trans ageing and care – a review of the terrain
- Part I What do we know about older trans people’s lives and care needs? Messages from research
- Part II Perspectives from practice: views, attitudes and practices of healthcare and welfare professionals
- Part III Making care practices more inclusive: perspectives on improving care and support for trans people in later life
- Conclusion: Looking ahead for enabling trans-inclusive and affirming practice
- Index
Summary
Being transgender is never easy, yet it's not a curse but a gift. None of us choose to be trans; it's who we are. Like many of us, I knew at an early age that I was in the wrong body – I couldn't change it at nine or in the decades since. It was a secret I hid from family and friends, only dressing alone in private as a girl and then a woman.
At almost 50, I came out in Holland as Pauline and had two years of therapy to find out why I am different, and I learned to love myself and to build my self- esteem … zelfvertrouwen in Dutch, which encompasses selfesteem and self- love.
Life was not magically simpler, but accepting myself and loving myself made it more worthwhile, and I learnt to be an advocate for the trans community and to fight for us to be treated with respect and dignity as ordinary people.
This book is about how we want to be treated as we age – whether it's being looked after in our homes, in hospitals, in care homes or hospices. All we ask is that you treat us with respect and dignity; as we age, we will make mistakes and sometimes appear to be the gender we were born as rather than the one we have chosen.
Many of us are estranged from our blood family, and our friends have become our family unit now. Please do not misgender us, and show us compassion and accept that our family unit is not always conventional.
There are many words of wisdom in this research; please read it and listen to why it's important for all who are transgender like me.
It means a lot to me and all of us who contributed to this research. We are really just ordinary people, your sister or brother, grandad or grandma, aunt or uncle or your parent … or neighbour.
Treat us as you would them: with kindness and respect.
This is a poem I have written for this book about what it's like being transgender as an older person and what I hope will happen after you read this book.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Trans and Gender Diverse Ageing in Care ContextsResearch into Practice, pp. xvi - xviiiPublisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2024