I'm unfamiliar with Shulevitz's piece. Context seems to imply that a trans-person is somehow responsible for someone else's discomfort at witnessing them being trans?
An identity-state is not a behavior. Possibly Shulevitz had cited some particular behaviors in the original article, but that has been lost in the attribution-chain.
An archetypal trans behavior is wearing clothing that might confuse others as to their gender status. The behavior I am accustomed to in dealing with confusion is to ask questions; while it is possible trans people exhibiting this behavior might eventually get bored or tired of dealing with questions, we're now on our third order of hypotheticity, and I would suggest we pause and wait for reality to catch up with us.
Obviously, what trans people do is put guitars on their heads.
An identity-state is not a behavior. Possibly Shulevitz had cited some particular behaviors in the original article, but that has been lost in the attribution-chain.
An archetypal trans behavior is wearing clothing that might confuse others as to their gender status. The behavior I am accustomed to in dealing with confusion is to ask questions; while it is possible trans people exhibiting this behavior might eventually get bored or tired of dealing with questions, we're now on our third order of hypotheticity, and I would suggest we pause and wait for reality to catch up with us.