
When Parliament passed Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Amendment Act, 2026 this week the debate, at least on paper, was about definitions. Who counts, who qualifies, who can be recognized and under what conditions. The amendment moves further away from self-identification and towards verification, putting gender into a system that can be assessed, confirmed and, if necessary, rejected.
It is presented as administrative clarity. But if you listen carefully to the conversations taking place outside Parliament, it sounds like something else entirely: a familiar demand for an explanation before being allowed to be taken at your word.
For many trans people, this demand has never been limited to the state. It has long shaped how they move through public space, how they are read, and perhaps most significantly, how they are loved.
Because trans bodies are rarely allowed to exist without interpretation in India.
Members and supporters of the transgender community gathered in Parliament to protest the Indian government’s amendments to the Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Bill | Photo credit: NurPhoto
A trans woman I spoke to in 2019 described the feeling of being watched at night in Delhi—not in the way that someone might notice someone attractive, but in a way that felt almost investigative. “You can tell when someone’s just looking at you,” she said, “and when they’re trying to figure you out.”
One evening in a bar, this difference became painfully clear. A man watched her most of the night – holding eye contact just long enough to read it as interest. She hesitated and then decided to go to him.
“I thought I’d stop thinking about it for once,” she told me. “Let me go greet you like a normal person.
What followed was not normal.
His expression hardened and he told her—loud enough for his friends to hear—to back off. There was a brief moment when it looked like the situation might escalate.
“It was like I exposed him,” she said. “Like he could be watching, but I shouldn’t have answered.
She left soon after, more shaken than she expected. “One moment I was someone he was interested in, and the next I was something he needed to publicly distance himself from.”
This movement from desire to distancing is something that occurs frequently.
Another trans woman, who has been in what she describes as a “relationship but only technically” for nearly two years, spoke of a man who insists on defining their dynamic as casual, even though he acts in a way that suggests otherwise. He calls, checks in, gets visibly upset when she pulls away, but resists any attempt to make the relationship visible or defined.
“She’ll say, ‘I told you from the beginning, no strings,'” she said, “but the minute I treat it like there’s no strings, it becomes a problem.” “I once asked him, ‘What am I really to you?'” she told me. “And he said, ‘Don’t make it complicated.’
She laughed as she told it, but not because it was funny. “It’s complicated, I’m just asking for clarity,” she said. “Otherwise everything is very comfortable.”
What she was describing, without naming it directly, was a kind of limitation. A relationship that is allowed to exist, but only within boundaries that protect the other from having to answer for it.
Members of the LGBTQ+ community gather to protest the Transgender Amendment 2026, raising slogans and holding placards demanding equality, dignity and protection of their fundamental rights, at Jantar Mantar, on March 26, 2026 in New Delhi. | Photo credit: Getty Images
If this is one way trans people are kept at a distance, another is through a kind of closeness that isn’t quite a connection.
On dating apps like Tinder, Bumble, and Grindr, several trans users described interactions that acted as sorting mechanisms.
A trans woman from Mumbai put it this way: “If I say I’m trans upfront, it becomes the whole conversation. If I don’t, then I’m ‘hiding’ something. There’s no version of me just becoming someone you’re talking to.”
She described a pattern that has become almost predictable—initial interest, followed by a turn to questions that feel like interrogation.
“They’ll say, ‘I’m just trying to understand,'” she said, “but understand what? You don’t ask anyone else these things in a first interview.”
This is not accidental. Research emerging from Indian queer digital spaces has begun to map patterns that users themselves have long described. A 2021 academic study, Gay Dating Platforms, Crimes, and Harms in India, by Rahul Sinha-Roy, explores how geosocial apps like Grindr can become sites of coercion, extortion, and abuse, especially as anonymity and stigma make users more vulnerable.
In addition, wider research into violence in India’s digital spaces by ScienceDirect – a resource for scientific, technical and medical research – including studies on technology-enabled abuse, showed how online interactions can spill over into offline harm, with marginalized users at increased risk.
These studies make clear something that trans users already know: that these platforms are not insulated from the prejudices of the society in which they exist. They replicate them, sometimes more effectively.
A trans man I spoke to described meeting someone through Bumble and being struck, not by anything special, but by the absence of tension. “We were just… talking,” he said. “About work, how bad the traffic was that day, where to eat. I didn’t feel like I was being evaluated.”
He paused for a moment before adding, “I kept waiting for the point where it would turn into a conversation about being trans. It just didn’t.”
They’ve been seeing each other for a few months now, and what’s remarkable about him is how little of the relationship is organized around explanations.
“It’s not like she doesn’t know,” he said. “That’s not the most interesting thing about me to her.” Because for many trans people, the dating experience is shaped by these more subtle negotiations. Being desirable but not public. To be accepted, but conditionally. To be visible, but only as long as that visibility can be managed.
And this is where the law begins to sound personal. It is conceived as governance, as order, as the need for systems that can distinguish between what is valid and what is not. But when applied to identity, it begins to take shape as a control. As many trans people will tell you, it has a way of seeping into everything.
And maybe that’s where the real shift lies. Not in definitions or documentation, but in the difficult work of allowing people to exist without becoming questions to be answered.
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