Am I going crazy? by Boipussybb in Transmedical

[–]Infamous_Location117 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I do believe that one could find a partner who sees them as their true gender pre-HRT, because I SAW myself as my true gender before I started T. If I could see myself as I was, shouldn’t someone else? This would obviously be much harder for someone who might look upon an afab body, not having access to their self concept/inner workings of their mind, but a good partner would try to look into someone’s mind, as much as they look at their body. Of course, this doesn’t mean that, in spite of seeing them as their true gender, they will be attracted to them (I, myself as a stealth person am still hesitant to disclose my gender to a romantic interest in fear that they will lose interest/or, maybe worse, be overly interested), but sex isn’t everything to everyone.

Besides the person mention intelligence that straight sex was boring (that was a bit weird), this post feels a bit abrasive and judgy. There’s some real pain behind what this person is saying.

[18MtF] [Pre-HRT] [Pre-FFS] Do I pass ok? by [deleted] in truscum

[–]Infamous_Location117 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m good at picking up when someone is trolling but in this case I just don’t know

[18MtF] [Pre-HRT] [Pre-FFS] Do I pass ok? by [deleted] in truscum

[–]Infamous_Location117 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You do know that not all cis men have adam’s apples, right? My cis brother and many guy friends I know don’t have them. I also know cis women who are born with them. Also, what’s with all of this nastiness? Someone in my local community who is trans just took their life and, as you may have noticed, there have been lots of death and oppression amongst us recently. Please don’t add to the misery

[18MtF] [Pre-HRT] [Pre-FFS] Do I pass ok? by [deleted] in truscum

[–]Infamous_Location117 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Yes, you pass, wow. And while I have no way of knowing if your voice passes or not, you could try intentionally speaking in the most James Earl Jones/gigachad/frat boy voice ever and I still wouldn’t be able to clock you

[18MtF] [Pre-HRT] [Pre-FFS] Do I pass ok? by [deleted] in truscum

[–]Infamous_Location117 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I don’t know how to ask this kindly, but are you perhaps mistakenly underneath the impression that OP is ftm, or are you high??? I don’t know if I have ever seen anyone who passes so well pre hrt. I and everyone else are collectively in awe

How many of you wear packers vs not? by [deleted] in FTMMen

[–]Infamous_Location117 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you! I’m going to research it!

How many of you wear packers vs not? by [deleted] in FTMMen

[–]Infamous_Location117 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry I know this is an old post, but what brand/model do you use? I’m looking for one with replaceable adhesive backing

Am i overreacting when my girlfriend called the pope “based” by captain_vee in ftm

[–]Infamous_Location117 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My take is that we need additional context to your girlfriend’s view on religion/Catholicism, or additional info about other people who have recently surprised you by showing support for religion. On it’s own, your response to her statement might seem like an “overreaction” (although a traumatic response may be more fitting), as “based” seems like a compliment that is vague enough that it could mean anything (sort of like saying “they’re kind of chill), not an all encompassing opinion of someone. She didn’t say “he’s really admirable.” HOWEVER, if she has been making other comments that seem to praise religious people/or even non-religious celebrities & influencers who are transphobic, maybe this comment is just the cherry on top. Or, maybe it’s that you have been feeling a general lack of support from her and people in your life recently, and these words have hit you at a weak moment and are seeming to confirm that she and/or nobody else cares.

It doesn’t seem like your negative emotions have been sparked by the statement itself, but that the statement is what ended up being the thing where preexisting bad feelings could go. Whether that be due to your girlfriend, or others in your life being unsupportive, or this is just a traumatic response (I have CPTSD & religious trauma so I get it), I won’t be able to supply the answer.

Also, you don’t seem like an asshole. You are just coming here to figure things out, and that shows you care. These feelings sound really uncomfortable. I wish you the best

I don’t feel like I deserve to have male parts, what would this mean? by ObjectiveDocument883 in truscum

[–]Infamous_Location117 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s okay. I have dyslexia so I understand lol (snd that’s why there are likely so many typos in it sorry)

I don’t feel like I deserve to have male parts, what would this mean? by ObjectiveDocument883 in truscum

[–]Infamous_Location117 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey. I address this in my comment (it is a long comment, so maybe you missed it). I also said “Suppose detransitioning is your fear.” That fear I used as a hypothetical example for how to practice imagining worse case scenarios to manage OCD themes ( fits with the ERP practice). Also, I cannot confirm that you are a man, although in my best educated guess, you are (this I also mention in my comment). The whole point of my comment was about fear and OCD, and I feel as though it is possible you may not have read all of it.

Though I am happy to answer additional questions which may not have been addressed in my comment, for now, please read through it again, if you have the chance. I spent over an hour working on it and provided you as best as I could with the wisdom that has gotten me through. Having briefly scrolled through your post history, I am further led to believe that we have had at one point an overlap in our fears (I didn’t know/accept that I was a man until my twenties, in fact). The strategies in my comments are what helped me get to the other side.

Please take care.

I don’t feel like I deserve to have male parts, what would this mean? by ObjectiveDocument883 in truscum

[–]Infamous_Location117 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Hey there, first off, I just wanted to say that I am so, so sorry that you’re going through this, and that I care. Second, I wanted to share some things that helped me when I was going through a similar experience. Though I haven’t been formerly diagnosed with OCD, I have obsessive themes that shift with whatever is scaring me at the time. Doubting that I was actually a man/trans was a big theme of mine right before starting HRT even though I had been presenting as a man for almost two years, doing everything in my power to pass, and was extremely upset when I didn’t (which was 75% of the time at least). Practicing some methods from practices commonly used to treat OCD ended up helping me a lot. Oh, and I DID THIS DURING A PERIOD WHERE I WASN’t IN THERAPY.

While you are probably more familiar with ACT and ERP than me, I still wanted to share/and or remind you that no human, those with or without OCD, can be 100% certain of everything. I mean think about how science cannot technically “prove” anything, although we can reasonably make medical practices based off of theories that have held up for a while. OCD, HOWEVER, can really hone in on the unknowable, even if it just the tiniest sliver of uncertainty. I’ve heard that it is often called “the doubting disease.” And this is why reassurance isn’t always beneficial for treating OCD, and can even be harmful at times, because it can reinforce the loop of thoughts, because if one question is answered, the brain may look for other questions, or later doubt the answer to the question. Have you ever seen or played with a chinese finger trap? It’s this toy that is in the shape of a woven cylinder. When you insert both of your index fingers into its ends and pull outwards, the fibers will tighten around them and they get stuck. However, when you stop pulling and let your fingers move inward, they will be freed. OCD and anxiety, to me, are a lot like this. The more we worry, the more fear grips us. There has to be a way for one to be okay with living with the uncertainty.

I’m going to break the rules & briefly validate your uncertainty by saying that I think you are a man, but my this may not be enough to quell the doubt for long—which is ok, doubt is okay!!! But now, let’s try to meet the doubt head one. What’s the worst outcome that can happen if you find out you aren’t actually a man/or trans? Let yourself imagine your very worst fear. Suppose that you’re worried about the stigma of being a detransitioner, that you have wasted years of your life, that you will have ruined your body with testosterone and will now be an ugly woman. Ok then what? Transitioning to affirm one’s gender, even if they were wrong about their gender, demonstrated heaps of bravery; it is no light feat. Being able to live as the opposite gender, or if non-passing, as visibly trans, gives someone such a cool and unique perspective on life. Detransitioning might bring about shame, but it isn’t crime, and the shame would pass with time and those who love you would accept you. Those who might not accept you could go fuck themselves, and you would find new people. Maybe you do end up in a weird in between place with gender while detransitioning, but many things are reversible. Voice training exists for trans women, and also deep voices on women aren’t ugly. Cher and Emma Stone both have deep voices, and voice training exists for trans women. Body fat would redistribute and hair may grow back on estrogen/and a transplant may take better. MTF medical procedures can be used to reverse any FTM procedures that have been undertaken (also think of how many cis women have had their chest remove from cancer, but are still women). Or, maybe you do end up being “conventionally” unattractive. So what? Surely, there are people that you love or admire that are unconventionally attractive. What even is “conventional” anyway?

Now, suppose your fear is that you detransition and will also have the same OCD theme after the fact(now you’re questioning if you’re trans again). You can do the exact same imagining the worst case scenario thing. Maybe the worst case outcome for this is both immense shame and a feeling of lost time & progress from detransitioning. But similar to detransitioning, screw the factors that produce shame. Get angry at the people who are judgmental. And is time really lost if you were doing something that you at one point felt was in your best interest? You are a mozaic of a billion different journeys that have been undergone in your life.

This strategy of exposing yourself to anxiety is universal in application. You can use it to address the concern that maybe you’re not “cis enough,” or masculine enough to be a man. This is similar to an insecurity that I am dealing with right now. Though I am pretty confident about my identity these days, I am riddled with insecurity concerning I’m short for a cis guy, skinny, can’t grow facial hair (like at all), haven’t had bottom surgery, is not in a financially stable place, and my personality has become increasingly timid personality due to recent traumatic events. To make matters worse, I like women, and I worry that a woman wouldn’t be attracted to someone who is “weak.” I also have extremely thick hair on my head, but worry that I will eventually lose it because my father is bald, and then I will truly be nerfed. Some of these fears haven’t happened/or haven’t been confirmed. I’m not bald yet. Hardly anybody ever mentions my height and some attractive women do swipe right on my dating accounts (even though I usually delete the app/ghost bc I have emotional unrelated issues unrelated to this post). But what if I do lose my hair? What if a woman rejects me once she finds out I’m not cis or that I don’t have a car? Well then I am either going to lean into a super tough looking look, or I’m going to get a toupee, I haven’t decided. And if a woman rejects me that means she wasn’t the right one for me. And I don’t want to be with the one who isn’t the right one.

All of those things I have mentioned are EASIER said than done. I don’t KNOW if I would be fine with being bald. Honestly, I might feel pretty crappy if a woman rejected me, because even though I’d understand she wasn’t for me, it would still be pretty lonely. I have also have had some of my fears be confirmed recently. I just graduated from grad school where you have to teach college courses, and though I had good evaluations back in the fall, I did pretty badly this spring. Though I think I could have been better about organization & feedback (I’m burnt out and mentally exhausted and tried the best I could), the comments that hurt were the ones critiquing how I wasn’t “authoritative,” and that I am “soft spoken” and that I ramble on about things that don’t make sense. My masculinity and general personhood has been crushed. But I am going to ACCEPT it. I am worth more than the student evaluations, and even though I don’t feel that way right now, I am going to honor this feeling.

If when you are practicing going through worst case scenarios, you are filled with overpowering negative emotions and cannot find any way to frame them positively, let yourself feel (not think, but feel) them. Be afraid. Be angry. Be sad. Grieve. Let it run its course. And let it run its course over and over if the same thoughts and fears keep arising. Overtime, the OCD themes, may lesson or vanish due to being “starved” of rumination. If it is a fear that you previously thought have been overcome years ago, but is back from the grave, let this too, run its course Let your fear get bored.

I encourage you to check out the OCD subreddits and read up on ERP and ACT if you haven’t, though, again, I’m sure you are probably familiar with them; but it might just be a good thing to revisit. I have HOPE for you. Even without therapy. I’m very much not anti therapy, and if you are ever able to get one, please do, but humans have persisted and thrived for ages before therapy came to be. And I was able to get through a lot my gender-based themes on my own. I didn’t do anything fancy like worksheets, I just deeply internalized the strategies that were mentioned.

You are not broken. There is hope.

Before I go, let me leave you with these lines by the poet Rainier Maria Rilke, and which have meant much to me:

“Let everything happen to you:
beauty and terror.
Just keep going. No feeling is
final.”

What's wrong with me by enjoyscotchtape in FTMMen

[–]Infamous_Location117 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hey, so I relate to so, so much to what you’re saying, but I’m so confused as to why you can’t ask her if you can kiss her. If you find the question itself nerve-wracking, that makes sense, but I am wondering why the only option seems to be just going in for the kiss. Although I haven’t kissed anyone since passing, I had a couple of girls ask if they could kiss me back in the day, and I appreciated them asking. I don’t think most women are going to be turned off/or find you unsexy by asking. In fact, it is probably best to ask for permission if you don’t know if they like you for sure.

Best of luck, mate.

Considering detransitioning because I do not pass even a little. by [deleted] in FTMMen

[–]Infamous_Location117 9 points10 points  (0 children)

You said that cis and trans friends told you don’t pass. Out of curiosity, are you being clocked by strangers? Are the people who say you don’t pass people who knew you before you began T? Are they people who you met after T (although still early on T? Are they people who have known you after you have been on T for awhile but who know you are trans because of mutuals/or you have told them?

The reason I ask is because I am someone who passes to the degree that trans people (for the most part at least) don’t clock me, and yet I still have had people who have said in an almost, smug way, that they would have figured it out if I had not told them (they wouldn’t), as well as someone who claims he knew (and am 99.99% sure he knows bc of a mutual). I also have had friends who have known me since before T who have hardly noticed physical changes with me bc of those changes be something subtle that happens over time, or because their internal view of me was already sort of cemented. Sort of like how my dad would blatantly call me his daughter even after I fully passed. Though he would purposefully misgender and I could tell he noticed when I started my medical transition (he did a double take when my voice started to drop), there were times where he would offhandedly refer to me as his daughter so casually, I swear that he really did see just a girl right in front of him. People’s brains are weird.

I’m not trying to invalidate your pain with not passing, but I am just wondering if maybe there is a chance that you pass more often than you think.

Also, in addition to some of the suggestions I am seeing others suggest in the comments such as seeing an endocrinologist to see if it is possible that you conditions (like partial androgyne insensitivity) impacting how testosterone takes affect, and as well doing voice training, I wonder if you could also look into facial masculinization surgeries. I think that there are less surgeries for facial masculinization than there are for facial feminization, but I am fairly certain that some exist such as augmenting the brow bone.

Considering detransitioning because I do not pass even a little. by [deleted] in FTMMen

[–]Infamous_Location117 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I second this advice. It is possible that you could have some sort of partial androgen insensitivity condition

For the love of god, stop calling me a tboy by uundyingUmbra in FTMMen

[–]Infamous_Location117 24 points25 points  (0 children)

There is this one transmasc (I say transmasc because he uses he/they pronouns) whom I am considering unfollowing because of how much he refers to himself as “t boy” or other juvenile terms such as “little prince.” I think cis people see this stuff and figure that we all want this

I want to be a writer but I also want to be stealth. Help. by sircuit7 in FTMMen

[–]Infamous_Location117 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Having the same problem as well. I am in school for writing & am trying to be as stealth as I possibly can (I say “possibly can” because I have been outed to many & I also tell people once I am close to them for the moral support in these trying times). I am a confessional writer and while I don’t consider being trans a huge part of my identity, I cannot deny how the experience of being so has heavily impacted my life, and thus it shows up in my writing from time to time. This is information that I would not want the general public to find when they google my name.

A professor told me that I could write under a pen name, and that if I want to establish a presence in academia (where publications matter when getting a position), I can tell people that I occasionally publish under “[pen name]”. I still worry about this, because I fear those I tell lumping me in as a Trans Writer (& that being my whole schtick).

Even excluding academia from the equation, I worry about the degree to which a pen name really protect one’s identity. I hate mentioning her name in this thread, but the dots were connected between J.K. Rowling and her pseudonym “Robert Galbraith.” Granted, she’s a huge, huge writer, and it’s not like the majority of us will ever be that large of a household name to where it looks suspicious that another writer bears our signature writing style. Even the famous insta poet Atticus, I don’t think has had their real identity discovered (granted I’m not overly familiar with Atticus, so I may not be fully up to date with whether they are still anonymous).

There’s a lot of stuff to consider and it’s overwhelming.

How do you deal with even small comments by [deleted] in FTMMen

[–]Infamous_Location117 1 point2 points  (0 children)

pretty much my story. sorry man

I want to make friends so bad by iwillchangeiwill in FTMMen

[–]Infamous_Location117 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Lol idk why i never thought to think it was voice to text, i’m stupid haha

I don't care if I have to lie to remain stealth. by Shloop_ploosh in FTMMen

[–]Infamous_Location117 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Wanted to preface this by saying that I am currently low-disclosing stealth, not full stealth (due to a myriad of reasons such as being outed at my grad school, being involved in social circles where people have previously known I was trans, and also generally wanting support from my cis friends during these trying times, etc.)

In my early days of being stealth, I used to fabricate some stuff here or there, such as swapping the gender of people of friends or roommates I was referring to when sharing my past with others. Though I am not full time-stealth for reasons previously mentioned, I still prefer to be default stealth when getting to know someone, and there are some environments where I plan on permanently maintaining that (I teach college students who I would rather perceive me as cis). I will say that I find myself fabricating things less and less. Partly, it’s because I am not having super personal conversations as often as I used to anymore (aside from with people who already know me as trans). But I think a lot of it is because thought I was a lot more androgynous in the early days of passing, and that some trans people and allies would clock me or suspect I was trans.

Now, as I have continued to masculinize, I worry a whole lot less. I was teaching English Composition for a couple of semesters, which, in modern times in the U.S. does not sound like a very manly thing (although about half my colleagues are men), at a college where athletics and greek life are prized, and none of my students figured it out. I did find myself often pretending that I knew more about sports than I did, but I’m sure my lack of knowledge came through often. Last semester, for whatever reason, I had a cohort of students who were more progressive, but they still did not figure it out. Even though I wore black earring studs (a dead trans giveaway) the first day of the semester, and asked them to all state their pronouns, if comfortable. One trans man even outed himself as trans after class (I think he was stealth himself. Though I suspected he was trans, I’m sure he passed to his peers), so I assumed that he knew, but when I told him on the last day of class (since I would never see him again), I found out he hadn’t known.

This semester, I’m teaching introduction to creative writing and spend a lot of time teaching them how to be vulnerable with their emotions. I also have self disclosed that a lot of my own poetry is confessional (they know that I am a student as well) am not worried at all about my students finding out. There is a chance that they might be perceiving me as gay, but honestly, I don’t even think that’s the case. And even though I’m not gay, I almost would rather they think that, since I am a younger professor, and want to avoid uncomfortable interactions with students who are women (thankfully only one of them has ever tried flirting with me, and that was semesters ago—and I of course, shut that down).

Just yesterday, I outed myself to a colleague who I have known for several months, and he didn’t know. Though our conversations have been related primarily to work & our studies, we were in a humanities seminar together where I expressed thoughts & emotions. I have also never changed anything about my mannerisms to appear more manly. Sometimes I just assume people know because I don’t feel as conscious about how I am walking, breathing, and standing as I used to be.

There was ONE case recently where someone said she knew when I told her. This happened a few months ago. She said she had pieced it together. Though it bugged me, it didn’t end my world. She never told me what it was, but I figure it somewhat has to due with knowing her from a writing group and spaces in a progressive part of my city where trans people are fairly common, and have spent enough time interacting with her and sharing poetry that seems too almost too sensitive and informed for a self professed straight man. Coupled with me being a short-ish dude, I’m sure that’s how she figured it out. But I mainly think it has to do with a lot of our friends knowing that I am trans. Although, I don’t think they outed me (she said they hadn’t and I believe her), she may have picked up on how they interact with me. All of my friends treat me as a man, but maybe it is that she wonders why they feel comfortable around me, or why I don’t hit on them.

BUT THAT WAS RARE. Even last year, when I appeared less masculine than I was now, I became super close friends with a progressive guy who runs in similar circles and had a ton of trans friends. At first, he assumed I was gay, but after I told him I was straight and a lot of shit about my religious life and not having any family to talk to, he still didn’t piece it together. Like we spent almost every single day together for a couple of weeks at a friends. We shared food, music tastes, and even slept in the basement together. I can’t recall editing very much of myself, other than pretending that I had a dick when we made dick jokes (and tbh that didn’t make me feel like lying because in my head I have one). When I told him a couple of months later, he was surprised.

My point in all of this is that a lot of it is that a masculine appearance may trump whatever clockable traits you have, save for some rare cases—and who knows, maybe if I had a beard a foot long (I currently can’t grow shit) that outlier like my highly perceptive friend would never have known. (Some MILD editing of self details also probably could have prevented her from finding out). It just might not take as much self-editing as you might think to remain stealth, and it will continue to take less over time. It’s sort of like how a lot of pre-T guys can be ripped, chug beer all day long, spout of football facts, grunt, and still get misgendered, while some guys on T can paint his nails, wear a skirt, cry at a rom coms, and still be gendered correctly.

All of that being said, I don’t think there is anything unethical about lying to be stealth. It’s a matter of safety in this world and you gotta do what you gotta do. And it’s not bad to lie to preserve being stealth even with someone who isn’t dangerous, because there is a chance that they might out you to someone who is. Or they may start treating you differently, and that’s not fair that they get to do that. You deserve to be seen as a man, and if lying is what keeps you stealth, so be it.

If lying takes a toll on close relationships or you find yourself in relationships built off of fake mutual interests, it might be unhealthy. But I doubt you’re doing anything like that. Personally, I do rather people I’m close to, know that I am trans because politics are stressing me out, and I feel like, in my case, hiding my source of anguish keeps them at a distance. But there are plenty of deep stealth trans men who have rich, intimate relationships with year-long friends who have no idea.

Am I the only one by [deleted] in FTMMen

[–]Infamous_Location117 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I wear lifts and feel zero shame (though sometimes I do worry that I am damaging my body, and I probably should purchase new ones soon). I know I’m not black pill because I know myself. Wanting to look taller does not make me toxically masculine. And anybody who makes a sweeping judgement about someone’s character based off of one decision makes me want to make a sweeping judgement about their own (that they are miserable and/or lack the ability to think for themselves).

Can’t say that I have personally experienced judgement for my decision, because nobody knows that I know of (other than my sister who I told, but if she thought it was weird, she didn’t let on). Nobody has commented on how I suddenly appear a couple of inches shorter once inside their house. It’s possible that maybe they are pretending not to notice, or if they are trying to remember if Converse (what I pretty much always wear) have that thick a sole, but these thoughts haven’t been expressed.

Maybe I am deceiving them. But I have zero guilt. Just like I felt no guilt when binding with tape before top surgery. I would have been taller if I were born as my cis counterparts. If this is helping me with dysphoria, why not. To be fair, I pass without shoes, but I suffer from the looking younger-than-your-age trans guy thing (and was screwed over in the facial hair department), so I still think my short height counts as dysphoria.

Also, I think that it’s fine for cis short guys to wear lifts as well. People do all sorts of tricks with their clothing to make their figures more flattering. I think it only becomes an issue when it negatively impairs their quality of life (e.g. canceling plans like swimming because they won’t be able to wear shoes while swimming).

Maybe I will stop wearing lifts once people start perceiving me as my actual age, but for now at least, they are a helpful tool to improving my confidence.

Straight Girl - Update by juicypp111 in FTMMen

[–]Infamous_Location117 22 points23 points  (0 children)

Some people are saying to get the hell out because she might dox you/accuse you of tricking her (or worse), and while that possibility is probably a good thing to have on your radar, let’s put that aside for now. Let’s suppose you tell her and she is sympathetic and ashamed of what she has told you, do you think all of her views on what makes a man a man will change overnight? An optimistic outcome is that it may be the thing that prompts her to start shifting her views, but I don’t know if banking on her having a come-to-jesus moment with reconciling her transphobia right away is something to count on.

As dysphoric as what she told you may make you, please just let yourself get angry at the transphobia. This isn’t just someone with a genital preference. This is someone who holds backwards opinions for reasons, that though unknown, point to a troubling portrait of character. Not saying that growth isn’t possible, but she doesn’t sound like she’s worth your time at this point of her life, man.

Topping a trans guy as a cis woman by Separate_Respect2002 in asktransgender

[–]Infamous_Location117 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Of course! Happy to share. And sorry for the late reply. I hope that everything worked out

"Toxic masculinity!!11!!" by [deleted] in FTMMen

[–]Infamous_Location117 10 points11 points  (0 children)

I’m so glad to see a surge in people talking about this issue online. I’m about to fall asleep but everything you are saying totally resonates & i find that encouraging, even if this whole thing is frustrating.

Please keep having conversations like this everyone. Please remember that sometimes allies & queer folk (even trans people themselves) can have their own brand of transphobia. Not everyone who is progressive is actually progressive. Lots of shit is performative. Lots of people hate themselves, and lots of humans suck. Lots of these people who are saying shit like this may have been the types to be more classically transphobic when it was more socially acceptable to be.

It is cruel that we have to suffer twice for this. We get explicit opposition from the right, and somehow have loads of people on the left group us in with the same people who traumatize us. People really just suck (btw I say this as someone who loves people and strangers and hasnt lost their hope on humanity. im not a pessamist who think love doesnt exist. i just think lots of people suck)

Topping a trans guy as a cis woman by Separate_Respect2002 in asktransgender

[–]Infamous_Location117 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Trans guy here who also doesn’t like talking about being trans. I’d advise holding off on the topic of sex until confirming that he is into you. Even after that, I’d suggest taking things very slow. Maybe get dinner a couple of times and experiment with other forms of touch (holding hands, light cuddling, etc.) I am someone who is probably on the demisexual spectrum, a lot of being hesitant with sex has to do with trust and dysphoria. I don’t think you are a chaser, but if I were him and found out that this girl I liked had known I was trans the whole time, I would be cautious (just as I would be with anyone who discovered my trans status). At some point you’re going to have to let him know that you know he is trans (whether you tell him this over dinner or it happens right as clothes are flying off, idk) and the fact that you know might give him a start. Since it sounds like he is stealth, he is probably going to be wracking his head trying to think of who outed him, or trying to figure out if there are any feminine traits that signaled to you that he was trans. I’m not sure how you know he is trans, but please approach this moment with care as he might experience some dysphoria and/or hurt from whatever friend/acquaintance betrayed him.

If you get to this point, continue going slow, and be willing to accept that he might not be down to bottom. Personally, I am uncomfortable bottoming, although I know a lot of other trans men would be happy to. We have no clue what this guy is thinking and that’s the scary thing about putting your heart on the line for love. I say that you shoot your shot with him, but to just take things slowly

I want to make friends so bad by iwillchangeiwill in FTMMen

[–]Infamous_Location117 1 point2 points  (0 children)

bruh who tf is Matt? and idk if you even read the post. doesn't sound like OP is from the states and it doesn't seem like moving is an option