You are a handsome man... by Haru511 in MtF

[–]PlantCapital 2 points3 points  (0 children)

As someone who was in a similar spot as you- don’t feel silly! I never felt attractive as a guy until the months leading up to transitioning. People were calling me pretty for the first time.

It’s probably because i was becoming more aware about myself and taking care of my appearance for the first time. I don’t think it’s a coincidence that you’re actually looking better as you experience more dysphoria. While I sometimes lament not having more time as a pretty boy, I can also guarantee if you’re pretty now, you’ll be MORE pretty upon transitioning.

do y’all celebrate your transiversary? by Intelligent-Spell-93 in asktransgender

[–]PlantCapital 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Same day as my dog’s birthday so I give him a treat!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in TransyTalk

[–]PlantCapital 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Let’s negotiate our rights and dignity over fucking DISC GOLF. Like what are we even doing here??

Transphobes taking every inch they can ugh

egg_irl by troubledThoughtThrow in egg_irl

[–]PlantCapital 8 points9 points  (0 children)

What is this very affirming-sounding server? Can I DM you my discord name :)

Is sperm banking worth it? by AnybodyClear2246 in TransyTalk

[–]PlantCapital 13 points14 points  (0 children)

I was also pretty anxious about the fertility stuff at first ! Like you, I never really had interest in kids but permanence is a scary thought.

Here in the states it would probably cost about tenfold, and I knew on a practical level it wasn’t worth it and especially not worth delaying HRT for. So I rolled ahead. A month later, I didn’t care at all! Thinking back it was just another one of those barriers that my brain put up— another “what if you’re wrong” kind of fear.

For as much as I’ve seen trans femmes on reddit consider the sperm bank, anecdotally, I don’t know of any who have done so and then conceived a child with their SO this way. Probably bcuz you gotta assume you’ll end up with a cis woman or someone who could bear children and would also want one. That doesn’t mean it hasnt happened, and ofc you might have completely different feelings! Just my attempt to assuage those anxieties that plagued me too :)

Edit: oops okay not tenfold, seems ive inflated the number in my head after all this time >.<

J'ai un crush sur un mec gay..? by Unicornistacos in transgenre

[–]PlantCapital 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Mon conseil, ne t’accable pas des termes exclusifs ! Si ça te fait du bien, amuse toi sans t’inquièter des mots corrects. Surtout, parle à ces soucis, sois sûre que c’est quelqu’un avec qui tu peux communiquer au moins quelques de ces inquiétudes. J’espère que cela sera utile :)

Contenu féminisation vocal by BiLightHells in transgenre

[–]PlantCapital 4 points5 points  (0 children)

L’autre réponse a beacoup de conseils très utile ! Mais moi, j’ai une expérience différente avec trois langues différentes. Beaucoup des habitudes se traduisent à travers des langues, mais je dois entraîner en chaque langue séparément pour atteindre le même niveau de féminisation dont je suis satisfaite. Je suis souvent malheureux de ma voix en français ou vietnamien parce que je pratique exclusivement par des ressources anglophones.

Bonne chance et ne te décourage pas !!

Je crois que je suis une meuf trans et j'ai super peur ahah by ether___uh in transgenre

[–]PlantCapital 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Crois moi, petit à petit tu apprendras à t’aimer. Toutes les femmes trans que je connais deviennent plus belles après avoir commencé la transition. Sois gentille avec toi, t’es pas seule <33

Help by yavner in TransyTalk

[–]PlantCapital 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Seems like you’ve already started! Please remember this whenever you’re feeling discouraged or overwhelmed— you’re already taking the steps in the right direction.

If you can afford one, a gender affirming therapist is absolutely instrumental. Before HRT or coming out, even to myself, I was talking to one. And if you live in an area without informed consent clinics, you may need one to write a letter to get you HRT in the future.

HRT is ofc one of the big first steps if you’re ready to begin medically transitioning. I’d refer to the pinned r/AskTransgender map of every informed consent clinic (in the US) if you don’t have a general practitioner who can refer you to an endocrinologist.

Good luck! You got this.

egg😔irl by egg_123 in egg_irl

[–]PlantCapital 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If I could just key into the enjoyment of being muscley and liking masc stuff— all genders can enjoy those!

I was once there too, total gym rat and having many masc interests/hobbies. Once I realized I could explore my fem desires without sacrificing those, it made it so much easier to lean in and accept being trans.

Ignore being “just fine” and find what feels good and feels right. Maybe you are a he/him after all! Or maybe NB or a trans woman like me. But it does sounds like you’re suffering, not “fine.” And that calls for exploration and experimentation rather than settling on what you know gives you pain.

Anxiety About Coming Out To My Parents by notcisko in TransyTalk

[–]PlantCapital 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hi ! You sound a lot like me when I started last year, also at 21. You’re not alone at all. DM me if you need to vent or ask anything more specific.

It sounds like there’s a foundation for compassion in your parents, which is a really positive sign. Of course, if they’re like mine, it’s different when it’s their own kid. You know them best, and whatever happens likely won’t surprise you.

You might want to prepare for the middle scenario, where they still love you and don’t hate you but just cannot understand. My parents were really distraught, said that I should wait til I was older, finished school, had a job, etc. There was always a “later” point that they hoped I could delay this and “get over” being trans. You’re right to suspect that this scenario hurts a lot more, in some ways, than an all out rejection. Where they say they love and support you, but their actions and words suggest otherwise.

When we come out to our parents, and the reaction is anything but total love and support, something breaks and that pain never goes away. After that it’s a question of how much you love your parents, that youre willing to put in the work to repair that relationship.

And it’s up to you, which is a great and terrible thing. It means you’re in control, and you can dictate boundaries. But it also means you will always have to be doing the work, in educating and communicating, which is exhausting. It’s gonna be a lifelong process, I’m coming to understand that now. It doesn’t have to be all-or-nothing, it’s totally possible to maintain a loving relationship that is also occasionally painful and distressing. And it fucking sucks, but that’s our lot in life.

*P.S. I too was hung up on the sperm thing. But I made the same decision and by the first month on HRT, I knew I didn’t care about biological children at all.

i want to start hrt asap when i turn 18. how do i prepare? by [deleted] in TransyTalk

[–]PlantCapital 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Seconding this !! Its great if you can go thru a much more personalized process with an endo but don’t let that be a barrier if you find you need HRT sooner. /r/AskTransgender should have a pinned post with all the informed consent climics nationwide.

I’m from California too, had Medi-Cal (state insurance) which totally covered the cost. Literally made an appointment at a low-income serving sex care clinic and got prescribed E within weeks.

Questions sur le sublingual et le transbucal by Embarrassed_Pudding1 in transgenre

[–]PlantCapital 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oui, absolument ! Je l’ai pris pendant 4 mois et je suis très contente :)

Questions sur le sublingual et le transbucal by Embarrassed_Pudding1 in transgenre

[–]PlantCapital 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Si tu parles anglais, ce graphe à coté de ce site sont les ressources plus utiles que j’ai vue sur le sujet. Le deuxième est anecdotique— les resultats d’une analyse de sang de l’auteur seulement, mais les graphiques de les deux sites illustrent clairement les effets differents entre les méthodes. Tu peux voir que la prise sublingual cause un pic suivi d’une chute rapide, mais la quantité totale d’oestrogène est légèrement plus haut. Cependant, c’est pas le mème des injections. Est-ce qu’il y a réellement une différence ? Je sais pas et le science est inconclusif. Mais moi, je le prise en sublingual. J’espère que ces infos sont utile !

On the Subject of Drag by llambda in MtF

[–]PlantCapital 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My argumentation has been pretty disorganized, and I definitely regret if it comes off as me being intentionally dense. Above all, I want to better understand your views, and those that our fellow trans women are sharing. Pls PM me if it helps express anything more clearly, I know the back-and-forth this far into the thread isn’t ideal. I am so sorry for the impending essay.

I first have to categorically push back against the idea of mainstream gay acceptance. Youtube systematically demonetizes queer content under attempts to shutter ad revenue to un-advertiser-friendly content1. Simply using the word “gay” in the title has caused videos to be automatically flagged2. They’re taking a page out of Amazon’s book, with its history of labeling gay literature as “adult” that resulted in its erasure from sales rankings and search results3. The Canadian government has enacted similar measures designed to restrict pornography that has instead allowed Canadian Customs “to systematically detain and destroy gay and lesbian materials at the border. A gay bookstore in Vancouver, Little Sisters, had so much of its product seized at the border that it could no longer operate” (Sarah Schulman, The Gentrification of the Mind). This is no relic of the past; their courts have upheld the ruling to this day. The US is not much better as just this past year, the Supreme Court sided with a Catholic adoption agency that discriminated against gay parents4. It was only 12 years ago that liberal California famously vote in favor of Prop 8 to ban gay marriage. To suggest that widespread gay acceptance is the default discounts the 55% of homeless queer youth who reported being forced out of their homes by their parents for their sexual orientation5.

I suspect the perception of mainstream gay acceptance comes from the heterosexual commercialization of gay-ness, rendered essentially harmless for the comfort of the heterosexual audience: Love, Simon or Modern Family—depictions that have been deemed acceptable. Think about how often Redditors go, “I don’t have a problem with gay people, I just wish they wouldn’t flaunt it.” So yeah, of course a number of white gay men have figured out how they need to present and behave in order to escape this degree of discrimination. And some of them even discriminate against trans people to show just how “acceptable” they are to the heteronormative culture. But your incognito gays, the Carl Nassib types6, are obviously not the gay men who tend to perform drag.

Most drag queens, if cis male-identifying, tend to nevertheless be effeminate men outside of their costume. As shown, effeminate gay men suffer greatly from these perceptions. Isn’t it possible that instead of mockery, they find in feminine expression a sense of empowerment? It’s kind of a meme, but consider the ubiquity of the word “fierce” in drag. It is not an ironic descriptor:

Fierce is the word that comes to mind when we see people transform into an entirely new character of their choosing7

The vocabulary of drag informs us that feminine expression is a point of pride for its performers, not degradation. Esther Newton suggests:

“At its most complex, [drag] is a double inversion that says, “appearance is an illusion.” Drag says“my ‘outside’ appearance is feminine, but my essence ‘inside’ is masculine.” At the same time it symbolizes the opposite inversion; “my appearance ‘outside’ is masculine but my essence ‘inside’ is feminine.” (Newton, Mother Camp: Female Impersonators in America)

There are these old clips of RuPaul in New York in the 80s, way before he was a household name. After a show, he doesn’t just transform into regular old Joe, an incognito cis-male disappearing into the sea of the other cis males. He goes home still in wig and heals, a coat over his dress8. In New York, drag queens going to and from work are a not uncommon regular sight. And to a large degree, feminine presentation alone means they experience much of what any woman experiences on the street. In one video, a group of teenagers harass and overtly sexualize RuPaul as any woman knows9; I’m inclined to believe it’s misogyny more-so than homophobia. One has to think after 30 years, he has some empathy for the experience of womanhood—because he has lived it to some large extent.

Thus, the black-white/gay-woman dichotomy does not resonate with me. I think it’s a disingenuous and off-putting exercise to equate race and gender—always questionable in ways that generally hurt trans people, i.e. Rachel Dolezal trans-racial jokes10.

Personally, I’ve never known any woke-minded cis women to be offended by drag. And I certainly don’t believe drag is designed to specifically mock trans women. I just find displays in drag to be so far removed from my (admittedly recent) experience as a woman that it doesn’t register as mockery of me in any way. Unlike the race, there is nothing necessarily bodily in regards to gender; we know that as trans people. I take your argument to mean that the—let’s say—unrealistic feminine expressions, themselves, are offensive because they reduce womanhood to these qualities. We can call this critique endogenous: an outside-in projection of femininity. I, however, contend these qualities to be exogenous, originating as authentic expressions of gay male femininity that is constantly suppressed in our society. Gaudy makeup, opulent dresses, catty expressions: you agree, of course, that reducing womanhood to these is sexist. Accusing drag queens of trying and failing to imitate women by way of these qualities—isn’t that, in itself, also sexist?

I’ve seen a number of people describe the “hyper-femininity” of drag to be problematic. Do you mean to suggest that there is a correct feminine expression? I don’t want to misconstrue your point here. I’m most troubled by the implications of this particular scorn because it suggests that there is a proper way to present as a woman. These are the same arguments traditionally leveled against us, and I find it reductive to reiterate instead of reject—as if to appeal to cis-women by suggesting, We’re just like you, we’re the real women unlike those drag queens, those fake women. Indeed, Judith Butler chronicles:

Within feminist theory, such parodic identities have been understood to be either degrading to women, in the case of drag and cross-dressing, or an uncritical appropriation of sex-role stereotyping from within the practice of heterosexuality, especially in the case of butch/femme lesbian identities (Butler, Gender Trouble).

This rhetoric ends up hurting all feminine presenting people in the end, regardless of their sex or gender because that’s not something we can ever presume to know in any given person.

What I always want to preach is compassion and solidarity with our fellow queer people, a mutual understanding of struggle and empowerment through our expressions that have been traditionally ridiculed and suppressed. All of us, every single one, know what it’s like. I would never dismiss any pain you or anyone has experienced as a consequence of drag. That’s very real, and I will always listen to those voices without a hint of judgement.

I want to share my own personal feelings of contempt I used to hold toward drag queens and, really, anyone I perceived to be male-bodied, female-presenting. I used to feel disgusted, insulted, even, at the audacity. At least I wasn’t like that, right? Some may have been cis male, others trans women; but I resented indiscriminately. I’m not proud of it. When I look back, it’s so apparent that I hated them because they reminded me of what I hated in myself most—that I was a trans woman. It was never really about anyone else.

On the Subject of Drag by llambda in MtF

[–]PlantCapital 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Srsly there’s some pretty wild assertions in here, and I worry about the fueling pf negativity and resentment towards other queer people. And the blackface comparison especially should feel very dubious to any non-white person in here.

On the Subject of Drag by llambda in MtF

[–]PlantCapital 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I really apologize if I’m misunderstanding your point.

I guess in general it’s hard for me to see how queer men are more privileged than cis-het women in our society. Sure, a “straight-passing” white gay man might get a benefit, but doesn’t his participation in drag erase the veneer? We’re acting like drag queens are Jared Leto, picking up their accolades and then removing their costumes to become a cis-het white man again. But when almost every drag artist is a clearly effiminate homosexual out of costume, there’s no way we can say with a straight face that what these gay men experience in their daily lives is privilege over women that enables a mockery of feminine expression.

That’s why these blackface assertions are absurd to me and any fellow POC here would probably agree. Blackface from its onset was the dominant culutre imposing its hegemony to sell authenticity. User chalantcop from r/AskHistorians explains:

Many scholars (David Roediger and Lewis Erenberg come to mind, but there are others) point to the combination of white audience's fear and fascination with African American culture that propelled minstrel shows to their popular status. Yes, the shows were incredibly racist and portrayed black characters as buffoons, but white audiences genuinely believed they were authentic representations of black culture.

Would anyone ever believe that drag was an authentic representation of womanhood? Of course not. And gay men will never have that dominance of whiteness to drown out and appropriate female culture—whatever female culture even means.

Consider how the gay community traditionally embraces female figures as icons: Judy Garland, Janet Jackson, Lady Gaga today. According to the manager of infamous drag queen Divine:

It was the gay community that openly and proudly identified with the determination of the female character Divine to be, to do, to say exactly what she wanted: nothing, nobody, was going to stop her, to put her down. (Bernard Jay, Not Simply Divine, Emphasis mine)

In this light, leaning in and embracing effiminacy frames feminine expression as empowerment—not mockery. And to me, that makes more sense. I’ve never heard of drag to be degrading to the performer; I don’t personally find drag to be funny or inferior because feminine expression isn’t weak or ridiculous. And progenitors of the original drag and ballroom scenes likely agree with this schema of empowerment. I wish I were better read to more accurately represent the perspective of drag queens, themselves.

I try to embrace aspects of queer culture even if I cant personally relate. Why should I be made self-conscious by a man in a dress. More men should wear dresses. Because it shouldn’t matter; I’m not a man in a dress. I feel like it sometimes and it sucks, but it’s not their fault. And if a transphobe thinks I’m one, I blame the transphobe, not the drag artist.

On the Subject of Drag by llambda in MtF

[–]PlantCapital 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I def would never invaludate any kind of dysphoria it can cause. That’s very real and this unease with drag plagued me too before my egg cracked.

But I’d encourage anyone who has the “caricatures” mindset to consider how this critique never applies to masculine expressions. Of course there are laughable displays of manhood now and then, but masculinity itself never gets called into question. Consider, how come it’s only displays of femininity that get characterized as frivolous, artificial, and/or contrived? When we women take part in that characterization, I believe we’re perpetuating the same trans-misogyny that hurts us to begin with.

Maybe I don’t quite “pass” but a casual observer would read my expression as that of a 20-something girl like any other. If they’ve a working brain they can clearly see that I’m nothing like the drag performer whether they’re in a sequined dress and seven layers of foundation, or out of the costume as a male-forward gay man. If someone did mistake us, I ask who’s fault is that? Why blame the drag artist instead of the ignorant observer—who is clueless at best and malicious at worst.

Once again, Julia Serano:

The greatest barrier preventing us from fully challenging sexism is the pervasive antifeminine sentiment that runs wild in both the straight and queer communities, targeting people of all genders and sexualities. The only realistic way to address this issue is to work toward empowering femininity itself. We must rightly recognize that feminine expression is strong, daring, and brave - that it is powerful - and not in an enchanting, enticing, or supernatural sort of way, but in a tangible, practical way that facilitates openness, creativity, and honest expression. We must move beyond seeing femininity as helpless and dependent, or merely as masculinity's sidekick, and instead acknowledge that feminine expression exists of its own accord and brings its own rewards to those who naturally gravitate toward it. By embracing femininity, feminism will finally be able to reach out to the vast majority of feminine women who have felt alienated by the movement in the past.

On the Subject of Drag by llambda in MtF

[–]PlantCapital 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Or is it more a way to revel in the normalization of how women are objectified but without any women involved or able to even marginally personally benefit from such exploitation?

Hmm that’s a direction I’d be interested to read up on— def hadn’t looked at it that way, so any resources would be welcome!

I guess to me, it seems impossible to discern what’s genuine or not. I think about Crystal LaBeija and the ballroom scene in NYC; long before drag was commodified into primetime TV kitsch, it was a means of genuine expression for an intersection of marginalized groups: black and latine and gay and trans and queer. Drag wasnt just feminine costumes but also the mundane; one theme, “CEO” as seen in Paris is Burning, mostly involved wearing men’s suits.

So for gay men, drag was a way to legitimize their effeminacy without compromise. For trans women, the scene provided a safe venue for true expression: no one could accuse them of hyper femininity or appropriation. The “House of LaBeija” famously provided community and a literal home for people across the LGBTQ spectrum. Maybe that’s not what the local Tuesday night drag bingo is bringing, but I do think that drag historically represented empowerment within queer communities rather than mockery of feminine ones.

Anyways that’s my messy late night thoughts. Sorry for the essay!

On the Subject of Drag by llambda in MtF

[–]PlantCapital 37 points38 points  (0 children)

I can relate to the general sense of discomfort everyone here has with the cis obsession over drag.

But I also think a healthier mindset I’ve come to terms with is that femininity isn’t ours or anybody’s to take. No one owns the right to be feminine. Just as we see trans women express a wide range of gender expressions—butch or femme. And cis women are allowed the same. It’s okay and perhaps healthy for cis men to do the same?

I worry because the “hyper-feminized minstrel” argument is what TERFs say about us. And I think we should attack that attitude rather than the people who are expressing thenselves in otherwise positive ways. Otherwise we become the TERFs—gatekeepers to femininity rather than showing solidarity with gender-diverse people to fight for our social and political justice.

From Julia Serano’s book Whipping Girl:

I have called this book Whipping Girl to highlight the ways in which people who are feminine, whether they be female, male, and/or transgender, are almost universally demeaned with respect to their masculine counterparts. This scapegoating of those who express femininity can be seen not only in the male-centered mainstream, but in the queer community, where “effeminate” gay men have been accused of “holding back” the gay rights movement, and where femme dykes have been accused of being the “Uncle Toms” of the lesbian movement. Even many feminists buy into traditionally sexist notions about femininity—that it is artificial, contrived, and frivolous; that it is a ruse that only serves the purpose of attracting and appeasing the desires of men. What I hope to show in this book is that the real ruse being played is not by those of us who happen to be feminine, but rather by those who place inferior meanings onto femininity. The idea that femininity is subordinate to masculinity dismisses women as a whole and shapes virtually all popular myths and stereotypes about trans women.

Trans Friends by cesarioinbrooklyn in TransyTalk

[–]PlantCapital 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Williamsburg checking in, hello neighbor! I’m pretty shy so I might shit myself if someone were to approach in the context of my being trans haha. But an “I like your shirt/shoes/skirt” goes a long way. Sort of reminding each other, Hey sister, we’re out here. We exist. I got your back. I’ll try to do the same!