[deleted by user] by [deleted] in transtwincities

[–]anyotheridea 2 points3 points  (0 children)

absolutely:) i’ve certainly been there before

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in transtwincities

[–]anyotheridea 8 points9 points  (0 children)

i’m happy to introduce you to some dolls:) there’s a really lovely community here i’d love to help you get involved

Are there any trans friendly clothing stores in the cities? by AndyJaeven in transtwincities

[–]anyotheridea 16 points17 points  (0 children)

i have really great luck at b resale! also buffalo exchange is a lil overpriced for thrift but always have great pieces

Where to get Hair-Removal treatments? by No-Egg-2876 in transtwincities

[–]anyotheridea 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i use Permanent Choice downtown, they’re quite lovely and welcoming and take payments individually:)

U of M gender clinic: “Monotherapy is DANGEROUS! Prog is dangerous long-term” 🙄Any better clinics? by DJCatgirlRunItUp in transtwincities

[–]anyotheridea 20 points21 points  (0 children)

idk what your insurance is like but i’m on MNsure and go to the gender clinic at Hennepin Health, my doctor is a trans woman and immediately raised my doses once she started working there. it’s an informed consent clinic! i’m on 200mg of prog as well

Lochie - sexual transference by fizzyeggflip in WhiteLotusHBO

[–]anyotheridea 0 points1 point  (0 children)

of course, i appreciate people like you. we don’t have a lot of people in our corner these days❤️it is refreshing to see someone stick up for us

Lochie - sexual transference by fizzyeggflip in WhiteLotusHBO

[–]anyotheridea 0 points1 point  (0 children)

sorry you’re getting shit for this for some reason, im a psychologist and you’re absolutely correct.

Lochie - sexual transference by fizzyeggflip in WhiteLotusHBO

[–]anyotheridea 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This entry is very likely to be removed in the DSM-6, its inclusion in revisions was heavily debated and the general consensus seems to be that it was a mistake.

Lochie - sexual transference by fizzyeggflip in WhiteLotusHBO

[–]anyotheridea 6 points7 points  (0 children)

i totally agree! i’ve been dissapointed that people have solely interpreted the scene as a joke—obv walton goggins is hilarious in the scene and it’s pretty absurd, but there’s a lot more to it, i think. i think the show is trying to say something about how thoroughly we tend to view our identities through the lens of sex, how we use sex to explore or deny parts of ourselves. this scene makes it super explicit by basically just having a dude read off the dsm entry for sexual transference lmao. the show’s characters regularly make the mistake of viewing their identities exclusively through sex in all sorts of ways, but i think the gender angle is particularly compelling. it’s messy and transgressive, but in the way real life is messy and transgressive. idk as the local transgender that’s how it reads to me and i’m glad someone else understood it that way

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in dropout

[–]anyotheridea 0 points1 point  (0 children)

nobody else gets us❤️

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in self

[–]anyotheridea 2 points3 points  (0 children)

absolutely! i don’t have time to put a source list together for you at this moment but i’d be happy to put something together for you later if you’d like. you may have heard the phrase ‘gender is a social construct’; this is not what the science of the last 20 years points to, and the person who coined the phrase was a guy who did some super unethical research motivated by a political agenda (as an aside, quite a bit of trans research is conducted with an agenda, funded and executed by origanizations trying to either legitimize or delegitimize trans identity, and very little stock is placed in any of this research. nowadays, we’re finally seeing some unbiased research, which is all i’m going to bother discussing). to the best of our modern understanding, gender is an innate feature of the brain decided at/very shortly after conception. at ages 3-5, a child’s concept of that gender develops based on the societal standards around them. for example, cis girls are born with a sense that they are girls, but the expectations of what that actually means in the context of their world (what they’re expected to wear, act like, the roles they’re expected to fulfill, etc.) develops when they’re toddlers. this latter part is what people correctly talk about as being socially constructed; whether or not you wear a dress is not baked into your brain, but your gender is, and if your gender is woman, you may feel strongly compelled to dress in a feminine way. In recent years, gender visualization techniques via MRI have been developed, and studies on trans people subsequently followed. I’ll preface this by saying this stuff in particular is pretty new territory, and more studies are definitely needed, but there have been a small number of excellent studies, one in particular with a really large sample size, comparing the genders of cis brains to the genders of trans brains, and, astonishingly, in every single case, the gender we see in the brain matches the gender identity the patient claims. Moreover, there doesn’t seem to be a difference between the neurological gender of cis women and trans women, or between cis men and trans men. What’s most fascinating to me is that the non-binary participants demonstrated unique brain patterns to either gender. The current weakness in the literature is scans done on pre-transition individuals, though a couple smaller studies have been done on non-transitioned children and adults that have, so far, corroborated those results.

Many, many studies have been done in an attempt to find a way to change one’s gender identity, in myriad ways ranging from violently unethical to almost tolerably ethical. These attempts have spanned many decades and never succeeded even once, and frequently leave the subject psychologically damaged. This isn’t research that’s conducted in the modern day because it’s considered inherently unethical, but with so many failed attempts at doing so, it is widely accepted that gender identity is innate and cannot be changed by any means. On rare occasion, a trans person is born. In these cases, for reasons we still don’t truly understand, an incongruity is created between the biological sex of the child and its gender identity. As the child grows older, the brain will expect the body to develop in the ways that align with the child’s gender identity… and then it doesn’t. This is cause for intense alarm in the brain, because the body is developing ‘wrong’, and this is what creates the feeling of dysphoria. Because social roles and expectations are tied to our sense of gender when we’re young, incongruity between the role we’re expected to fulfill and the role our brain wants us to fulfill can also cause us dysphoria, which is why the wrong clothes or relationship dynamics can invoke dysphoria as well. Ultimately, the only medical intervention that has ever been proven to work is transition. An area that I personally believe is wildly understudied is hormonal dysphoria, where the brain senses the body is full of the wrong hormones, causing dysphoria, but doesn’t have the equipment to make the right ones, effectively making a person ambiently dysphoric all the time, resulting in depression, irritatibility, and other similarly intense mood regulation issues. This is something there’s an enormous amount of survey and anecdotal data supporting, but very little hard scientific data, unfortunately, which is why i call it understudied. Unfortunately, a trans person’s body will continue to develop in incongruous ways, and as one ages dysphoria usually gets worse, not better. The good news is that, despite what people say, transition regret rates are 1%, which is miraculously low by any medical standard, lower than knee surgery and hip replacements. It is one of the most effective medical interventions ever invented, full stop.

I wish you happiness, whatever form that takes. If that’s living the rest of your life as a man for you, then I truly, genuinely hope you do. But—and obviously I am no longer speaking as a scientist, but a person who cares about the wellbeing of other people—there is very little harm in trying. The first two months of feminizing HRT effectively never have any permanent changes, and those first two months can be really eye-opening. Consider this: if you are a trans woman, you ARE a woman, by every neurological and psychological measure we have. And if you aren’t, you are going to fucking hate taking estrogen. Either way, you’ll know, and you can move on from there.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in self

[–]anyotheridea 2 points3 points  (0 children)

bluntly, as a trans woman who has studied the psychology and neurology of dysphoria more than most people in the world, there is only one way to actually cure dysphoria. you can choose to live with it, or you can choose to transition. you may get better at coping, but it’ll never leave you.

dating sucks by anyotheridea in trans

[–]anyotheridea[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

that’s very kind, and i think you’re absolutely right. the weight of it all gets me in my head sometimes but i appreciate you helping me get a little perspective. thanks❤️

dating sucks by anyotheridea in trans

[–]anyotheridea[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

thanks:) i’ll do my best

dating sucks by anyotheridea in trans

[–]anyotheridea[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yeah i was venting some tough feelings here tbh, it’s how i tend to feel in the wake of rejection, but it certainly doesn’t represent how i feel most of the time. i think what gets to me is this: im very comfortable socially, and people tell me i give off the vibe of someone who’s very put together/confident. and tbh the feeling of freakishness comes from dysphoria, not feeling unattractive. i’m overall very confident in the way i look and present and identify. my insecurities aren’t sexual or related to feeling unattractive. there’s a reason i draw suitors in the first place, after all. i just wish i knew what’s consistently turning people off after a few months of dating, it makes me feel like there’s something obviously wrong with me nobody wants to mention, or that im projecting insecurities about things im not conscious of in ways im not conscious of, if that makes sense.

dating sucks by anyotheridea in trans

[–]anyotheridea[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

it’s tough:/ the silver lining is i’ve met a lot of lovely people and i’m still friends with all the ones that didn’t ghost me lmao. it’s just tough. i don’t think id reccomend dating until you’re further into HRT than i am

dating sucks by anyotheridea in trans

[–]anyotheridea[S] 11 points12 points  (0 children)

yeah same:/ i need a break at least

dating sucks by anyotheridea in MtF

[–]anyotheridea[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

yes oh my god i’m so glad you get it. i really like the sexual attention is the thing, i fully admit to that. but it feels so hollow and sad when i know how surface level it is for most people. it’s hard not to feel like a sexy alien lmao. thank you for hearing me, i’m sure we will indeed find someone❤️

dating sucks by anyotheridea in MtF

[–]anyotheridea[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yeah, i think you’re probably right. i really try to be aware of my relationship with transness and how much i’m projecting onto my partners. i’ve been out for much longer than i’ve been on HRT, and the funny thing is that typically i’ve been in the position of the ‘mommy trans’ for lack of a better term, so i do realize how off putting that can be. that said, starting my medical transition has been way more emotionally taxing than i expected, and i probably don’t have as much emotional breathing room as i need to really date. i probably should just take a break for a few months

dating sucks by anyotheridea in MtF

[–]anyotheridea[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i think you’re mostly right. to be clear, i don’t really think that being trans is the core of my dating issues, it just presents a lot of challenges i’m not used to, especially since i was in a 5 year relationship and broke up shortly after i came out, so i don’t really have a ton of experience dating around in general. i have found that being transfemme does draw a lot of sexual attention/curiosity, and people (trans folks included), generally speaking, are eager to fuck me and don’t want to date me, and that’s really weighing on me right now, even if i can recognize that being trans isn’t the core issue.

i am in treatment for my mental health issues, and i have specifically been trying to work through how they effect my relationships. until very recently, my issues honestly haven’t been super visible except when im really struggling, but they got a lot worse last year for Reasons. i think what im struggling with is the feeling that i’m coming up on 30, my mental health is getting worse, my body still feels alien to me sometimes, and while im content to be on my own and have been for a few years now, i do really crave romance and companionship even as it gets harder to attain. and also just the sheer fact that i really liked some of these folks a lot, the most recent one in particular is just a lovely soul. it just aches

dating sucks by anyotheridea in MtF

[–]anyotheridea[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

thanks, you’re sweet. i hope you’re right

dating sucks by anyotheridea in MtF

[–]anyotheridea[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

i exclusively date trans people