Trans
General trans community.
Rules:
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Follow all blahaj.zone rules
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All posts must be trans-related. Other queer-related posts go to c/lgbtq.
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Don't post negative, depressing news articles about trans issues unless there is a call to action or a way to help.
Resources:
Best resource: https://github.com/cvyl/awesome-transgender Site with links to resources for just about anything.
Trevor Project: crisis mental health services for LGBTQ people, lots of helpful information and resources: https://www.thetrevorproject.org/
The Gender Dysphoria Bible: useful info on various aspects of gender dysphoria: https://genderdysphoria.fyi/en
StainedGlassWoman: Various useful essays on trans topics: https://stainedglasswoman.substack.com/
Trans resources: https://trans-resources.info/
[USA] Resources for trans people in the South: https://southernequality.org/resources/transinthesouth/#provider-map
[USA] Report discrimination: https://action.aclu.org/legal-intake/report-lgbtqhiv-discrimination
[USA] Keep track on trans legislation and news: https://www.erininthemorning.com/
[GERMANY] Bundesverband Trans: Find medical trans resources: https://www.bundesverband-trans.de/publikationen/leitfaden-fuer-behandlungssuchende/
[GERMANY] Trans DB: Insurance information (may be outdated): https://transdb.de/
[GERMANY] Deutsche Gesellschaft für Transidentität und Intersexualität: They have contact information for their advice centers and some general information for trans and intersex people. They also do activism: dgti.org
*this is a work in progress, and these resources are courtesy of users like you! if you have a resource that helped you out in your trans journey, comment below in the pinned post and I'll add here to pass it on
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Indeed! When I think about things I'm mostly thinking about properties, relationships, and feelings. I can't really visualize myself, but I can vividly imagine what it feels like to see myself in the mirror.
I sometimes have a gendered "feeling" about myself that sorta shapes what I expect myself to sound like or be like behaviorally - there is a kind of "being a man" in my own head that can sorta come up more, and then other times I can feel more like a woman - do you have any gendered qualities to those things related to your self concept?
I know that feeling intimately, but being nonbinary it isn't innately manly or womanly, just "me" or "not me".
I had to learn how people's gendered expectations work the hard way, through years of observation and rote memorization.
ah, I am a bit more dissociated and have a harder time recognizing "me" or "not me" - though once dramatic changes have happened I can acknowledge the older photos of me seem very foreign and I wonder how I ever looked that way, which is a kind of "me" vs "not me" feeling / awareness.
That being a woman is "me" is rarely clear to me in a normative sense, it's more that I wish I had been a woman, but that I am not and never will be. Even when I have moments of thinking of myself as a woman, it's a pragmatic social context kind of "being" and not a deeper sense - there is always that asterisks that I'm not "really" a woman.
Some of this is dysphoria, some of this is transphobia - the way they manifest in intersection or as a synthesis of both seem to make it complicated to parse them separately.
In some sense I am not sure learning gender expectations were any different for me - though maybe one difference is that the observation of women and the behaving as a woman feels easier and more natural to me, while behaving like a man always had some cracks in it - I did a good job with my "man drag" (behaving / living as a man), but I always had effeminate cracks or inconsistencies that were hard for me to eliminate or cover up fully - my voice, my hand motions, my expressiveness, my general being made people often think I was maybe gay. But it wasn't as overt as some kids, like I really did hide my "gayness" so I could pass as straight somewhat, I just wasn't amazing at it. Growing a beard and learning to wear certain clothes helped me - as well as learning to just not talk or communicate much, but that easily went out the window when I interacted with someone more. Even in the years prior to my transition when I was probably the most masculine in my whole life, I still had men disclosing to me they are straight as if they were worried I was attracted to them, implying they thought I was gay and that was a necessary boundary.