Transfem
A community for transfeminine people and experiences.
This is a supportive community for all transfeminine or questioning people. Anyone is welcome to participate in this community but disrupting the safety of this space for trans feminine people is unacceptable and will result in moderator action.
Debate surrounding transgender rights or acceptance will result in an immediate ban.
- Please follow the rules of the lemmy.blahaj.zone instance.
- Bigotry of any kind will not be tolerated.
- Gatekeeping will not be tolerated.
- Please be kind and respectful to all.
- Please tag NSFW topics.
- No NSFW image posts.
- Please provide content warnings where appropriate.
- Please do not repost bigoted content here.
This community is supportive of DIY HRT. Unsolicited medical advice or caution being given to people on DIY will result in moderator action.
Posters may express that they are looking for responses and support from groups with certain experiences (eg. trans people, trans people with supportive parents, trans parents.). Please respect those requests and be mindful that your experience may differ from others here.
Some helpful links:
- The Gender Dysphoria Bible // In depth explanation of the different types of gender dysphoria.
- Trans Voice Help // A community here on blahaj.zone for voice training.
- LGBTQ+ Healthcare Directory // A directory of LGBTQ+ accepting Healthcare providers.
- Trans Resistance Network // A US-based mutual aid organization to help trans people facing state violence and legal discrimination.
- TLDEF's Trans Health Project // Advice about insurance claims for gender affirming healthcare and procedures.
- TransLifeLine's ID change Library // A comprehensive guide to changing your name on any US legal document.
- Rainbow Railroad // A non-profit international humans rights organization helping at risk LGBTQ+ people relocate to safety.
Support Hotlines:
- The Trevor Project // Web chat, phone call, and text message LGBTQ+ support hotline.
- TransLifeLine // A US/Canada LGBTQ+ phone support hotline service. The US line has Spanish support.
- LGBT Youthline.ca // A Canadian LGBT hotline support service with phone call and web chat support. (4pm - 9:30pm EST)
- 988lifeline // A US only Crisis hotline with phone call, text and web chat support. Dedicated staff for LGBTQIA+ youth 24/7 on phone service, 3pm to 2am EST for text and web chat.
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first of all, relax and take a breath.
start by shaving :-)
if you have dark hair and light skin, laser is great for most of your body, and much cheaper than electrolysis (but still very expensive, and still painful)
electrolysis is the only "official" form of permanent hair removal and is very much not underrated, it's just very expensive and time consuming, and works best on small areas - electrolysis makes the most sense on the face (usually after a year or more of laser treatments), and on the genital region in preparation for surgery.
1. start HRT first
I know this sounds like a much later step, but it's actually one of the first things I would do: it is a useful diagnostic step, changes are very slow and it can take a while to even get an appt. to start, and it's extremely low risk and potentially extremely helpful for mental health - you can even stop HRT anytime within the first 3 months without any permanent changes, and after that the only permanent change you risk is having breast bud growth that sticks around.
2. educate yourself
Read any trans related educational material you feel might be useful, but here's a starting list:
3. what you can do to help with dysphoria now
Gender-affirming care is the number one way to alleviate dysphoria: hormone therapy, surgeries, hair removal, etc. should be prioritized and come first.
In the meantime, here are some concrete steps you can take that that have helped me:
Generally, dysphoria is not as bad for me when other things are going well, e.g. if I'm well hydrated, had a good night's sleep, and I'm eating healthy my skin tends to look softer and more feminine and is more likely to look "nice" to me. My mental health is also usually better, I'm less likely to spiral from insecurities and poor self esteem, and so on.
So, follow the basic steps of being healthy as well:
It's less about being perfect and more about doing what you can.
(I've run out of space, will finish in a follow-up comment.)
That's not quite correct. It gets said that way because the US has very specific requirements for what can be called permanent hair removal and what can't. Laser does do permanent hair removal. It just never gets 100% of your hairs, and some of the ones it does get will grow back. But the vast majority of lasered hairs will be zapped, and zapped permanently.
A common approach is to laser the majority of the hair on your face, and then finish off the stragglers with electrolysis.
I've got dark hair and light skin, and I lasered my face between 8 and 9 years ago, and I've never had electrolysis, because I've never needed it. The few hairs that did escape my laser treatment are small enough in quantity that I tweeze them. Maybe 3 or 4 a day. That's pretty permanent hair removal :)
Hey Ada, just giving you a heads up because I don't know if this is something that concerns you, though I assume all you can do probably is ban them from this instance alone.
Take a peek at the almost certainly LLM account that replied to all my latest comments with nonsense, upon my interaction with them. Ctrl-F for my ceicocat comment in this thread, they replied with a nonsense question to that too, and if you want, check their account.
I banned the account