Susan's Place Logo

News:

Since its founding in 1995 Susan's Place forums have blossomed into a truly global lifeline. To date we've delivered roughly 1.4 billion page views to hundreds of millions of unique visitors, guided more than 41,000 registered members through 1,985,081 posts and 188,474 topics across 193 boards, and—most importantly—helped save tens of thousands of lives by connecting people to vital information and support at their most vulnerable moments.

Main Menu

I'd have much rather...

Started by RhinoP, December 01, 2011, 12:10:45 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

RhinoP

I'd much rather have been bullied in school for "Haha, is that a guy or a girl? He looks so girlie I can't even tell!" than "Ew, that guy looks like a caveman, who in the world would want to talk to him?"

That's something I thought up when thinking about my old therapist's argument that my personal GID is caused the fact I went through bullying about my extremely caveman-like features, which haven't been considered handsome since 1975. But I don't care about bullying, I can be bullied to the end of time: I just want the bullies to say the things that secretly make me happy. Lady Gaga obviously secretly likes it when people call her a freak or she wouldn't dress the way she does, and I wish I was female-looking to the point the only thing bullies could say is "Is that a man or a woman!?"

Random post, but it makes a point.  ::)
  •  

caramelbook

Nobody likes being bullied in any case: what about if you were a boy who didn't look 'caveman-ish'? How do you compare that alternative reality to yourself as feminine?
  •  

Felecia

I'd rather agree. If I was back in high school for example. I would rather be teased for looking like a girl or at least the people not quite sure, androgenous. To be looked at as a caveman or vey masculine would be depressing. Why?  Because I want to be seen as as myself, true self inside. If they see me as feminine and so forth then good, that's who I want to be seen as.

  •