Susan's Place Logo

News:

Based on internal web log processing I show 3,417,511 Users made 5,324,115 Visits Accounting for 199,729,420 pageviews and 8.954.49 TB of data transfer for 2017, all on a little over $2,000 per month.

Help support this website by Donating or Subscribing! (Updated)

Main Menu

Now that I'm in the Androgyn Forest, how do I find my way around?

Started by ativan, July 23, 2012, 09:17:11 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Kinkly

I live it the tree house near the waterfall you can find me swinging on my swing or swimming at the base of the waterfall, pop by anytime
I don't want to be a man there from Mars
I'd Like to be a woman Venus looks beautiful
I'm enjoying living on Pluto, but it is a bit lonely
  •  

Edge

As predicted, I have gotten an apartment in the male city where I stay sometimes as well as my lab where I work, but my home is still in the forest. I don't feel like I quite belong with other residents of the forest since I feel like I belong in the male city, but I also know that the forest is where my heart is and will always be where I belong as well. I am still a wild thing even though I am a male wild thing. A male wild thing that still sometimes refers to himself as "she" and isn't wrong, but isn't any less male because of it.
I wonder how the other residents of the forest are doing. If they consider me one of them or an outsider or both. I wonder if agfrommd has found a place to sit that she likes and if he will come visit me sometime.
I wonder what the people of the city think of me. If they see me as a outsider or as one of them or both.
"The rules and use of a GPS unit just don't apply to the forest." I like that. It allows me to be as contradictory as I am.
  •  

Padma

I feel like I'm doing that flying squirrel, glide-from-tree-to-tree thing - but it's mainly to show off my new waistcoat ;D.

It's such a relief to be outdoors. The air is amazing here.
Womandrogyneâ„¢
  •  

tekla

Live with us in forests of azure.
Out here on the perimeter there are no stars.
Out here we is stoned immaculate."

Now listen to this, and I'll tell you about the heartache
I'll tell you about the heartache and the loss of God.
I'll tell you about the hopeless night.
The meager food for souls forgot.
I'll tell you about the maiden with wrought-iron soul.

I tell you this,
No eternal reward will forgive us now for wasting the dawn.


Jim Morrison
FIGHT APATHY!, or don't...
  •  

Pica Pica

'For the circle may be squared with rising and swelling.' Kit Smart
  •  

tekla

Jim was the real deal alright, even the obscure stuff is brilliance.
FIGHT APATHY!, or don't...
  •  

Pica Pica

'For the circle may be squared with rising and swelling.' Kit Smart
  •  


suzifrommd

Quote from: Edge on September 09, 2012, 11:58:21 AM
I wonder if agfrommd has found a place to sit that she likes and if he will come visit me sometime.

Well, I'm still here in the forest where I belong, but unfortunately I spend my days and some of my evenings in the Male city where I know I don't.

But a few days ago I sneaked into the female city for an afternoon. It was hard getting in, required a lot of work and knowledge. No one said anything (but I did get a couple of weird looks). Despite how hard it was to get in, I really want to go back there, and maybe live there permanently like I always wished I could. Except I really belong in the forest and I don't know if I'd be happy staying there.

Oct. 12, I have an appointment with a therapist, someone who will (hopefully) help me figure this all out.

And Edge, I'm happy to visit any time, wherever we both end up.
Have you read my short story The Eve of Triumph?
  •  

ativan

Just like IRL, there are many people who live in more than one place.
Even live different lives, depending one where they are.

There isn't anything wrong, even remotely with that.
Who hasn't tried out different life styles, one way or the other?
It's less and less so as we grow older, as we tend to settle into a groove that suites us.

When it comes to gender, many have secrets that they either ignore or act on. Maybe.
For those of us who have grown into their groove, making the decision to do something about it can be difficult.
Only in the sense that we are so used to where have ended up or become.
For those who are still trying to find their selves, are willing to pay attention to gender, it's a difficult decision.
We aren't sure, either way, in the beginning as to were we will end up.
That would be the 'oh for sure' natural effect of making such a decision in a binary world.
There are many who just pass by the forest, intent on their getting to the next place.
But there are those who stop by, maybe come back to stay, maybe to visit.
So long as they aren't doing something to like, burn the place down, they are always welcome.
Just as we aren't expected to do the same in the cities. It's all good when we respect were we are.

Whether you live in a city and visit the country, were the forest seems to be, it's all OK.
They have parks in most cities, were they go to be with the trees, so to speak.
Where you choose to be doesn't disqualify you from being being someone who belongs in the city or forest.
There are many people from the forest who have a duality in their lives.
I don't know for sure, but I imagine the same holds true for city dwellers.
Why not? Because it's unsettling or confusing? Don't let it bother you. You don't need to.
Everyone does this whether it shows, whether they are willing to admit it or not.
We do this to one degree or another, at one time or another. You'll live through it, we do that.

There are no rules as to just how much of one place or the other you belong to.
Belong in both? Many do just that.
Don't let the strangeness of discovery ruin a perfectly fine journey to find yourself.
It gets better, and if it doesn't, there isn't anything that says you have to do anything in the first place.
It's up to you, and you only. A therapist is nothing more than a guide in life.
There's no guarantee that they know any better than you will, where you are going.
But they are usually pretty good to whatever degree, at keeping you from stepping off a cliff.

Don't let that 'did I remember to turn the stove off' effect ruin your journey.
And never let anyone tell you you have to go to or live in any one place.
It's your life, live it that way.

It's always good to visit with friends,
Ativan
  •  

foosnark

Sometimes the forest is the only real thiing, and the cities may as well be Atlantis and El Dorado.

Sometimes I live in Atlantis and worry about it sinking.  But I get postcards from El Dorado that have my own handwriting on them.

("Postcards From El Dorado" sounds like a movie title.)
  •  

tekla

We live in a time when forests are all nice and we get all tree-huggie in them (the woods are lovely dark and deep).  But that is a modern invention.  In pre-industrial (ie. before radical deforestation) forests were dark and scary places into which only the bravest people ventured, only if they had too and, at that, never at night.  (See: Grimm's Fairy Tales)  People who lived in the forest were considered beyond civilization - a place beyond the fences that kept the dark creatures of the night away - literally beyond the pale.  Forests were often trackless and disorientating, easy to get lost in and hard to find a way out of.  They were almost always haunted.

So the people of the forest have a different set of rules, use a different compass in the land beyond GPS, and live lives where the constraints and customs of the townspeople no longer apply.  And the old warning still apply, that's its easy to walk in, hard to get out.
FIGHT APATHY!, or don't...
  •