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Feel like dancing

Started by nicki, February 08, 2013, 06:03:35 AM

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nicki

Hi Everyone,

It's Friday night. I'm in Nicki mode. I'm listening to a few tunes. Suddenly I'm dancing around the lounge room like I haven't in years ... and loving it   :laugh:

In boy mode I never dance, too embarrassed and/or not interested.  :(

The real me emerging again  :)

Woo hoo!

Hugs

Nicki xxx













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spacial

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nicki

Hi Spacial,

Yes, I'm having a ball, with only a very minor amount of alcohol involved  ;) But as a professional graphic designer who relies on emotions and feelings to create work, I start to wonder just what else have I been hiding from the world .... ???

I can't wait to unleash Nicki on a permanent basis  ;D

xxx
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Elsa

:) Way to go girl! I've always thought dancing is more fun when you're a girl  ;)

Have fun!!! :)
Sometimes when life is a fight - we just have to fight back and say screw you - I want to live.

Sometimes we just need to believe.
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KayCeeDee

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Lesley_Roberta

For years I have been a good dancer, maybe a great dancer.

I never really gave it a lot of thought till I clued in why.

Well it is no secret that the world thinks most men suck at dancing.

So I guess not really being one is probably why I both like to dance and actually can.

I never had a problem dancing with the girls ie going up on the dance floor and just enjoying the fact I was the only male body there. But then I suppose I just felt 'comfortable' dancing as one of the girls.

I have been told I dance like a girl. A much delayed thank you I suppose is in order :)

But alas, my home town, it is devoid of decent dance locations, especially for my age, where I think they expect me to go to boring pseudo country dances (yuck). Currently, I go for walks, and I listen to my tunes (actually my son's tunes, he has great tastes). I am generally in my own world, and I like walking at night, alone, and in my mind I am at a night club and I am wearing a to die for outfit, and I am dancing like I could when I was young.

And regardless of my lack of interest, the thing is, a great mental image requires that I am driving the guys wild with my moves, and getting a lot of flirting in, but really, that is just my mind saying, well of course, I look incredible after all.

I wish I really could go dancing, but my disability would be incredibly angry with me the next day.
And I live in a lot of fear of pain. I recall when I moved last, I was so exhausted and totally spent, that for 2 weeks I was dangerously suicidal, and it took me a full year to get over the shock of the effort from moving.

So a night out on the town, I suppose that is likely condemned to only happen in my imagination.
Well being TG is no treat, but becoming separated has sure caused me more trouble that being TG ever will be. So if I post, consider it me trying to distract myself from being lonely, not my needing to discuss being TG. I don't want to be separated a lot more than not wanting to be male looking.
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nicki

Hi Lesley_Roberta,

I'm sorry to hear that dancing is not an option for you, I hope for you that one day it may be.

For me, from the age of 17 until I was 22, (when I moved from England to Australia), I was all girl, (at least in my mind). I had long blonde hair in a pony tail and danced all the time, but I panicked, got a flat top and retreated in to boy mode so as to safely survive living in a new country. Dancing, femininity and real emotional evolvement disappeared from my life. I did come out to my SO when first met within 3 weeks of arrival in Oz, and for a while Nicki was alive and well but she (my SO) said that she would rather that I stayed in boy mode so I reluctantly complied.

25 odd years later, here I am, I have re come out to my SO, and Nicki is starting to remerge again, along with all the emotions, joys and now dancing that she needs  ;D

I hope that you find some relief from the disability that afflicts you, I do understand what pain management entails as I am currently looking after my mother who is in a similar situation from a car accident 15 years  ago. It's very difficult.

gentle hugs

Nicki xxx
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JLT1

My wife and I met at a dance.  She was a ballroom instructor, I had rhythm and wanted to learn.  We even competed for a while.  Now, 20 years after that first meeting, we still dance.  When we got to a certain level, I had to start learning the woman's steps and the woman's movements so that I could lead them and put myself where I needed to be.  Dancing as a woman is so much more fun.  That is one big thing I look forward to doing once I get up the nerve to go out in public as myself - dancing as me - Jennifer.
To move forward is to leave behind that which has become dear. It is a call into the wild, into becoming someone currently unknown to us. For most, it is a call too frightening and too challenging to heed. For some, it is a call to be more than we were capable of being, both now and in the future.
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