Quote from: Not-so Fat Admin on March 02, 2013, 01:59:14 PM
Eh, no idea where you're going with this. But I certainly had no social support or connections at all during my first puberty. It was a death and I treated it like one.n my case.
Okay, I started trying to find the essay I'd read, with no luck so far, but at least some of what I recall was similar to
an abstract that I see you brought up here a few years ago.
Not really the same specific issues that I recall from the article I'm still trying to find, but some of the points seem relevant. Unfortunately, I don't have ready access to the full article, and am not in a position to go spending money on someone's possibly idiotic academic rambles. The discussion in that old thread, though, is probably as relevant as anything that might be framed in sociology-speak.
The gist, in lay terms, of what I remember, at least, tended to center on the fact that FTMs tend more often to find connections to lesbian communities, as individuals. In my personal experience, I know that whatever social skills I developed did tend to come out of my ability to connect with women, both women who were part of a fairly open lesbian community during college, and earlier, in high school, with a small circle of friends, nearly all of whom were women. This is statistically and anecdotally
not an experience that I tend to find all that common among MTFs, but is one that plays out quite differently, but still seems to be much more frequent (and often seens to be deeper and more far-reaching in many individual stories from FTMs than I recall mine being, especially in the early teen years).
Please let me be clear, that greater perceived frequency does not mean this is by any means true for
all FTMs.
As with anything like this, statistical observations are meaningless when it comes to individual histories and narratives.