Quote from: suzifrommd on March 18, 2014, 06:38:07 PM
I hope I'm not one of those ThePhoenix talks about who knows nothing about real women and has never been around them. I feel like I've spent my entire male life drinking in whatever tidbits I can about the way women really are and what they really face. I feel like I got it about 80% right. Post-transition, some stuff surprises me, but mostly it's pretty much what I thought it would be.
For the record, I was not thinking of you when I posted that. I make it a practice to avoid commenting on anyone specific. I do not comment on people's presentation, etc. unless it is to (very rarely) give a compliment. I figure that's a good way to avoid fights. I'll call people out on some of their actions, but I'll sit on my hands and bite my tongue about presentation for good or ill because even compliments to one person may be taken by others as a condemnation by omission of them. But I am not commenting one anyone's specific presentation nor am I in a position to assess whether you have or have not spent time with women (or men or raccoons).
With that said, I will admit that in this instance there is one transwoman who is very difficult for me to keep out of my head. It was an individual that came to an outdoor picnic li attended ast year. Before she came out to join the picnic, she spent two hours in the restroom applying makeup and getting dressed. She wore ornate, blingy jewelry, and a formal gown. To an outdoor picnic with barbecuing going on and games being played. She didn't seem to notice that she was a teeny bit overdressed. I love picnics, but I must admit that it has never occurred to me to wear something like that to one. So unless you are that extreme, you can safely assume that I didn't have you in mind.
With that in mind, I do have a couple of thoughts on the rest of the post, not in the order originally written.
Quote from: suzifrommd on March 18, 2014, 06:38:07 PM
Sorry, but being a woman IS magical. No one from either side of the aisle has posted anything in thousands of posts that has convinced me otherwise. I see what the mothers of the world do, the patience they show, the compassion they feel, the love they give, day in and day out, with very little thanks. Nothing I could achieve as a man could hold a candle to that.
Do you understand how this statement, undoubtedly intended as praise, could become limiting for women? Yes, motherhood is magic. But it's not all there is in life. But if it truly is the best, greatest thing and so much greater than what men can do. . . . Isn't that what women should be doing then? Making babies? Because anything less is somehow lesser?
I can't have kids. It's not a trans* issue for me. I just can't regardless. So am I condemned to a diminished life? Many women with infertility issues struggle with exactly that feeling. Because they are taught that the highest, greatest good they can have in life is to have a child. If womanhood is magic because of motherhood, as you say above, then what does that mean for women with infertility? As a transwoman, you won't be able to have children either. Does that mean you're not magic?
I'm sorry to pick on you. I don't mean this to put you down at all. I just ask these questions so that maybe we can start to think about how these things play out. People perceived as female are powerfully affected by this very perception. But MAAB trans* people seldom give them a second thought.
Quote from: suzifrommd on March 18, 2014, 06:38:07 PM
By some accident of birth, being a woman moves me EXACTLY in the direction I want to move. With transition, I some howacquired the desire to adorn my body with flattering clothes (I do wear pants, but I prefer skirts or skinny jeans. Shows off my legs.) and jewelry. Sorry, but I'm pretty much ThePhoenix's incomprehensible stereotype of a transwoman. Early on, I was given the advice that if I blend it will be easier to pass. I refused to take it. I found my own style which probably makes me stand out, but it also makes me feel like me.
Hey, I already said I live in skinny jeans too.

And for similar reasons. My legs are one of my better features and skinny jeans do flatter them. I also like the way they feel.
I would never say that a person should not dress or express themselves in a way that feels authentic to them. But I would ask the following two questions:
(1) Authentically what? Being authentically you is the most important thing. But it does beg the question of what that means? Is it really authentic femininity or is it something else?
(2) What's with all the focus on clothes? Being a woman is about so much more. So why are we so focused on talking about clothes largely to the exclusion of other things.
Quote from: suzifrommd on March 18, 2014, 06:38:07 PM
The emotional changes are in the direction I want to move, as well. I love the fact that HRT has made me more patient, more accepting, and more tender.
I have to admit I don't know how to respond to this one. I know that testosterone made me more uptight, but I don't remember it making me more tender. This is a challenge for me to discuss in this way because the effects of estrogen feel more like baseline to me. The effects of having taken T feel like changes. E feels like undoing changes. That makes it hard for me to really assess what is the impact of estrogen.