Quote from: lxndr on May 22, 2014, 06:35:41 AM
Yeah because I do this just because I'm too weak not to bow to societies standards, nothing to do with having dysphoria and trying to keep my sanity at all...
So... what's the biggest reason it wanes on your sanity? I'm guessing you and your pet (if applicable) seldom have an issue with guessing what gender you are; if you do have issues with guessing your own gender and misgendering yourself at the store, then feel free to correct me if I'm wrong, but I'm guessing that the standards and expectations of society
do play some part in this --if it didn't, I'd seriously go out dressed like Divine every day, but because that would get me misgendered more than now, because the expectation is that men who are Queens only dress like that at certain times and places, and that misgendering at that rate
would tear at my sanity and bring the dysphoria back in full force, I don't, because interacting with others isn't just about me, it's about other people, too. I mean, heck, part of the reason I had so much dysphoria previously (and do still get those moods, on occasion, just no-where near as much as I used to) is because other people, especially those clerks at the stores and hair cutters and what-not, couldn't see the real me, which is male, they saw a 4'11" stature, a 38K bra size, no evidence of having shaved off facial hair, and they heard a voice that sounded like Jeaneane Garafalo's and could sing a clear dramatic mezzo-soprano.
The way people treated me is the biggest factor of what affected me, and they treated me that way because what they saw and heard didn't match their expectations for a "male" presentation by a pretty wide margin. The external affects the internal, the physical affects the mental/emotional/spiritual, and that's generally true for most people. If that's not true for you, and how people treat you has genuinely no effect on your mood/sanity/psyche, well, then, clearly you're an exception, but if all that does have an effect on you, then what good is it going to do to deny the role that society's expectations play? I'm genuinely curious.
And I'm explaining this because everything I've seen to this point in my life, in myself and others, points to its truth. Yeah, I'm
ultimately transitioning more for myself than others (and the same goes for every TS people I personally know), but because humans are social creatures, how our societies react to us
does come up and affect how we feel, at least from time-to-time.
Quote from: Rossiter on May 22, 2014, 04:51:40 PM
Am I the only person who's never really corrected pronouns? Early/pre-transition I didn't exactly want to go around outing myself as trans to a bunch of random strangers, which is what it would have amounted to when I didn't really pass. [...snip...]
I did ask my family to start using male pronouns in public once I was on t for awhile, mainly because it would've been really weird and awkward for everyone if they didn't. That's the only time I ever asked for certain pronouns.
If that's what works for you, great. It just seems clear that it doesn't work for some, which is where advice on how to deal with the situation comes from. But hey, if that's honestly what works for you, rock on.

Quote from: christopher on May 23, 2014, 12:47:18 AM
I'm so glad this thread is around right now. Today, I got a message from the bank that there was fraud on my account. I called the number. They asked me if this was Christopher xxxx. I said yes. But then the lady kept calling me miss and I never corrected her. So then later I had to call the bank again and this time I was talking to a guy. I identified myself and explained why I was calling. He says "your name is Christopher?" even though we just established that.I say yes. Then a minute later he says miss. That was the only time but I didn't correct him. And I was talking in a low voice on purpose. I didn't think my voice was that female. I'm so frustrated with myself. I didn't correct either of them. And yes, I'm early one and it does make me feel like I'll never pass 
If you're less than a year into HRT, trust me, it *will* change your voice. I still get "miss" or "ma'am" on the phone occasionally, even going on seven years in, but less so when i first wake up (I guess "groggy" sounds like "male" to more people? wtf;idk). In most people, the vocal chords don't start to thicken until at least six months in (based on my own experiences and what I've noticed from the report of others in various places over the last decade), and the voice doesn't really seem to "mature" until about two to four years in (as a corrolary, most cis- boys start to experience voice changes around the age of 13, so go watch reruns of shows like
Malcolm In the Middle, actually, that's a great one, cos you pretty much watch Frankie Muniz progress from the ages of 12/13 to 18, and his voice gets significantly different about every 18-24 months), it's not a fast process at all, but it WILL get better. :-)
Quote from: blink on May 23, 2014, 10:20:18 AM
Social cues are badly limited in text, so I'm trying not to assume, but this sounded like unnecessary attitude-slinging to me. [...snip...]
And intellectually knowing the words are meant to be polite, and actually taking that into account when responding, are two separate things. I've seen too many comments online promoting being rude and nasty as a good response to even accidental misgendering. That means there are people who, at least in that situation, respond to attempted politeness with deliberate rudeness.
Would it be seen as a gesture of good will to assure you that I wasn't slinging unnecessary attitude?
:-)