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

Feeling Female

Started by Tori, June 08, 2014, 08:30:46 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

stephaniec

for me I am who I am. My personality is exactly the same as it has always been . the packaging is changing but I'm not I just always viewed my self female
  •  

Tori

This has really turned into a cool thread.


  •  

Kimberley Beauregard

I sometimes "feel female", but I think it's just euphoria I get when I imagine doing everyday stuff while presenting as a woman.  I've been told I look very happy in my cross dressing photos.
- Kim
  •  

peky

Quote from: suzifrommd on June 08, 2014, 11:48:01 AM
but I still didn't feel like a woman.

If you asked cis women, most of them would pooh-pooh the idea that there even is such a thing.

So I've come to the conclusion that gender is so complicated, it's better just to decide what we want it to mean for us, rather than trying to figure out where we fit according to some standard.

How can you or anybody, who has never been a woman, and starts down the path of HRT and/or RLE know ? It is impossible to know without a frame of reference.

I think the best you can do is live like a woman, see how are are treated, see how you feel after a few years of HRT and RLE, and compare to the memories of when you were male.

I have asked several cis-female, and none could answer the question, all of them told me that they have never ponder the question. Most of them told me they just kind of know they are females and they are different than the boys at a very fundamental psychological and physical level.

I never felt like a boy, so now or then (pre HRT and RLE), I always felt female. I do not struggle with this issue but I found facinating
  •  

judithlynn

Hi Everyone this is a really nice and interesting thread.

I have had the experience of transitioning twice ( I first transitioned in the UK, about 26 years ago). The first time I transitioned I lived full time as a woman for just over 2 years.  was working as a Secretary/receptionist , dressing as a womam full time, on HRT and I  had a group of really strong and loving women friends around me especially a couple of very close ones. (These were the ones that gave all my "male clothes: to the charity shop to make sure I was 100% committed)

This female bonding really helped me to feel totally female 100% of the time. It wasn't that I just dressed very in a feminine manner (I only wore skirts and dresses) nor , that I wore make up, perfume or acted  in a womanly way,. It was all these things and with the mental changes too. The calmness, the  gracefulness, the need to think about how I looked, people (including men) giving me flowers, couples treating me totally as a woman. All of these things plus the physical changes, the soft skin, made me not conscious of feeling female. I just was  female every minute of every day.

Omn of the things I really enjoyed and is something I am doing now on my second transition stage, was to have a pampering day at the beauty therapist once a month. Sometimes I went on my own, sometimes with a girlfriend.

I used to make a day of it. Facial, Eyebrow shape and tint, eyelash tint and lash extensions, Underarm and arm wax; full leg, tummy (abdomen) and full biknei line wax (I always had a Hollywood (Landing strip) wax; full pedicure and manicure including french tips or polish, body massage then makeup. In the warmer months I also had a full spray tan.

Being pampered in the beauty salon is just about the very best way I can think of feeling totally female.
Hugs
:-*
Hugs



  •  

sad panda

See, I never understood this. i never felt female, no matter how outwardly I seem female. There was no like, magic sense or something.... It is what convinces me i should start living as a boy again.. cuz I'm not validating myself or anything by living as a girl, just being allowed to be honest about my personality.
  •  

Jill F

I only can ever really know is what it's like to feel like me.   All I know is I like "happy" me better than "who cares if I die tomorrow" me.  The rest is gravy.  And I like gravy.  A lot.
  •  

Mermaid

How does one "feel" female?

It's an odd concept... To feel you're a gender. Does that happen once you become an embodiment of stereotypes? Like a caricature of what we perceive one sex to be?

Frankly, I don't think anyone ever felt like anything but themselves, and why should you want to, really?

You're yourself, if you identify with women better, then that's enough to make you one, I think? I doubt any women "feel" like women, they just feel themselves and don't give it any thought... I guess you can know you're a woman but what does feeling like one mean?
  •  

Sammy

Huh, assuming that a lot of gender-related stuff go off during social interactions... and assuming that I dont know "how", but do feel "when" it happens, it is mostly when being around other people. Lets say, nothing makes it feel female more than when receiving small and kinda meaningless acts of validation - stepping out of elevator and bumping into several men, smiling for being a bit awkward, letting them pass first (cause You suddenly dont feel very happy about having so many guys behind Your back), seeing them opening a door, then turning around to You and gesturing to let You pass... walking among them and suddenly feeling so small in comparison...
The sum of really small and meaningless things and actions makes really feel that way :)

When being alone, such thoughts tend to stay away from this airy-head :), I simply live without thinking who or what I am.
  •  

suzifrommd

Since first reading this thread, I've started watching myself, trying to figure out in myself what my gender feeling is.

I think the problem is not that I don't feel female. I do, some of the time, especially when I'm using feminine mannerisms or voice or doing some classically female activity.

The problem is that I feel male some of the time. That I definitely identify as male on occasion.

I hate that. I don't want to identify/feel/see my self as male, pretty much ever. But I do.
Have you read my short story The Eve of Triumph?
  •  

Sammy

Quote from: suzifrommd on June 10, 2014, 06:08:13 AM
The problem is that I feel male some of the time. That I definitely identify as male on occasion.
I hate that. I don't want to identify/feel/see my self as male, pretty much ever. But I do.

Being/feeling non-binary is a dirty job at times. But somebody gotta do it ;).
  •  

Tori

I mean, I get the point, and often embrace it myself, that we just feel like ourselves. We don't feel gender.


But why then were we dysphoric to the point of needing to transition?

I am surprised often enough at how much my life has changed on HRT. But those changes have not changed who I feel I am. Not at my core. If anything, I feel more like me than ever before and I kinda' dig it. I am just the one who makes the choices and drives the car.

The tactile feeling of female clothing is something that makes me feel female. Especially now that the garments and undergarments are really starting to fit my shape better. I want to go shopping...

And yes, social interactions where people treat me as a female are remarkably helpful. Men treat women differently and women treat each other differently. I am impressed at how easily some folks accept me for who I am and not who I was. Still got some learnin' to do, but it is oh so fun.

And boobs. They are kinda noticeable all the time. They keep moving after I stop. They get in the way. They feel nice and hurty at the same time.

All this stuff can be overwhelming one moment, and have me going, "Is this it?" the next.

I usually dream I am in transition now. That is cool.


  •  

Tessa James

One thing I was sure of prior to accepting myself as TG was not feeling like a man or a boy.  I think that it is difficult to know what a typical female feels like until we are socialized and living as one and that feeling has been validating for me.  How much is gender roles vs gender identity? IDK
Open, out and evolving queer trans person forever with HRT support since March 13, 2013
  •  

Handy

Quote from: Tori on June 10, 2014, 02:25:49 PM

But why then were we dysphoric to the point of needing to transition?


I can offer my experience:

I long held off on transitioning precisely because I knew if I DID transition, I'd still be the same person, and I didn't need to physically BE female in order to do stereotypical 'female' things; to assume one must be female in order to be verbose, to enjoy shopping, to wear dresses, to be emotional, etc., was to me, to be as sexist as those who forbid me from doing those things in the first place for being 'male'.

I continued on doing whatever the hell I felt like, social consequences/gender-binary be damned, convinced my dysphoria was the result of being gender-programmed. Gender is a purely social construct right? I thought there was no such thing as "gender-identity", that identifying as "male" or "female" was dependent entirely upon how you were raised, and that I was just a nutjob who needed a good kick in the pants. (If you have even a tenuous grasp of human biology and/or psychology and/or the numerous case studies which contradict this perception, you realize I was way, way off, but I beg your understanding as I was a stupid teenage armchair philosopher/psychologist)

It was only after trying this for a couple years that I accepted I still wasn't happy (in fact more miserable than ever), and this approach had in no way ever remedied my GD in the slightest. There was a profound disconnect between my mind and physical body. I may have been expressing myself in whatever way I chose, but try as I might I never overcame the trigger of seeing myself in the mirror. It was only after doing my homework, seeing the physical evidence for transsexualism, being exposed to the error in my (quite frankly TERF'y) theories, realizing that in 22 years of telling myself I could "beat this" I'd never come any closer to actually doing so, and realizing that the alternative was ultimately spiraling deeper and deeper into depression ending in suicide, that I chose life and decided to pursue transition.

I'm still me, and I'll always be me. The pains of GD have steadily begun to subside, despite never 'feeling female', and for once I'm a happy, productive member of society.

tldr:  I transitioned because transsexualism is a physical condition, and transition is, as of this moment, the only viable treatment.



On HRT 2 years - Full time 1/7/14
EE-Comp Engineering Student and Cartoon Lover
  •  

Jill F

Quote from: Tori on June 10, 2014, 02:25:49 PM

But why then were we dysphoric to the point of needing to transition?


I wasn't always.  I sucked it up for decades.  I seriously thought I could die with my deepest, darkest secret intact.  And I damned near did.  Twice.

The thing about dysphoria is that it seems to be a progressive thing more often than not.  I could still live as a guy with the level of it I had even ten years ago and not have needed to transition.   It got to the point where I didn't want to get out of bed, spent half the day crying in a fetal position and the other half completely drunk.  Transitioning wasn't even remotely on the table for me until my therapist told me that my brain was starving for estrogen and that I was actually a prime candidate for a successful transition (and she was right about transition not being as big of a deal as I had made it out to be).  I took the estrogen, it worked wonders for my mental state right away, and only then did I start to shed the decades of systemic denial.   Two months later I was full time.
  •  

Hikari

I am not really so certain there is such a thing as feeling female or male. At least not in the sense that one can "feel" anger or "feel" joy. The most I can reall approximate for me is that there are times when I feel "wrong" and I feel "Right". Being myself, being Femme, being on HRT all of these things just feel right to me, trying to push myself into a male role, or heck even try and understand why men think the way they do just feels "wrong" to me.

Perhaps a non-binary has a better description than that, it could be a simple case of me not knowing the feeling because in order to know it, there needs to be a contra feeling to compare it to.
15 years on Susans, where has all the time gone?
  •  

Bea

I don't have all the answers, but I will say my feelings change all the time now. I was on HRT for 20 months before going full time, and during that period I felt like a man and HRT wasn't working. It took allot of electrolysis and my breast growth to make the change to full time.

Also, while Living as a man, I wanted to be a woman and cross dressed(had a secret). Living as a woman I have no desire to dress as a man, or crossdress per say(no secrets). So for me, the HRT helped, but living as a woman was the cure. Or may I say, HRT helped me live as a woman.

Not sure this helps :-\





  •  

Suziack

Quote from: Northern Jane on June 09, 2014, 05:41:54 AM
That is a question I was asked a LOT when I was young and began protesting my 'assigned sex' but I didn't really have a clear answer then. The answer didn't evolve until a year or more post-op and didn't become crystal clear until decades later when I read "Why Gender Matters" (by Leonard Sax).

There is no "feeling female". What there IS is common experiences, things we have in common with others of the same gender.

As a child, my sense of being female came from commonalities with other girls, things like preferred forms of play and a dislike for loud or pushy behaviour, early development of linguistic abilities, preference for non-conflict, and concern for others. I understood and could identify with girls and felt one of them but had nothing in common with boys.

Through later childhood and my early teens, a growing sense of being excluded (to some extent) by girls was very distressing - I had always been excluded by boys - and I became very isolated.

Within a short time after SRS, like a year, I began to see my childhood differently. I always WAS a girl and, seen in that light my responses and my problems were totally understandable for a young girl trapped in an untenable situation. Integrating into women's life was a snap! It just meant letting go and relaxing into being myself, unguarded and uninhibited.

Through the 40 years since then the vast majority of my friends have been women (cis women) and we have talked about everything imaginable. In that time I have come to understand that the biggest factor in feeling like a woman is in shared experiences, both the good and the bad. With the exception of periods and childbirth, there is little difference between my life and those of my friends.

In my humble opinion, "feeling female" is about where you fit, the place in life where you fit in comfortably and naturally.

NorthernJane, I think that for many you've hit the nail right square on the head, and Ms Grace then followed it up (which ties in) with her thread about unexpected triggers (https://www.susans.org/forums/index.php/topic,166548.0.html). And then there's that little thing called SRS... lol. Not to poo-poo anyone's late arrival, but it looks like the earlier one starts, the better.
If you torture the truth long enough, it'll confess to anything.
  •  

meganB

The first time I felt female was when a transman (we are good friends and knew each other before we started hormones) said that in his eyes I always was female (I always saw him as a man, this happend just before we started on hormones). It was nice but it didn't stick.

It did stick when I fell in love with him  ;D

Still though I'm just me so I feel like myself.


  •  

spx_1112

I feel female in sooooo many ways.   Let's get a list going. Hugs Shannon
  •