Quote from: Silver Centurion on July 08, 2014, 01:19:34 PM
I do hang out with guys primarily. I work with male lab partners at university and hang out with them outside of class. I socialize with the dads of my sons football team and have for years. I have a few tomboy friends and go to a FTM group as often as I can.
Forgive me but I'm a little confused. So the people you work with have accepted you as yourself which is awesome but it is strangers that is causing the issue? I think the best thing is to just present yourself as you are. If you're trying to fake something it's probably never going to work like the situation with socializing with the wimmenz. It's just my opinion but if you want to hang out with women just hang out and don't try to conform to anything. From what I've read I'm assuming that you're not presenting as male if they know you are female but if I'm wrong please correct me. The same sort of thing goes with engaging men socially. Just be yourself and that will remove a lot of awkward and the more they become comfortable with you the more natural things will become. I suck at trying to put things the right way but there is truth in that men will tone down conversation and change how they behave if they know there is a woman among them. If you're transitioning at all socializing as a man will change that dynamic.
My job requires that I change teams or that new people come in a lot. Also I have customer contact.
In my old firm, I kept to myself mostly, but after a couple of years, the men knew me well enough to include me automatically.
But this doesn't happen when I have to work at different places, where people are just weirded out when I go and join the all male groups during breaks instead of the all-female groups, and so on. It's just not done.
The situation seems to get worse the older I get- a 20 year old "tomboy" is accepted in all male groups much more easily than a person that's going 40 or older.
I don't want to hang out with the female groups at work, but I feel they take it personally if I don't join in with their chit chat. This doesn't help with my career chances esp. with female superiors.
So I make an effort to participate when they include me. But I'm just no good at it.
So you could say, most men accept me after getting to know me (apart from the queer bashers), they recognize that I can interact with them on a male/male level, but the women (no matter if straight or lesbian) don't accept that I prefer male company, or even understand the situation.
And when I come to new groups where the men don't know me, I'm really the square peg.
I have had this recurring experience with women (no matter if gay or straight) that they want to include me, and if I don't manage to join in with them, they get miffed, no matter what I do. Even if I say I feel I don't belong they get pissed, so I just can't win ;-)
As I said this is something that has gotten worse the older I got, as if people can accept variance in youth but from a certain age, you need to be one or the other.
Also the older groups are more gender segregated again (compared to 20-somethings).
I'm really surprised that nobody seems to have social problems when they don't follow the gender rules.
Because the world seems to be organized pretty much along gender lines.
Another example: Very few women have close male friends. A problem that comes from that is that the wives of my straight male friends see me as a threat because I bond with their husbands in a way that a "woman" just isn't supposed to do.
I share their husband's interests and hobbies and speak the same language. I've had two wives of close male friends throw fits during the last years because they were jealous of me (despite the fact that I'm mostly seen as lesbian, i.e. no threat).
Btw. a trans male friend of mine works in a lab too, and even before transitioning this seems to have been a really good place for him (Mostly male scientists, but not macho).