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on scale of 0-10 how much do you think strangers really care what you look like

Started by stephaniec, April 24, 2015, 01:24:46 PM

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0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

from 1-10, 10 being anal and I being oblivious

0-totallaly oblivious
5 (11.6%)
1- notice , but don't care
2 (4.7%)
2
3 (7%)
3
3 (7%)
4 just being observed as anyone else
12 (27.9%)
5
3 (7%)
6
4 (9.3%)
7
4 (9.3%)
8
0 (0%)
9 l
1 (2.3%)
10 looking for any possible sign somethings amiss
2 (4.7%)
addendum(I donn't care what they think)
4 (9.3%)

Total Members Voted: 43

stephaniec

Just walking down the street or sitting in a restaurant , how much do you think people really care about whether you appear female or male or any degree in between. I've been totally full time this past week and have gotten absolutely no comments or stare from anyone. I've live in the exact same neighborhood for 20 years and  not a peep for the environment. I've gotten a couple of comments about how pretty they think I am, but those are from clerks that know me as male for a long time. I just don't think the vast majority of people give a c--- about  what shade of gender you seem to be.
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Emjay

I think overall most people are completely oblivious to most of what is happening around them...

Ever tried to manuever a shopping cart through a busy grocery store?  OMG people will stand directly in your way while your just trying to get through an aisle and act like you're not even there!




Start therapy:                            Late 2013
Start HRT:                                 April, 2014
Out everywhere and full time:      November 19, 2015
Name change (official):                            February 1, 2016
I'm a Mommy! (Again) :                             January 31, 2017
GCS consultation:                        February 17, 2017
GCS, Dr. Gallagher (Indianapolis, IN)  February 13, 2018
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marsh monster

It depends on the stranger and what their habits and tendencies are, so it'd be different by person.

I have had someone I did not know come into the store I used to work at and say hey, I remember seeing you at the Walmart the day before. Which was weird as I had been at that Walmart(45 minutes away) the day before with my brother and his family and it just seemed like something about me must have stuck with that lady enough that she would recall me from a crowded super store. So yeah, that bugged me as I did not know why a perfect stranger would remember me in that setting with no interaction between us.


So I figure that there is no single easy answer for this.
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Alexis2107

I moved to a totally different state/town so nobody here knows the old me.  Everyone I talk to only sees me as a woman and not had any second guesses.  As far as stares, I not noticed any except for the pervs who gawk at my breasts or try to walk by and look down my shirt as I am sitting... creeps -_-
~ Lexi ~

HRT 11/5/14
Full Time woman 3/12/15
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stephaniec

the ones who think their sneaky and wait to pass on the side of you to look at your breasts
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Devlyn

I voted 1, I think people around Boston notice what you look like, but by and large they don't care.
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stephaniec

we're doing good in the statistical sense , heading for another perfect bell curve
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Ms Grace

Grace
----------------------------------------------
Transition 1.0 (Julie): HRT 1989-91
Self-denial: 1991-2013
Transition 2.0 (Grace): HRT June 24 2013
Full-time: March 24, 2014 :D
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Jill F

Zero.  I also have returned the favor.  I frankly don't care what anyone else looks like either.
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Evelyn K

I think at our very core it is human nature to care how we are perceived. It is necessary, it is how the tribe communicates health, information, culture, trustworthiness, affection, etc. etc. It is how our species survive.

So with that said, I actually do care. A lot. As for others? Wutever. ;D
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Evelyn K

Quote from: Devlyn Marie on April 24, 2015, 04:48:32 PM
I voted 1, I think people around Boston notice what you look like, but by and large they don't care.

Good point. Some cultures are very forward and may get in your face about their prejudices.

Other cultures like Japanese people tend to be very polite and passive irrespective of what they *really* think about you.
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JoanneB

Having lived in very urban (metro NYC) and rural (rural WV) environs, I give a big "It depends" In more urban areas people ALWAYS rate eachother on various scale, mostly based on how you present/look, followed by  (if they dare speak unto you) how intelligent you seem (their criteria for "Intelligence"). In rural areas people are more real, not so superficial, and tend not to judge too much on appearances. At 6ft tall big boned, big everything and deep voice I was accepted as a woman. Years ago I was (harshly) ridiculed in the NYC suburbs.

I totally envy those who say "I don't give a rat's ass...", or "It's their problem, not mine". I can't. I do care very much what others think. I also try not to let what others think influence what I think of myself
.          (Pile Driver)  
                    |
                    |
                    ^
(ROCK) ---> ME <--- (HARD PLACE)
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stephaniec

it"s definitely hard not to be affected by some idiot calling you some name out in public. Luckily that's never happened to me , at least yet.
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Evelyn K

Quote from: JoanneB on April 24, 2015, 10:15:12 PM
Having lived in very urban (metro NYC) and rural (rural WV) environs, I give a big "It depends" In more urban areas people ALWAYS rate eachother on various scale, mostly based on how you present/look, followed by  (if they dare speak unto you) how intelligent you seem (their criteria for "Intelligence"). In rural areas people are more real, not so superficial, and tend not to judge too much on appearances. At 6ft tall big boned, big everything and deep voice I was accepted as a woman. Years ago I was (harshly) ridiculed in the NYC suburbs.

I totally envy those who say "I don't give a rat's ass...", or "It's their problem, not mine". I can't. I do care very much what others think. I also try not to let what others think influence what I think of myself

In my opinion "I don't give a rat's ass..." can only float your ego so far. Because life and living and seeing peoples responses to you will remind you of how much you really do care indeed.
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rachel89

5, but where I live, people really have no place to judge because they often go to the local Wal-Mart in pajamas and sometimes not having taken a shower (the classier ones at least put on some camo and ratty jeans). I have this fear that I might not pass If I don't dress like a redneck girl ;)


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Christine Eryn

It depends on what I'm wearing oddly enough. I get gendered as female 90% of the time, even in dumpy boy mode. I stopped giving a ->-bleeped-<- and refuse to bind my boobs nowadays. I gained confidence when random cis women addressed me as female. It's when I'm glammed up I am hyper aware of people noticing me. I get a little shaky knowing I still have brow bossing and an Adams apple, so I rely on other things to help me.
"There was a sculptor, and he found this stone, a special stone. He dragged it home and he worked on it for months, until he finally finished. When he was ready he showed it to his friends and they said he had created a great statue. And the sculptor said he hadn't created anything, the statue was always there, he just cleared away the small peices." Rambo III
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rosinstraya

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suzifrommd

Ten.

It's the ONLY thing they care about.

They don't KNOW anything else about me.
Have you read my short story The Eve of Triumph?
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ana1111

well I put five...when I first started say around sixteen I was really androgynous and just starting to explore things... I didn't care then about passing...I was just trying to find a way to do what felt natural...women's clothes, makeup, nails etc but I never saw myself as a crossdresser as it wasn't a part time thing or some fetish...I got stared at a ton and I was occasionally mistaken for a girl and other times people were just confused...I had pretty short hair no bra or boobs, no hrt, probably didn't do my brows or shave very well and wore really flashy bad makeup and bright hair colors....as cool or interesting as it might sound it wasn't cute and looking at pictures from that time is actually embarrassing...now after hormones, electrolysis, great makeup and clothes, very long natural hair and a lot of people in person and online saying I pass completely and having instances where people didn't know when they first met me both at a trans group and an electrolygist....people still look at me too much at times I feel and I had a guy sitting across from me at a doctors appointment keep making eyecontact...three people ive told said he was flirting but I cant shake the fear he was clocking me...
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ana1111

my point being I do think people care as if they didn't they would never notice people who were different in either a good or bad way...
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