Quote from: rylielove on August 25, 2010, 01:27:27 PM
I can relate to the falling into a comfort zone kinda thing... its not that I'm comfortable being a guy but I know how people react and treat me based on that personality so theres comfort knowing how people treat you. There's fear not knowing how people are going to treat you especially at the start of transition.
Does that make more sense with the comfort zone kinda thing? That's how I relate to it at least...
Yes it does. It's exactly the same for me. I'm still unsecure when dealing with everyday folks as soon as it gets more personal than a short chat in a Mom-and-Pop store or something like that. But then, I always had trouble getting along with people who were not queer at least in one way. Or highly skilled, or from a multicultural background, with mental disorders or whatever. "Normal" people just don't work for me, I don't know why, maybe I just can't relax well there. Or I just find them boring. Before transition, I had the same problems as now, but at least I had figured out over time how people reacted to my actions, and how they interpreted them, and what message they got depending on what I sent them.
I had hardly any chance of passing before T due to some physical aspects - I had extreme woman-child features compared to the more "Walkyrian" girls here in Germany, and I am very small and of a slender built - I'm no German, and both males and females from my people tend to be much smaller and more slenderly built than Germans. But I don't look definitely exotic either, so people thought I was a German girl. Almost no German guy was built like me, though many guys of my folk are. But I live in Germany, so... well it ruined my passing no matter what I tried. Plus I live in a city with a huge LGBT scene and all these butch lesbians being seen in everyday life did not help me for my passing at all (I don't mind them being around though as I think they have a right to exist on their own, plus many of them look hot as hell).
Best passing I had was when I wore drag, long skirts in screamy colors. This brought me at risk of being beaten up for being a transvestite several times, as I "was definitely a male as I walked like a guy though I was very small and had a delicate build" - original quote, and I never even wore high-heels, which looks horrible when I try to walk in them. But I still did dress like in drag, in spite of the risk, as at least then I passed - at least then - hooray. So you see I almost got no pre-testo-experience of being seen as male unless I was seen as a transvestite, or on rare occasions, as a gay teenage guy (my boyfriend and me got harrassed for that on two or three occasions).
Now, it's more difficult, as a lot is new. Whatever was okay for me to do before seems harrassing women or disturbing men now, whatever was inappropriate before seems okay now etc. Lots of things get read differently, not all, but many. Thanks God I look under-age though I'm in my mid-thirties, so people forgive me a lot of my mistakes. I feel much better being read as a guy now, but I'm unsecure how to react in appropriate ways, and I still have trouble getting along with "non-queers". I tend to overlook a lot and I am very distracted, so that doesn't help me getting aware of feedbacks. I think I'll grow into it over time. And at least, I don't get thrown into my face any more that I'm a "woman" all the time. That alone is worth all the fuss.
Many people wonder a lot about whether I'm gay and ask me "trap questions" to see if I am gonna out myself as gay. But I don't care about it, hell, I'm bi, so it's okay. Nevertheless, I don't feel that easy about it. Before, as a girl, I often got transformed into a fetish as soon as I said I'm a bi, and straight people never clocked me unless I had very short hair and ran around butch style, which I sometimes did. Straight guys often asked me when they found out (as I've always been out as bi, means, answering questions honestly) whether they could have a threesome. Now, it can be even harsher than that. As a bi guy, I risk to get really bad reactions from straight guys. But I have not tested it yet. Some are good at clocking me, others don't have a clue. The FTM phenomenon being unknown, that's a big advantage for me.
Sorry, you're an MTF, and some of what I wrote here does not apply to you - e. g. passing but first as a very young teenager or generally as a gay guy etc. But I can relate to your comfort zone idea. It's something you are used to, you know the rules, how things work, which of your actions provoke which reactions etc.