I read a very good comment from a person that has been transitioning for some time now, and was reflections on 10 things to know that you might have wished to have known before transitioning began.
While all 10 were good reading, a lot of it was also very self evident too perhaps, but, the #1 comment I decided to copy paste, as I often think we fail to really take the idea seriously enough.
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1. Brace yourself for beauty culture.
This is especially true for my fellow femme girls, and there's a reason it's #1 on my list. Before I started presenting as female, I had no idea just how toxic beauty culture is in this country. Women are constantly inundated with airbrushed images and messages aiming to tear down our self-esteem and make us feel inadequate. Fashion magazines and the beauty industry make billions every year by exploiting these insecurities with the promise that if we only try harder to be prettier, we too can be happy.
As a trans girl, beauty culture can be especially difficult to navigate, because most of us have haven't been exposed to it very long. Our cis partners and friends have been dealing with it since middle school (if not earlier), and many have had years to develop effective coping strategies, so we DMAB ("designated male at birth") ladies have to make up for lost time, and on top of that, cissexist standards of beauty add another way for us to feel insecure.
It helps to maintain a sense of perspective. Many trans girls, including me, have a habit of romanticizing the cisgender experience. A month or two into my transition, I told my girlfriend that I couldn't wait until I could look in the mirror and see a pretty girl staring back at me. "You realize that's never going to happen, right?" was her response. "You're going to look at your reflection and feel unsatisfied -- just like every other woman." And it's true: Even the most gorgeous of my friends can list a dozen things she'd change about her appearance. So the next time you're feeling unattractive, don't blame yourself; blame capitalism and a beauty culture designed to make you feel that way.
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I think the summary is this.
Actual cis females are constantly told they are ugly, in need of work, need to buy products to make them look better, and marketed to on a constantly basis with clothing that is probably grossly unfair unless life has granted your a perfect body.
Soooo keep in mind, while staring at the mirror, wishing you could look better, prettier, more female, society as a whole, is being constantly told that already.
By joining the ranks of female society, you will be inundated with a message that you are inadequate.
Don't expect the marketplace to have any sympathy for you, it has no sympathy for cis females either.
If you feel ugly, you are not alone.