Quote from: VeronicaLynn on October 21, 2013, 08:00:19 PM
I think I touched on this in another thread, but it is a separate topic. I hate men, I don't know if it's entirely because I don't want to be one, but I can't stand talking to or being around any of them. I can't really relate to them, unless it is on something very specific we have in common, and really have trouble having conversations with them. Because of this, I get labeled as shy or introverted, but I have no problem talking with women, either alone or in groups. I do also have problems with mixed groups, as I seem to revert to not being able to have conversations when men are in the room. Am I the only one like this? I actually have a hard time understanding how quite a lot of transwomen date men, I don't even want to be friends with one.
Firstly... I apologise in advance for trying to get inside your head. I just can't help myself sometimes. *blushes*
However, I'm a pretty firm believer in the idea that people usually have a reason for the way they feel, even if it's not immediately apparent. And based on your post I have to wonder if you hate men themselves, or more what they represent to you. Whether some of it isn't a projection of things you don't like about the circumstances you have to deal with in your own life which causes you to naturally want to distance yourself from what you see as the embodiment of that. And being put in encounters with this embodiment reminds you of things you can't identify with. Things which draw your attention inwards and perhaps some deep-seated resentment towards facing an aspect of yourself that you wish wasn't there. In essence, whether your hatred towards men is more the hatred towards the projected personification of everything you want to get away from. A sort of universal composite of everything you dislike about yourself which is applied to all the men you meet, regardless of how they are as individuals.
Tied in with that, perhaps a primal fear that communicating with men will mean you have to act like one, in order to fit in. And your mind has developed a sort of buffer zone, to keep you away from the way you feel you may be expected to be. To be someone you're not. And this has taken the form of a strong emotional response which keeps you as far away from those situations as possible.
...
Again, I'm sorry for the above... I just find it intriguing how it's possible to dislike an entire group of people based solely on their gender. I've met some pretty amazing guys. A heck of a lot more since coming here, truth be told. But what made them amazing was who they were as people, not their gender. Granted, for me it definitely took getting over some of what I've mentioned above in order to do it. But I do think it's possible when you get to a point where, rather than hating the idea of trying to be a man, you come to an acceptance that you're simply not one. If you can reach a point where you can see yourself for who you are, rather than who you are not... it makes interacting with
everyone somewhat easier and emotional responses tend to be based more on the people as individuals, rather than aspects of ourselves we do or don't recognise.
At least that's been my experience.