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FOR THE 24/7 GIRLS: WHAT DID YOU DO WITH YOUR MALE CLOTHES?

Started by Miranda Catherine, December 19, 2013, 03:41:22 AM

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Miranda Catherine

I took my first dose of Progynon Depot and Spironolactone on July 22, 2011, and had the opportunity to live full time only six weeks later and took it. I was so desperate to make my life as a woman or die, I gave every stitch of male clothing I had except a few sweatshirts, a sweater, and a pair of tennis shoes that could pass as female, and that was it. Fortunately, I didn't have any problems passing (I don't know how that was possible!), but I was never going back to being a male impersonator, never, ever, ever, no matter what. I gave everything to the Rescue Mission and never looked back. What I'd like to know is, what did all of you other girls, women and ladies do with yours? Do you still have any of them, like a security blanket, or were you like me, unable or unwilling to turn back, so you tossed them out? For me, it was the smartest thing I could have done, because I always function better when there's no safety net or any other avenue of escape, lol! Mira
These three years have been the best of my entire life
ones I've been able to live without lying
and the only time I've had since the age of twelve
I haven't constantly thought about dying



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big kim

I put most of them in a bag for a charity shop.I kept a few T shirts and jeans that could still be worn in girl mode or  really old worn ones for working on the car
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Sammy

I am not 24/7 but as I dropped out from L size male clothes, I am just giving them away to friends.
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Evolving Beauty

I kept it 1 year due to fear I might detransition then I gave it all to my best friend who was gay. Now it's 5 years & I never turned back.
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nikkit72

First was to cut some up for rags to use in the workshop and dust around the house. Some were cut up and used as protective packing in parcels. The decent stuff went to the charity shop or used as material for sewing practice.

I suspect I'll get some type of male clothing from my mother, who refuses to accept me, for christmas just to prove some sort of a point or to be hurtful. This will in turn be turned into something femme by the sewing machine and worn when I go and visit after christmas. Last pair of jeans ended up a skirt which went down well.  >:-) Too bitchy maybe  ???
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Cindy

Gave the lot to the Goodwill store. I own no male clothing, I'm not into cross dressing anymore. I burnt every bridge in one giant go. No going back for me ever.
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Teela Renee

RedNeck girls have all the fun 8)
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Bardoux

I've given some pieces that i can't fit into to a friend who is FtM. Looks good on him as well :)

Northern Jane

By the time I transitioned and had SRS I didn't have much except the clothes I wore to Colorado and I gave them to my nurse's boyfriend after surgery.

(It wasn't until the trip home that I realize my ID was still male - I didn't look it! - and I still had to pass through Canadian customs & emigration!  :o Fortunately that was a LONG time ago and turned out not to be a problem.)
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Anna++

I donated my old jeans to a thrift shop supporting the local school district.  I still have the rest of my clothes, since a coworker of mine is planning a "clothing swap" for after the holidays.  I'm hopeful that I'll be able to trade my old male clothes for new (to me) female clothes!

I'm going to work on donating what's left after that.  I've decided to stop buying clothes hangers to encourage me to get rid of old stuff so I can hang anything new :)
Sometimes I blog things

Of course I'm sane.  When trees start talking to me, I don't talk back.



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Mogu

* Looks at picture *
Wait, you're not cis?

OT: Keeping them for now. I mean, I don't have any non-workout pants anymore. Only skirts. And all my shirts are button down stuff, not very fitting right now and I plan to replace them, but eh.
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justpat

I have given everything to my favorite store Goodwill except some work clothes I get very dirty.
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awilliams124

I gave almost all of mine to local charity shops, with two exceptions. I kept a pair of designer black suede brogues in the hope my son might like them when he is old enough for them to fit. I also kept a pure cashmere overcoat, which is the most expensive item of clothing I ever bought. I have no attachment to it whatsoever but I kept it in order to try and get some money back on by selling it, and then investing any money I get in a nice new coat. That was two years ago and I still haven't got around to doing anything about it. I'm not even sure where the coat is!

Actually I kept just a few items for a month or so. I was worried what might happen if, for example, I had to take one of the children to hospital. After experiencing no problems in passing (goodness know how!) there was no need to keep those last few bits and when they went I felt a huge sense of relief.
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Zumbagirl

Quote from: Cindy on December 19, 2013, 04:17:22 AM
Gave the lot to the Goodwill store. I own no male clothing, I'm not into cross dressing anymore. I burnt every bridge in one giant go. No going back for me ever.


I did the same thing. Packed it all up and brought to goodwill. When I started off in my new life I even shopped at goodwill a few times. I only kept a few pieces of old clothes (the "boyfriend" sweaters and stuff like that. There was no way I was going back. This was a 1 way trip for me.
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Katie

Well lets see. I have a pair or Timberland boots that I still have from that past life. They are good for hiking. I also have a leather jacket for riding the motorcycle but then the same jacket was produced for men and women with the same appearance so I guess that's why I kept it.

Basically there is a few things remaining but then they really are more unisex so to say.
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kathyk

Like you, I never looked back and gave everything to Goodwill.  To work in very dirty conditions outside I have an old pair of jeans hanging on a nail in the garage.  I haven't tossed them because I don't yet have a pair of my beautiful new jeans stained, or covered in conrete, paint and oil.  I don't wash them or take them in the house.  Those jeans are hideous!





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Jill F

I purged that wardrobe in May.   Gave it to Goodwill.  Still have unisex stuff, some shirts that pass as blouses and a couple of pairs of worn-out jeans that are unisex looking as well.  I always wore androgynous looking clothing, come to think of it.   I also kept a suit just in case I have to go to court in guy mode or another emergency.  Oh, and the biker jacket.   Still haven't worn any of that, but maybe some day I can pull it off?  It would be awesome to be able to wear guy/andro clothing and still be seen as 100% female. 

 
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Brooke777

I donated all of my male clothes except for my dress military uniform. I kept that.
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Constance

I gave away the majority of mine to a charity, especially since I had numerous clothes that would've been good enough for jog interviews. Most of my neckties I gave away to my genderfluid daughter, though I kept 1 because it looks really good with this little black dress I have.

I also kept a couple of boxers for sleeping in, a sweatshirt, and a pair of sneakers.

MadelineB

My ex-wife wears some of mine that she looks good in. The rest went to charity six months before I was full time. Felt good to switch to androgynous clothes made for women. I also needed the closet space.
History, despite its wrenching pain, cannot be unlived, but if faced with courage, need not be lived again.
~Maya Angelou

Personal Blog: Madeline's B-Hive
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