Quote from: Hypatia on September 10, 2007, 10:20:30 PM
Something germane to this topic that no one has mentioned yet--
When you have supporters with you who consistently call you "she" and treat you as totally a woman-- that will favorably influence the perceptions of strangers you're meeting for the first time. Friends and allies who support my womanhood in public are so important to me. No woman is an island. We are social beings and our social functioning happens in concert with those around us. Use this to your benefit.
Quote from: Berliegh on September 11, 2007, 04:51:21 AM
....The unpassables could be passables if they were able to access the right surgeons and technicians........
The first point is, imo, spot on. The thingy I found that wasn't mentioned by Hypatia is simply that being among those who gender you properly is also a major self-confidence boost in early stages.
I hate to say get rid of people, but if you are constantly around those who belittle your looks and confidence you are gonna have a rough row to hoe. But, at the same time you need some honest commentary as well. Like if your make-up looks silly, etc.
But the building of self-confidence is crucial for any of us, at least I found it so.
Thus, along with the easier to be gendered properly, it becomes easier for you to gender yourself properly as well.
It would be nice if surgery could do the entire job. That way if someone was just wealthy enough they could be gendered however they wish. *sigh*
Sorry, Berleigh. I cannot buy that one. I have known a couple of much wealthier than I women who used all the best surgeons and, quite honestly, I imagine will forever be seen by others as "men in dresses."
Like Nero, my take on them has been that there is too much of the "male life" that they didn't wish to toss on the trash heap. Or couldn't. They just do not ring female, regardless of looks.
Money and surgery cannot, imo, delete certain difficulties that the individual needs to work on herself. The opposite of that has been a few women I have met whose looks were not blended, but then after a bit, it became more than obvious that they were indeed, women.
Nichole