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What would you do?

Started by Alaena_okc, October 24, 2014, 03:25:05 PM

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Alaena_okc

i watched the TV Show "What Would You Do", it was about a transgendered women that gets insulted by a customer. it amazed me as to how many folks stood up for her, to a point they was willing to fight for her...

i dont know if im allowed to give a link to youtube, so if im not forgive me, but i thought this was very important for others here to understand we are not alone, we are appreciated...


XOXO Huggs :)
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Alaena_okc

i like how the show put us in a good light :)
XOXO Huggs :)
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Jessica Merriman

The video is OK. I love watching these myself. For those scared and without hope it should give them some confidence.  :)
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Ms Grace

I think I'd feel pretty sick being in a situation where something like that was going down, staged or not. But good on those people for standing up for Carmen!
Grace
----------------------------------------------
Transition 1.0 (Julie): HRT 1989-91
Self-denial: 1991-2013
Transition 2.0 (Grace): HRT June 24 2013
Full-time: March 24, 2014 :D
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Eyie

Definitely inspires hope and just proves how much things really do just keep getting better and better. Also that took place in New Jersey which is where I live so that all looked even better to me lol.
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Jaime R D

The only thing I really wonder though is would people speak up just as much for someone not as attractive.  Cause my experience is that its been easier to find acceptance the more attractive you are as a trans woman.




Not that I'd know much about that...
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herekitten

I remember this show. Brought back memories of what happened to me and to this day I wonder what must have been going through everyone's minds. I'm gonna sound like Sophia from the Golden Girls here.  Picture it -- I was living in a small quiet mountain town on a mountaintop apartment building. I was in my very early twenties, waiting on my divorce from husband.  I thought I was the hottest thing since sliced bread :laugh:  I was 'the girl' everyone wanted to meet. I began dating a local guy who was divorced and he became infatuated with me. He was very well to do and was showering me with gifts of every sort (I was young and naïve = I did not know that everything tends to come with a price). I told him about me and my 'situation'. He was very understanding and almost immediately never left my side. He moved in with me, and began pressing me for marriage. For a bit, and it was my fault here, I entertained the notion of it and the lifestyle he was offering me. But I noticed the 'golden shackles' quickly being placed on me and I wanted out. He continued pressing marriage upon my divorce and one fateful dreadful evening it came to a head. I told him No. I could not marry him because I was not ready to do that again. WHACK! went the back of his hand against my face and I went flying back into the mahogany sofa arm. I came to with a knife at my throat and him looming over me (he was a big guy at 6'4") telling me that if I did not marry him, he was going to cut my face so bad, no one else would have me. My mind raced at what to do to get out of this situation since he was obviously out of his mind. I told him Yes, I would marry him and we could start planning and I was not thinking right to please forgive me.. It worked! As he let me up, I noticed the foyer door slightly cracked open, so I told him I had to go to the bathroom and asked him to change clothes so we could go for a walk and talk about it. He went into the bedroom and of course I ran into the hallway and was about halfway to the front door when he came after me. He caught me in the foyer by my hair and I lost it. Somehow I ended up on the floor and I was screaming and kicking. Ugh! what a time to be wearing a dress. Everyone came out yelling at him to leave me alone and to get away from me because they had called the police. Last I remember was him screaming at me, "Tell them about you, tell them what you have!".  I blanked out. I came to in my friend's apartment. Everyone asking if I was alright. He had left the building but I was beyond shaken up.  When I calmed down a bit, what was their first question? Yup, you guessed it. "Kitten, what did he mean by what he was saying?"

To this day, I wonder what those people must have thought and to remember that evening sends shivers through me. Oh the humanity of it.  But I can laugh about it now and see an odd humor in that experience.  That experience did not end there, but went on to an extent that the local detectives office put me in a 'safe house'.  Craziness.

Back to the point of the post. Yes, there are more people than you think who are accepting and will rush to your side than you can imagine. I know.
It is the lives we encounter that make life worth living. - Guy De Maupassant
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Eyie

Geeze kitten that was a terribly horrific story and it is amazing how you say you can laugh at it now. I guess everything is a learning experience but wow.....
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herekitten

Eyie, it was beyond scary, because the whole thing threw me for a loop I was not expecting such a violent reaction. Many years  afterward I was visiting a friend in that town and I saw him with what I assumed were his wife and kids (he did not see me).  I felt so sorry for her, because I knew he was the type to hit a woman.

I laugh because prior to his coming home that evening, I'd made a crock pot of beef stew and the odor was all through the hallways of the building. After the ordeal, I did not want to go back to my apartment but that crock pot was still turned on and I was afraid of a fire, so my friends (a very nice young couple) and I crept back all scared and jittery thinking he would pop out from behind a door and took the crock pot of beef stew back to their apartment to eat and calm our nerves. It just smelled that good! We could not believe the trauma but that crock pot of beef stew somehow calmed me and them...  that part is just funny to me somehow.
It is the lives we encounter that make life worth living. - Guy De Maupassant
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OlderTG

herekitten, I can't believe what you went through! That's horrible. I'm glad you can laugh at it now, but that should never happen to anyone.

And I was going to say Carmen was brave! She was! And thank God there are people like those on the show who defended her right to be herself.
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Alaena_okc

i remember a time in the 70's and 80's, we would of had no one to stand up for us, instead we would have been taken around back and have the living you know what kicked out of us or murdered. i remember having punk asses chasing me with sticks, simply because i had long hair in the 70's...

when i see video's like this - it reassures me that things are getting better for us...
XOXO Huggs :)
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ForeverGiselle

Videos like these made me happy. :)
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