Hi guys,
I started a similar thread about this topic in the non-binary forum, but I'm mostly interested in hearing stories from masculine FAAB-people and I assumed this'd get a wider audience. I apologize if this has been discussed before - it doesn't seem to be covered in the first few back pages of this forum, though.
There's been a lot of buzz in the lefty news lately about cis women getting harassed by cis men on the street. Also, less talk but still sobering statistics about the people who tend to get the most harassment and violence: trans women, especially trans women of color. I think we can put together why some cis men find trans women to be such a threat to their masculinity that they would react with such violence, but what about trans men?
Most trans men have stories - often from youth - of being bullied for not being girlish enough or a lesbian or whatever, but what about the kind of sexual harassment that happens to cis women on the street? Does it happen to trans men, too? Or the kind of sexual retaliatory violence that occurs when a man's "true sex" is found out (ala, Boys Don't Cry )?
I ask this because I'm recently post-op (chest) but I'm not on T, still dress and act feminine-ly sometimes - in short, I don't "pass" at all, and I'm non-binary; passing is not one of my goals. As a bit of a celebration to myself I recently took a long-awaited trip to the beach where I swam shirtless in men's swim trunks, fresh scars and pear-shaped hips fully visible, and got A LOT of stares along the way; mostly curious and suspicious, some downright lewd and hostile that made me very uneasy. Yet for the most part, I've found that the more masculine my gender presentation (that is, wearing a shirt...), the less attention on the street I receive.
How worried should I be about my safety? For those of you who don't pass, do you worry about this? Has the amount of "male attention" you receive changed since you started presenting in a more masculine way?
Thanks,
V