Quote from: amber roskamp on May 03, 2015, 07:12:24 PM
I do realize that the vast majority of people are cis and harmless, but due to the fact that I still have a beard shadow and big veiny arms, I am very visible as a trans women. so I get a lot of stares and ive gotten laughed at. Its those little cruel acts that bother me, and im pretty good at shrugging them off afterwards and moving on with my life. I just have that reaction every time I deal with someone new. Just I guess I have a negative view on how the cis world feels about trans people based on my family, based on what friends used to say when I was growing up, and based on all of the micro aggressions I have faced. So most of my fear is based on hearing my brothers and parents talk about queer people as if they were disgusting.
Also I think most hatred is based of of ignorance. I feel like fear and hate are two different responses to ignorance. though fear can cause hatred as well.
Amber,
I don't like how my arms look either. So my solution is very simple: I always wear long-sleeved stuff in public.
I don't have any more beard shadow because of laser pre-HRT and IPL just recently, but I still have lots of annoying fair hairs in the face (not grays, just colorless hairs that I've always had since puberty and neither laser nor IPL took care of them). So I only go out in public when I am recently shaved and I make sure the foundation powder I use makes my face look hairless. Then the contrast I create on my face using some blush and lip color makes me pass face wise and from there on, everything gets easier in spite of my being tall and big in my upper body.
So IMHO I think that if you covered the areas you consider your weakest ones feminine-looking wise, you will do all right. In my real life experience, this is what matters most: 1) face and hair 2) voice 3) not showing evident body flaws and 4) attitude (showing that you are comfortable in your own skin, standing tall, smiling or showing a friendly face as opposed to a "resting bitch" one, more suitable for males than females), ignoring people staring at you, but being alert and ready to act in case they'd try to make a move on you.
Oh and BTW I have a 100% non-supportive family. In July it will be four years already since I told them that I am a transwoman, that I already had orchi and t-shave and they still keep treating me 100% like a man, addressing me like that and embarrassing me in public, calling me the male birth name and addressing me as their "son", knowing how much damage that does to me emotionally. So in this day and age, it is commonplace the fact that most people, including our parents, siblings and the rest of close relatives, will be hostile towards transgender people in general, and in denial and non-accepting of the ones they may have in their own family. I have given up on my parents regarding their acceptance. Unfortunately I live with them at the moment so I have to juggle having to live as a pseudo-guy at home with them and then "transforming myself" when I go out in public, and then presenting myself in the middle of both presentations, when I go out somewhere accompanied by them. It is such a draining way of life, but I have to endure that on a daily basis.
I used to think I had "cis-phobia" as well, but I've realized that I have a phobia against only those who may be ignorant, prejudiced and stupid, to the point of actually caring about my appearance when they don't even know me. But that's always a small minority and once you start building up your confidence and getting used to exposing yourself, that anxiety decreases and you start getting more accepted by the nice people, and just ignored by the ignorant bigots.
Cheers
Bibi B