Quote from: Nero on October 16, 2008, 05:11:37 PM
Evening dolls.
I was wondering about something. Do you think your background (being raised as male, treated as male, etc) has helped you in areas women typically struggle with?
For instance, a lot of women struggle with assertiveness and to some degree this is enforced by the 'proper feminine decorum' police. Assertive or confrontational women are often labeled bitches. So some women shrink back from speaking their mind in order to appear more 'pleasing' to others.
I've had fairly severe anger management issues (even to the point where I've been known to physically attack someone who angered me enough, though I always pulled my punches so completely that I never hurt anyone, and often didn't even do more than act like I was going to hit them) since about age 7 (and I'll note that my gender dysphoric feelings started a little before that as well, though I didn't understand that's what they were). Aside from that, and to some extent because of that (I was often teased about my anger, especially since my earliest forms of release was just to "scream like a girl" rather than to hit, the hitting things came later after I was forced to supress the urge to scream as a release), I'm an incredibly shy and passive girl. I'll stand up for myself if it becomes necessary, and I'm more inclined to speak up if it's for someone else rather than myself, but I mostly just keep quiet and rather invisible (which is kinda funny since I stand a little over 6' tall). People easily forget I'm there, and I typically will do what I'm told unless I 1) don't comprehend what I've been told to do or 2) find the task/action/whatever so completely appalling that I cannot keep my mouth shut about it.
This has only become more and more true as I continue HRT. Within a month of starting HRT, my aggressiveness had been cut in half, thus taking the drive out of a lot of my previous "angry reactions." I am still having to work somewhat on my anger issues because it has become habit for me to react angrily to many things (as such, I will sometimes react in anger without ever actually feeling the anger).
Now, contrary to this, I'm very much like my mother, only with more knowledge (not bragging, she would confirm this if she were involved in this discussion >.< ). I am an incredibly stubborn bitch. Without testosterone, though, my stubbornness
is less overt and more covert, though.
All in all, I'm shy, stubborn, passive, and bitchy. But only people who knew me before HRT (excluding a few like my best friend and boyfriend who have seen how HRT has helped me) consider me to be a confrontational and bitchy woman. People who've met me since then, unless influenced by others who knew me before, have been startled by my sudden bouts of bitchiness and merely attribute it to pms and rough days, which is at least half right.
QuoteAnother typically female struggle is body image and the pervasive belief among young girls and women that one need be pretty and thin to be worth anything. So many women measure their worth by their looks consciously or subconsciously. And if they fall short of the feminine ideal, they need to be working to achieve it.
As others have already said, body image is definitely an issue for us. I, personally, am "struggling" with my weight. For the past 8 years, I was in deep depression (not all of which caused by my gender dysphoria) and let myself get out of shape and gain weight. Now I'm in the process of losing that weight and getting into better shape, and while it's going very well, I still have bouts of depression over merely that aspect of my appearance. At other times, I start crying because I feel like I'll never be pretty enough. I don't know that I feel I have to be as gorgeous as Angelina Jolie or the like, but I want to at least be "pretty" and the thought of never reaching that point scares the hell out of me. I also occasionally will try to flat out starve myself when I feel like I'm not making progress on losing weight, though I've managed not to go that far for at least a couple months now.
QuoteThe above issues and others wreak havoc on women's self image everywhere.
I'm sure there are hundreds of other mostly female struggles. If you can think of them, I'd be grateful.
So do you feel your background has enabled you to escape these female mind traps or are you just as susceptible?
I can't think of any specific such struggles at the moment, but I would say I'm very much fully susceptible and have been all my life. I was never in tune with men at all. I never understood men, at least not the way men understand each other. I never could get along with them either, except in subservient "little girl" roles (such as one boy I knew who was a 6th/7th grader when I was a 5th/6th grader, and our relationship was more like little sister/older brother than anything else), and those were the better relationships. In most other cases, I was outcast from the boys and accepted into the girls' circles. The few extracurricular activities I took part in with boys, I wasn't being any different than a tomboy (though I'm definitely more femme than butch) and it was more to have people to do something with, and to make my dad happy.
I can honestly say that, even now, I don't understand men at all. My personal opinion of men is highly negative and likely based on the stereotypes that men themselves have reinforced in how they dealt with me, both when viewing me as male and when viewing me as female. Stereotypes of men being abusive, cruel, and shallow.