Quote from: imaz on April 24, 2009, 07:44:53 AM
Please excuse my ignorance but what exactly is a "->-bleeped-<- ->-bleeped-<-" and how does one distinguish between those who are and those who are not?
Anyway what's the problem if one is fancied for being TS/TG? That's something I just don't understand.
I believe that the "accepted wisdom" is that a "->-bleeped-<- ->-bleeped-<-" is a man or woman who wants a relationship with an MTF for the purposes of having a penis in the mix on their partner. The stories go that after the penis is gone that such a person is also gone and the MTF is left alone, having lost the appendage that was the "real" attraction.
I presume that such people exist. Although if they did they would seem like just another fetishist, like a person attracted to breasts or thighs or feet to the exclusion of an attraction to the person who had those parts. *shrug*
I believe the notion at work is that the MTF wishes to be desired as a woman, not as a woman with a penis or as a penis. But, I am a bit uncertain on the actual facts of the matter.
O, to answer the original question. I suppose I don't have a preference as I think the dichotomy is a false one.
I suppose I always think of myself as a "normal" woman, but am also a bit uncertain what that means as well. My partner, myself, and our female friends are alike in some ways, but we all have a varied range of likes, dislikes, styles, voices, faces, pasts and desires for future so actually nailing down "normal" seems a bit of a stretch.
Certainly I didn't come to normal in a normal way, but through transition. However, I am not at all sure that anyone is simply born "normal" and grows that way.
I suppose I like to think that each of our journeys are formed from various types and extensions of transitions. Surgeries and hormone replacements and name changes, etc are simply one of many that all humans who actually live their lives go through.
I find it difficult to think that my struggles to become Nichole are any more acute due to transsexing than other people's are who didn't make that particular transition in their lives.
My most difficult transition, in fact, was the one that took me from frightened victim of abuse to survivor. It was the hardest struggle.
Nichole