Quote from: Miniar on October 01, 2009, 11:56:22 AM
Either way, one of the harder things from my perspective is to keep myself from doing things for the sake of "playing the part" of a man, as opposed of not playing a part at all and just being me.
Hubby pokes me occasionally when I'm doing male posturing and reminds me I'm overcompensating instead of just being me and I don't take offense when he does because he's right.
I completely relate to this. I often catch myself being too stereotypically masculine when I'm feeling insecure, almost like a "pendulum swing" effect. When I notice that I'm doing something, or behaving a certain way simply *because* it's masculine, and not because it's actually who I am or how I feel.
But... that being said, I do think that sometimes it's important for me to "put on" a bit more of a masculine air than is natural for me, because when I'm just being my somewhat "androgynous" self (not that I'm androgyne as in gender identity, but just as in "personality balance" so to speak), it's easy to slip back into my "fake" feminine persona that I've affected for so many years, because it's fairly close to my more authentic "neutral" personality, and plus there's a "head in the sand" comfort level to hiding behind that mask. So when I push my masculinity a bit further than what is natural for me, it at least helps me break away from that safety zone, and try out different personality traits and find out which ones *are* authentic for me, and which ones are just posturing. I find that when I've spent a day pushing myself to that "just a little too far" masculinity, by the end of it, I feel more free from my previous "shell" of a personality, and more close to my true expression of self. If that makes any sense...
Quote from: interalia on October 03, 2009, 03:04:30 AM
Just reading the quote alone I get the sense the therapist is referring to complete abdication of masculinity by the MTF TS. We have a tendency to cling to our feminine attributes and deny those attributes that don't justify our femininity - at least many seem to at first. It seems to me that the therapist is saying that in doing that we aren't being "whole" or as I would say, "honest with ourselves" when we completely remove any and all things masculine with which we at one time identified.
I could be totally off base of course - that is just my guess.
I can also agree with this. There are times when I have gone too far the other direction (again, that pendulum swing phenomenon), and have felt like "I can't think like this, enjoy these hobbies, respond in these ways, etc. because they're too girly". So I've cut those things out of my life only to later realize "no, I like those things and they don't need to threaten my maleness". I don't have to live up to anyone's standard of my gender identity but my own, and it doesn't serve me well to give up pretending to be one person (a woman) just to pretend to be someone else instead (a macho man with no feminine traits at all), but it's definitely been a hard lesson to master (and I'm still working on it).
Quote from: Arch on October 04, 2009, 05:16:26 PM
Kate, you are very wise.
I agree, Kate you explain yourself so well!