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"Pretending" to be male online as a kid...

Started by Wilhelm, September 19, 2011, 05:28:18 AM

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mimpi

Count yourselves lucky guys. I've been faking it as male all my damned life >:( Respect to you FTM's, you are the best men I've ever had the pleasure to meet. :)
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Natkat

Quote from: mimpi on September 20, 2011, 05:29:11 PM
Count yourselves lucky guys. I've been faking it as male all my damned life >:( Respect to you FTM's, you are the best men I've ever had the pleasure to meet. :)

thanks hon, and dont worry, as long your still alive you still have the chance to make a difference on what you want.
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Sharky

Quote from: Chase. on September 20, 2011, 03:50:54 PM
lol, I did that every time I could make my own character. Habbo Hotel, My Coke Studios, Runescape. And it was really nice because I got the type of attention I had always been seeking.

I played My Coke Studios. The first site I remember joining was Neopets. That was about 12 years ago! I remember my friend being confused why my look up said male.
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blake

Quote from: Sharky on September 21, 2011, 01:31:55 PM
I played My Coke Studios. The first site I remember joining was Neopets. That was about 12 years ago! I remember my friend being confused why my look up said male.

Neopets was the first site I joined too, about the same time. I got so addicted to that site :)
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pllx

I did this all the time as a kid. From about ten to fifteen years old, I practically lived on the Internet, and I told everyone I met in forums and such that I was a guy. I got into the bad habit of stealing pictures, but I got over that when I grew up enough that I could slightly pass as male, but I've lost my zest for the Internet the past few years, hah.

It really bothered me to have these people I met online thinking of me as female, although I played my girl role just fine in real life. I think that I saw the opportunity to escape the femininity I've been encouraged to cultivate my entire life, and I couldn't resist it.

Neopets and Gaiaonline were my places, haha. Crazy times. I probably shouldn't have been chatting with people as much as I had at those ages.
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blake

Neopets - it's all about the games. I had to get more neopoints. I HAD to!  ::)

I think I signed up to that site as a "female". Back then, my understanding of gender was "whatever is between your legs". 
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kyle_lawrence

OMG Neopets!  Is it sad that I was 16 when I played that game?  I was technichally an aide in the writing lab where people could go for tutoring, but all we really did was sit on line and play neo pets.  I got a high school credit for that.    When I was a kid, we had a 28.8 dial up modem, and it charged by the minute (56k was super exciting when that came out!), so I wasnt really allowed online much.  College was really the first time I had real internet access, and never got into gaming or online forums and chat rooms till I was in my 20's. 

If I had the internet access as a kid though, I probably would have been playing as a guy and making male user names.  I did play runescape as a male character (I was 22 then, funny to me that someone played as a 5th grader). 
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Sam-

I didn't really do online stuff much as a kid, but I was always a boy on my Pokemon game!
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Sharky

Quote from: Sam- on September 22, 2011, 10:33:27 PM
I didn't really do online stuff much as a kid, but I was always a boy on my Pokemon game!
when red and blue came out I asked for red and my parents thought they were being awesome by buying me both because they didn't know it was the same game. My mom was mad when I never played blue. Then I was mad that professor oak didn't start you off with pikachu. So I had to get yellow when it came out. Pretty much had 3 copies of the same game. I don't want to know how much I spent on the cards. I still have them and pogs.
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viralpiral

Oh, wow. This was such a huge problem for me. And I say problem because I had a bad habit of getting into pseudo-serious online relationships with girls. It was terribly irresponsible of me, and I regret anyone I hurt in the past. My first serious "relationship" was with a girl in Illinois, who to this day has no idea she had been dating another "girl". I felt safe and happy on the internet, and as soon as I signed off, I was back to my crippling insecurities. I was young tho, and with a short haircut I could somewhat pass as an adolescent male, so I'd use my own picture and complain about how girly looking I was. I'd make up bs reasons for why I couldn't talk on the phone, and why I couldn't visit. It was a painful time, because I needed that normalcy, but it was at the expense of others. I didn't even know what transgender was when I first signed on to AOL and tagged the male option in my profile.

Looking back on all this, I wish I had had the guts and foresight to come out to anyone I talked to. I had some great bromances with fellow gamers, and it always made me feel physically ill that I was "lying" to them. I don't doubt that there would have been consequences, but it's such a disservice to all those great friendships I abandoned that I never gave them a chance to prove everyone wasn't small-minded.
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Konnor

Quote from: viralpiral on September 28, 2011, 03:22:39 PM
Oh, wow. This was such a huge problem for me. And I say problem because I had a bad habit of getting into pseudo-serious online relationships with girls. It was terribly irresponsible of me, and I regret anyone I hurt in the past. My first serious "relationship" was with a girl in Illinois, who to this day has no idea she had been dating another "girl". I felt safe and happy on the internet, and as soon as I signed off, I was back to my crippling insecurities. I was young tho, and with a short haircut I could somewhat pass as an adolescent male, so I'd use my own picture and complain about how girly looking I was. I'd make up bs reasons for why I couldn't talk on the phone, and why I couldn't visit. It was a painful time, because I needed that normalcy, but it was at the expense of others. I didn't even know what transgender was when I first signed on to AOL and tagged the male option in my profile.

Looking back on all this, I wish I had had the guts and foresight to come out to anyone I talked to. I had some great bromances with fellow gamers, and it always made me feel physically ill that I was "lying" to them. I don't doubt that there would have been consequences, but it's such a disservice to all those great friendships I abandoned that I never gave them a chance to prove everyone wasn't small-minded.

Whoa this sounds exactly like me!! Except I had virtual relationships with guys. And I talked on the phone to them, and somehow my voice passed. I kind of feel guilty about it looking back, but I don't really think I hurt anyone doing it. Yeah, it was dishonest, but if it had ever turned into something actually serious I would have came clean about it. I guess I should have realized that "normal girls" definitely don't pretend to be male online haha. Oh well...glad to know I wasn't the only one!
"It takes more courage to reveal insecurities than to hide them, more strength to relate to people than to dominate them, more manhood to abide by thought-out principles rather than blind reflex. Toughness is in the soul and spirit, not in muscles and an immature mind." --Alex Karras
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PandaValentine

I never really started going online until I was 13, but it wasn't long before I realised I didn't have to always sign up as 'female' and so started my secret accounts, I had doubles of just about everything  - that people I knew in person were on, just so I could have the boys clothes and what not, then I got into the Sims and since my sister would make male characters too (for her female ones), I just started saying I was doing the same, except I'd play as the guy and make him cheat on the girl with another guy, lol. Fun. But yeah I remember all the guy names I'd pick too, it was so much fun being a guy online, just had to try it in real life. :P - Kidding, but whatever, it did really help me come out by furthering my desire to be male.
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hellion

Quote from: viralpiral on September 28, 2011, 03:22:39 PM
Oh, wow. This was such a huge problem for me. And I say problem because I had a bad habit of getting into pseudo-serious online relationships with girls. It was terribly irresponsible of me, and I regret anyone I hurt in the past. My first serious "relationship" was with a girl in Illinois, who to this day has no idea she had been dating another "girl". I felt safe and happy on the internet, and as soon as I signed off, I was back to my crippling insecurities. I was young tho, and with a short haircut I could somewhat pass as an adolescent male, so I'd use my own picture and complain about how girly looking I was. I'd make up bs reasons for why I couldn't talk on the phone, and why I couldn't visit. It was a painful time, because I needed that normalcy, but it was at the expense of others. I didn't even know what transgender was when I first signed on to AOL and tagged the male option in my profile.

Looking back on all this, I wish I had had the guts and foresight to come out to anyone I talked to. I had some great bromances with fellow gamers, and it always made me feel physically ill that I was "lying" to them. I don't doubt that there would have been consequences, but it's such a disservice to all those great friendships I abandoned that I never gave them a chance to prove everyone wasn't small-minded.

This sounds so much like my history, some ten years ago. I didn't even always have any setting for my gender, but people usually assumed male and I ran with it because it felt so good. Sometimes it got serious, to the point that someone was seriously willing to fly across half the world for me, and I quietly sneaked out because coming out to him was too difficult. I still feel bad about that incident, because he was a really great bi guy and things might have worked out. The same happened with a couple of girls, but we never had as deep friendship to begin with, so I only feel a little bad for them...

In general, I usually didn't put my gender at all if I could, but most people assumed me to be male and I did not feel right about "correcting" them although at that time I was still telling myself I was just a girl. In fact, I remember one guy insisting on using "he" of me while my friends were using "she" since it was during my self-denial phase. Nothing made me happier than people "mistaking" me for a guy. But overall it was a large part of my self-discovery as FtM ten years ago. When I pretended to be a girl, or when people assumed me to be a girl due to female appearance, I had such a hard time forming relationships. But online, where I wouldn't disclose my gender or people just made their own assumptions, I experienced my first real friendships and even crushes that simply never happened to me offline.
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