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Do you ever wonder what its like to be acisgender woman?

Started by xXRebeccaXx, November 19, 2011, 09:18:50 PM

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xXRebeccaXx

My sister said that it must be really weird to have a body that doesn't match my mind...AND IT IS!!!
Even in death, may I be triumphant.
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toxicblue

Oh yes. I wondered that all the time before I knew about hormones and changing of the voice. Now I'm just focused on transition.
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Jen-Jen

Mostly what toxicblue said, but of course I wonder all the time! I know it would make my life a tad bit easier than what it is!
Don't judge a book by its cover! My lifes been like a country song! True love, amazing grace, severe heartbreak, buckles, boots n spurs! I 've been thrown off the bull a couple times, I keep getting up and dusting myself off! Can't give up on my happily ever after!
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Forever21Chic



   Probably not much different then it is to be a trans woman just add monthly bleeding to your schedule.  :D
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Mahsa Tezani

Quote from: Rukia87xo on November 20, 2011, 12:50:01 AM

   Probably not much different then it is to be a trans woman just add monthly bleeding to your schedule.  :D

If I was cis...
I could be a pregnant bitch 24/7 and CJ would be the father of my babies instead of Pezzies. But why would I be mating with an openly gay male?
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Sailor_Saturn

Yes, I've often wondered what it would be like to have had my body to begin with. The fact is that I think it's a better life to be a cis-genered woman than a transwoman. Here in Denmark we have no rites of passage for transwomen, and participation in established female rites of passage is abnormal to say the least. There's no sense of community and belonging as a transwoman, you're always "the other". People can be sympathetic, they can be kind, they can be cooperative, but they'll never completely see me as a woman in the same way they do a cis-gendered woman. And there is no third gender rooted into Danish culture which is equivalent to those found in North American tribes. You're a guy or a girl, game over, cash in your chips.

I hear so many women say "I'd give anything to be a normal, heterosexual man. But I'm not, I'm a transwoman."

This is essentially an acknowledgement that cis-gendered people have better lives and are more accepted. It's an expression of a desire to belong. I have the same desire, only I say things a little differently:

"I'd give anything to be a normal woman. But I'm not, I'm a transwoman."

I don't want to surrender my identity as a female. That's me, it's the core of my existence. Why should I even want to change that? I want to change the frame, not the engine.
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Lynn

Quote from: Jen-Jen on November 20, 2011, 12:38:17 AM
Mostly what toxicblue said, but of course I wonder all the time! I know it would make my life a tad bit easier than what it is!
I pretty much agree with this. I have thought about it a lot, and still do ... but right now it doesn't really help to think about it anyway, it's better to focus on what I -can- change.
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Alicia

I have wondered, but even without knowing in full it's still what I wish I could be (have been). Even if I could afford hormones and surgery, I suspect I'd feel like I've still come up short. I know that life wouldn't be perfect and I'd still have problems in life. I want it even more than being an ordinary straight guy. Though I know it's forever beyond my reach, I couldn't decrease the desire either.
  >:(
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Re: Joyce

I wondered all my life and now I know.  After a few years of hormones, a few years of living full time and now, finally, GCS and I officially arrived there.

     I'm here to tell you that surgery not only fixes what's between your legs, it can fix your brain.  When I came out of the anesthetic post-op, I felt an inner peace in my head that I never felt before.  All the "static" and noise in my head was gone.  I had no idea how bad it was.  Nearly all of you do.  It never stops and never goes away (for long).

      Now, I no longer think of gender issues.  I am female first and always.  Those awful memories are fading fast and my brain is clear.

      I've been accepted by many females in my life.  A group of girls I went to high school with get together regularly and they've accepted me and I'm now included in their activities.

      I've been asked to join an important women's group in my Industry.

      The final "you know you're accepted as a woman when...." story is one of the women I work with came into work with her hands and arms folded in front of her and asked me to come into another room with her.  She'd broken a finger nail and it was too painful to work the buttons on her blouse.  She asked me politely if I'd button up the front of her blouse for her.  There was no arousal intended here, it was one female asking help from another.

      Don't give up.  There is hope and there is a cure for these feelings.  I *am* female.  I can go swimming (just did recently) and I can pass in the shower.  I am accepted as such by others.  There IS hope.  I lived in despair far too long, believing that I could never be accepted and I'd only be an ugly man in a dress.  It's turned out that I'm a pretty woman in a dress. 

       I've had many women express envy at how good I look.  They mean it....   You don't have to live a lie, you CAN live a life.
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8888

Yes, because a lot of the cisgender females I come across are just plain weird! I wanna know why and how they function this way.
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rosetyler

Be yourself.  Everyone else is already taken.   :)
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LivingInGrey

I don't wonder what it's like as much as I loth the fact that I couldn't be a cisgender female all my life.

(ROCK) ---> ME <--- (HARD PLACE)
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MsDazzler

Oh, always, definitely! Everyday I look at the natal females and wonder.  :-\
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Amaranth

Quote from: xXRebeccaXx on November 19, 2011, 09:18:50 PM
Do you ever wonder what its like to be  acisgender woman?

Constantly.  To the point where, before I accepted myself as trans, I would have...."bad" thoughts triggered by envy towards ciswomen around me.  :\

Still happens sometimes, but I just think "that will be me one day."
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Mahsa Tezani

I actually like being both. I have my gay past which strengthened me now, I get to hob knob with straight guys, drag queens, and everyone.

Something I would have missed if I was cis.
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xXRebeccaXx

If I were cis I wouldn't have realized how much of a douche bag everyone is.
Even in death, may I be triumphant.
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Julie1957

I often wonder what it would have been like to be a cisgendered woman.  There is so much I missed having to go through puberty as a male - things that girls learn that I now have to relearn - having girlfriends over for sumber parties, doing each other's hair, sharing clothes and makeup, learning how to really interact with other women.  As a woman, I'm very inexperienced.

Julie
I always wanted to be someone.  Now I am someone.  It just isn't me.
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umop ap!sdn

Oh yes, I wonder what it must be like to be born with a proper brain-body match, to go through adolescence without changes that are disgusting, to have a small passable frame and hourglass shape. To be able to relax and be perceived as a woman no matter what, without having to strain one's voice or wear falsies. To have a vj that doesn't hurt and stays open without dilation. Even after SRS I wonder about and envy ciswomen all the time.
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xXRebeccaXx

Quote from: Mahsa the disco shark on November 21, 2011, 02:55:38 AM
I actually like being both. I have my gay past which strengthened me now, I get to hob knob with straight guys, drag queens, and everyone.

Something I would have missed if I was cis.

So...you're bigendered
Even in death, may I be triumphant.
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Sarah Louise

I've wondered.  I've wished it had been.

And I would be totally willing to have lost the experiences I had as the wrong gender, the friends, the life.

I also have absolutely no idea how it would have changed my life, there is no way to know, but I wish it had been.
Nameless here for evermore!;  Merely this, and nothing more;
Tis the wind and nothing more!;  Quoth the Raven, "Nevermore!!"
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