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does your genetic sex bother you?

Started by Elsa.G, June 10, 2012, 10:16:36 AM

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Elsa.G

apart from identifying gender, because we know gender and sex are different, but does your genetic sex stay on your mind? if you are not intersex that is
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Kelly J. P.

 My genetic sex has left numerous marks on me. It is very difficult to forget it, and often a source of debilitating depression. I am very unhappy with my appearance, and even when I do fix my appearance with the aid of completely unnatural surgery, I will never be able to reproduce as a woman... and my genitals can only be unnaturally remade into a close approximation of what a biological female has.

Add to this the simple fact that the experience of being male for my entire childhood deprives me of countless potential positive experiences, while at the same time being a central factor in countless negative ones. Because of this, I will never be able to take my gender for granted like the 99.95% do. At best, there will always be a small barrier between me and cis men and women... and at worst, I may never be able to socialize properly. This is up to probability to decide at this point in my life.

The sum of the above leaves scars, as well. These things have made me a bit jaded, and grim; a little dark, and my hope is a shadow of what it once was. Because of my physical characteristics, and the necessity of a journey to overcome them, my self-esteem is likely to be permanently damages, and because of the experiences I have and the ones I don't... I will never know in certainty whether I really am female, or just a sad boy that wished to be female.



... So, yes. I do think about it from time to time.

Me and my crushed spirit.
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Carolina1983

#2
I do not have super big problems about my genetalia.. But my body in general is something that I hate, especially my face because it is too masculine to ever be passable I think :(. It is a sad fact but I try to think that it could be worse.


Of course I would love to have a vagina instead and so on but I just have to make what I can from what I was given even if it sucks.



And.... I miss growing up as a girl, the act I had to put up has messed me up in so many ways I am afraid.


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Sephirah

Not really, no. I only think about it if something makes me aware of it. Mostly because the most important parts of me, including my mind, aren't my genetic sex, and never will be. So it doesn't really stay on my mind until such time as either a bout of dysphoria kicks in, or someone else makes it an issue in some way. Then it's like getting hit with a mental baseball bat. But eventually (usually with the aid of introspective techniques) that goes away and I go back to using my mind the way it works best, and being myself. I learned a long time ago that genetics isn't something I can do a whole lot about - I'll be XY until the day I die, or until they create some sci-fi way to change it... and things lost or never had aren't going to come back or appear through wishing it were so, so it's probably best for my sanity to just get on with it and make the best of the situation. There's a lot I can still do and offer to the world, dispite being hampered with a dyslexic... whatever, the thing which got the letters mixed up when I was born. I might not be able to change my genes, but I can do a bit of tailoring in order that they fit me better.
Natura nihil frustra facit.

"You yourself, as much as anybody in the entire universe, deserve your love and affection." ~ Buddha.

If you're dealing with self esteem issues, maybe click here. There may be something you find useful. :)
Above all... remember: you are beautiful, you are valuable, and you have a shining spark of magnificence within you. Don't let anyone take that from you. Embrace who you are. <3
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SourCandy

Kind of honestly, It's hard to really say sometimes what role my gender discomfort has played in my life and how separate that is or was from my tendency to alienate myself as I grew up. It does bother me to the extent that I feel depressed about it often times, but it's not like I would prefer being dead if that was the only other choice.

The amount that it bothers me probably won't magically get better as I transition, but I do hope that I can add a counter weight of feeling better about myself and the future.

Of course I do think there are at least a list of things I take for granted about having grown up a boy that I don't realize (One I know is that the odds of me having my best friend would probably be lower if I was a girl), and that I am the sum of my experiences and that good or bad, and no matter how much it bothers me, I can only hope to change the future and not the past.

But it does bother me, As much as I want to look towards the future, most of my nagging regrets are things I missed out on or didn't do, but I can't let myself be absorbed fully in my own real or imagined short-comings
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=celestica=

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Ms. OBrien CVT

The only real thing that bothers me, is the fact "it" is still there.  If I don't see it, I forget that it is there.  My orchidectomy helped a lot, but there are those moments that I am reminded.

My entire life I have mostly sat when I went to the bathroom, and most of the time I only see the way I was meant to be.  Yes, I have children so I had to use it, but I never really enjoyed sex.  It was a necessary evil.  I was raised to be a "man."  But I always knew I wasn't.

I look forward to the day that I am the way I am suppose to be.

  
It does not take courage or bravery to change your gender.  It takes fear of living one more day in the wrong one.~me
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Brooke777

Quote from: Elsa.G on June 10, 2012, 10:16:36 AM
apart from identifying gender, because we know gender and sex are different, but does your genetic sex stay on your mind? if you are not intersex that is

Only when I think about it  ;)
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Michelle G

I despise being male! I am pretty much "disconnected" from my boy parts which has made relationships over the years awkward at best.
I also dont mind my body really as being tall/thin with ok legs has been fine with me...but over all these years countless times I sobbed myself to sleep wishing I good wake up with perky boobs, girl parts and beautiful hair!! only to wake up and see a male face in the mirror that was attractive for a guy...but a disaster for being the female I feel I always should have been!!!

I deal with it though and do the best I can with what I have to work with, at least I am "out" a little bit and can be myself around the ranch here at home...that helps alot :)
Just a "California Girl" trying to enjoy each sunny day
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AbraCadabra

It was my genetic sex that prevented me from going through 'female rites of passage' as I just stated in another post with this title.

My chromosomes XY / genetic male sex condition is something that will be with me - for ever.

Never mind all the body fixes we do go through. The 'feedback' from this 'body condition' is not to be underestimated. It prevents - at least this far - a complete normalization or groundedness, I feel lacking most when awake during the night.

During early transition this was less apparent because so much still had to be done. Now all is done - more or less - save maybe a face lift?
Normalcy wants to establish, and normalcy keeps telling me I AM not quite normal... in fact will never be. Not in a 'normal' binary female sense.

I guess one will eventually get used to it, but having been saddled with a 'birth defect' - corrected fair enough - still leaves one with a history.
It is not depressing or any of this sort of thing - BUT it is ALWAYS present. It is present when called the right pronoun and feeling good about it, as it is when one attracts some looks of just a few seconds longer then this ever was the case pre-transition.

So, yes it does bother. Sometimes more, most of the time less, but it is just ever present even post-op with no more 'extra' reminder of our condition.
We are who we are...

Axélle

Some say: "Free sex ruins everything..."
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Beth Andrea

Most of the time I can ignore the parts.

But, if I look down while clothed, I see that disturbing bulge, and if I can, I'll "tuck" within minutes, lest I become home-bound due to depression. Once tucked, I tend to be ok.


But yes, if I could paint my body with invisible paint I surely would.
...I think for most of us it is a futile effort to try and put this genie back in the bottle once she has tasted freedom...

--read in a Tessa James post 1/16/2017
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LadySerraphym

In a word..........YYYEEESSS!!! I hate what lies between my legs and though I can change it, it will never be the same. But I refuse to let this ruin the exciting transformation I am going through now. I am woman....Hear me roar! LOL
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Shawn Sunshine

I have some days I hate the feeling of my genitalia , and yet some days it is ok , it's really damn confusing though because I do enjoy pleasuring myself, I just keep going through waves of phases where everything seems wrong and then for a while its just ok.

To be honest I am scared of the idea of loosing my parts , and yet I don't like the idea of continuing to feel all wabber jabbered about how I look and the discomfort of having to deal with it.
Shawn Sunshine Strickland The Strickalator

#SupergirlsForJustice
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MagicKitty

I've never hated my penis. There have been times where I've wished I had a vagina, but 99.9% of the time I don't think about it. As genderqueer, I never really questioned my genetic sex as a child, as it was always acceptable to me. Around the start of puberty was when I first noticed I was different, but I was unable to pinpoint what the feeling was.

Through the years, I went from not caring about my body, to wanting to master my genetic sex (male), I wanted to work out and have a good body as well as be a "manly man". But I've always had the opposite side as well. The feminine part of me also wants to come out. When I look back, though, it seems that my goal look was an attractive feminine guy.

Now that I'm on hormones, I often look into the mirror for 5-10 minutes. Sometimes I see a guy looking back, sometimes I see a girl. It makes me happy to see the girl staring back at me.
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mementomori

Quote from: ShawnToShawn on June 11, 2012, 12:16:15 AM
I have some days I hate the feeling of my genitalia , and yet some days it is ok , it's really damn confusing though because I do enjoy pleasuring myself, I just keep going through waves of phases where everything seems wrong and then for a while its just ok.

To be honest I am scared of the idea of loosing my parts , and yet I don't like the idea of continuing to feel all wabber jabbered about how I look and the discomfort of having to deal with it.


if youre scared of loosing your parts just feminize yourself without getting ffs . theres no golden rule about how you should or shouldnt transition/ and in what way you should
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mementomori

srs * not ffs , damn i must want ffs bad if i just automatically type that when explaining something else
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Shawn Sunshine

QuoteAs genderqueer

Ok what exactly does this mean in a nutshell? Is that related to being Androgynous?

Quoteif youre scared of loosing your parts just feminize yourself without getting srs . theres no golden rule about how you should or shouldnt transition/ and in what way you should
*fixed the srs/ffs thing for ya  ;D*

Well, that is true, and that is where I am going to start, my goal is to see where I really should be along the spectrum, still though I don't know if I would like having to keep dealing with what is down there, as it's usually uncomfortable most of the time now.

Shawn Sunshine Strickland The Strickalator

#SupergirlsForJustice
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justmeinoz

If it didn't I guess I would still have my old name and be living as a bloke, but I am not in a frenzy about it either. 
HRT is working it's magic slowly and SRS in the mid future will tidy things up.  I am patient enough to cope with the way things are going.

Karen.
"Don't ask me, it was on fire when I lay down on it"
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A

"In a nutshell" means "to sum it up". I think.
A's Transition Journal
Last update: June 11th, 2012
No more updates
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Nov413

Yes, but I've come to accept that as how I was born, and history is very hard to change.
"Courage and perseverance have a magical talisman, before which difficulties disappear and obstacles vanish into air." - John Adams
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