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Mosse (aka "Oddtail")

It will never make sense to me that there are parents, spouses, siblings, "friends" who want to control their close ones so much they'd rather see their alleged loved one dead than let them transition.

And yes, often the choice is that simple. Cis people truly don't get it, but maybe that's why you should fucking listen to us speak once in a while.

If you're cis or have a lot of cis friends on here, consider Boosting this post. It's my experience that sometimes it takes reading a simple truth put simply to fully internalise it's true.

It will never make sense to me that there are parents, spouses, siblings, "friends" who want to control their close ones so much they'd rather see their alleged loved one dead than let them transition.

And yes, often the choice is that simple. Cis people truly don't get it, but maybe that's why you should fucking listen to us speak once in a while.

Mosse (aka "Oddtail")

And the absolute most infuriating thing is when cises "mourn" the "death" of the close one they'd thought was cis.

Fuck off with this shit. You don't mourn the death of your straight friend when she comes out of the closet as a lesbian. Do you.

Think about what you're saying by "grieving" the death of a painful, exhausting, personality-killing, joy-of-living-destroying LIE.

And then maybe don't say it?

Mosse (aka "Oddtail")

I don't see this talked about like, ever.

So I'll talk about it.

If you realised you're trans but find yourself sometimes not really hating your assigned gender and being like "meh" to it?

1) That doesn't mean you've been cis all along;
2) It doesn't mean you just imagined your dysphoria;
3) You're not "pretending" anything or lying to anyone, least of all yourself.

It just means you're more tired than dysphoric. Your brain can't keep negative feelings at full steam all the time, which is good. It's not supposed to.

Do not measure your transness by how much you CURRENTLY need to transition. Dysphoria comes and goes. So does euphoria, for that matter.

I went through several cycles of "I am trans. Wait... I don't feel strongly about this anymore. Was that real? No, wait, ARGH, I'm trans. Wait..." and so on, before I started transitioning. Fooled me every single time.

I still experience this. I'm experiencing this today. I am currently wondering why this whole transition thing is such a big deal to me.

But guess what. I know I'm trans, I've been through this before. Doubts that something is true are not the same as knowing it is not.

You will have doubts whether you're trans years after you transition to your general satisfaction. You will. It just happens. You will still be almost certainly happy that you transitioned. That's what being trans means.

If you don't MIND your assigned gender at the moment, but still your actual gender sounds neat, you're still trans.

You're allowed to pause things and recalibrate, or focus on something else. Your transition should go at your pace.

But you haven't suddenly become cis. I promise you that you haven't. You still prefer to function as your real gender, don't you?

I've done this enough times that I need to say it. It's OK. It ebbs and flows. As long as you're not actually *satisfied* with your assigned gender, as long as you have ANY overall need to transition, you're not cis. You may be genderfluid or genderflux or bigender or agender or genderqueer or non-binary. Knock yourself out exploring those (I sure did). There's no penalty for concluding with "nah".

You may also be very Very, Very Tired.

But none of those things mean "cis". I'm begging you, believe me.

EDIT: one good way to figure this out is - OK, so you don't jump for joy at the thought of transitioning. Now imagine yourself in your actual gender. Imagine it's all done and dealt with. Is your imagined self repulsive, do you want to *avoid* this? Does the idea of HAVING transitioned fill you with discomfort?

If not, then you're not cis. Cis people are *uncomfortable* with the idea of transitioning because they inhabit their AGAB. That's their entire deal.

EDIT 2: also, this is the MOST unintuitive thing ever - I firmly believe feeling "meh" about transition can paradoxically be a symptom of dysphoria.

I don't think it's an accident that I currently feel this way after some rough days, and while having to deal with several days' worth of facial hair. One way dysphoria manifests is that your emotions shut down for maintenance. It's good. But it doesn't mean they were never there in the first place.

I don't see this talked about like, ever.

So I'll talk about it.

If you realised you're trans but find yourself sometimes not really hating your assigned gender and being like "meh" to it?

1) That doesn't mean you've been cis all along;
2) It doesn't mean you just imagined your dysphoria;
3) You're not "pretending" anything or lying to anyone, least of all yourself.

Toni Widmo

@oddtail@meow.social Thanks for this. I have had those 'meh' feelings, and continue to on occassion, and I'm 2 years in now. I've been living my gender for 3 years (when I started laser), so it isn't even because I'm still living my AGAB, because I'm not. Other than a few documents I need to change I've had my legal name change for a year and half. I haven't mapped those feelings at all, but I suspect they are more frequent at a certain time of the month.

Kara's Sahara Bar 🏳️‍⚧️

@oddtail Thank you for putting this down in words. I have had this all the way from realising I was trans still to this day i often think about it but never discussed it with anyone. I don't find it confusing anymore I just see it as part of a process but in the early days it sucks and I'm glad you've brought it up as everyone who experiences this should know they aren't on their own.

Mosse (aka "Oddtail")

(Reposted from Birdside, thread)

Today, the Polish parliament will read a proposed law that makes it illegal to "promote homosexuality", including - I am not exaggerating - pretty much ANY positive talk of LGBT+ people and their rights in public settings.

And foreign media seem almost entirely silent on this.

The law was drafted a while ago, but didn't get into the Parliament for procedural reasons.

It EXPLICITLY bans e.g.:

Mosse (aka "Oddtail")

* talking about LGBT ppl/issues in schools;
* Pride marches and any other LGBT-related public events;
* public endorsement of same-sex marriage or rights;

You read that right. If you say "I think gay people should get to be married" in a public setting, the new law states that you'd be committing a crime.

I know not everyone is equally passionate about LGBT activism, but this is actual insanity.

Dr. Quadragon ❌

@oddtail This looks awful lot like what we have in Russia.

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