Jump to content
  • Welcome to the TransPulse Forums!

    We offer a safe, inclusive community for transgender and gender non-conforming folks, as well as their loved ones, to find support and information.  Join today!

Words That Are Not Ok


Guest ashermohawk

Recommended Posts

Guest ThomasJames

i can't stand discussing...periods in reference to myself. my girlfriend will be complaining about hers and i have no problem. hell i ask her if she needs me to do anything and sadly i've memorized most of my friends' cycles. but ever since i started mine my mom and i have referred to the stuff for them soley as items. and the first time, i got so sick i went to the hospital so at first i blamed the blood on my sever kidney infection.

Link to comment
Guest ashermohawk

oh, this conversation started up again? cool.

something that also gets on my nerves is my aunt. her nickname for me is "Girly". she actually calls me "girly" in place of my name........BAH!!! :doh1:

Link to comment
Guest Juniper Blue

in my teens and early twenties I actually would stutter when trying to say the word lesbian ... I was raised with homophobia and the word was said like a dirty word and it took me a long time to re-claim it. Now, I can say that I am a lesbian without a feeling of deep sense of shame and with even some pride. I do not perfectly identify with the word ... but I see it as a clinical term that defines how I am viewed (legally) in society. I see myself as pan gender and androgynous ... neither male or female ... So, I do not feel the term lesbian really fits ... Also, I am attracted to women but I do not limit myself and define myself to this as a rigid and permanent reality ... in this sense, I identify better as pan sexual. I tend to fall in love with women but I am open to loving a person beyond gender and I have dated other genders on occasion.

So, back to terms .. none feel "right" but they help us to communicate and so, I prefer terms that are anatomically correct or linguistically correct as I see these as most respectful in most instances. If a person is triggered, I woudl try to avoid these words as much as is possible.

- J

Link to comment

Off the top of my head, I don't have a problem with any particular words when I hear them by themselves. I hear lots of slang words every day and am fine with it. I even use slang myself a lot like many bio guys. Though not in a disrespectful, offensive way. And I don't ever ever call people something they don't want to be called. But being as I'm a guy, I talk like a guy.

The thing is that when words like "lesbian" (NO offense to lesbians, I'm just not one :) ), period, chick, she, her etc. are applied to me personally, it upsets and angers me insanely, sometimes with a force I can't control. It makes me want to freak out and scream and hit. If anyone refers to my genitals with female words, I get super dysphoric - right away! It really makes me angry!

So the words by themselves I don't have a problem with but when they're used about me, it feels like one of the worst forms of abuse ever.

Talon.

Link to comment
Guest Juniper Blue

Yes, Talon ... I have a experienced a couple of times when a guy would say very deliberately and rather loudly "Young Lady" or "Ma'am" as if it were a mockery ... I felt that this was trans phobic and done to "put me in my place" It is very abusive. Words can be used like weapons.

Link to comment

I feel the same as many who have posted before. I can't use the words 'breasts', 'period', or so on, in reference to myself. I hardly even say them about others. I refer to 'that thing that happens to me every month' as 'crap happening'. And if I need items relating to that, I keep it very vague. So vague, I'm surprised anyone catches on. :P And I could hardly bear to even write 'bra' in one of my fictional stories.

I hate being 'ladies'd' when I'm out with female relatives. Ughhh... :banghead: And the word 'woman' in reference to me, terrifies me. But the worst of all... being called a female specific insult. You know the sort... a five letter word starting with a B, for one. :angry: That type of thing makes me more dysphoric, oddly, than someone referencing my anatomy. I had that happen once and curled into a ball over it... felt terrible, and dirty for days. -_-

Though, I'm not bothered by the words, in themselves. In fact, even slang doesn't bother me unless, of course, people are being sexist or something. If someone called me a female insult in jest, or for another reason, as long as they saw me as male, I wouldn't care. I just never want to be called something simply because I'm seen as female.

Link to comment
Guest NadineB

Before transition being referred to as a "big guy" always got me. During transition it's the "sir", "he", and "him" but for the most part it's stopped. Except for the phone :-(

The words that get me seeing red now are "Transgender" "she male" "he/she" and "it" and one I had never heard until a butch lesbo walked up to me and called me her sister/bro, then kept talking and called me a "Transgender". The derogatory terms I just used for her is still my anger at being outed in public by her. Then the b@&$h hit on my partner. I could have slapped her back under that rock she came out under.

I am a woman........get it right!!!

Hehe, sorry bout the outburst.

Luv Nadine

Link to comment
Guest ashermohawk

yes, i have been the subject of some "transexualist" comments as well. in the 10th grade, i was walking down the hall, wearing as manly an outfit as i could risk at the time, and behind me this girl and guy were talking and then looked at me and said, "oh look! now that is a real she/he! yo she/he! where ya goin?" i just ignored them and went on my way.

then last year i had gym class, and it was the swimming section. i was having "that time of the month where my stomach hurts" so i didnt have to swim. by this time, i was binding and wearing mostly guys clothes, but was still not out. so, while i was reading my book by the side of the pool, these two guys walked past, and one of them said, "hey, wassup fruit-loop?" at first i was confused, cuz i had only really ever heard that used to insult gay guys. the other guy said, "who are you talking to?" "that!" he pointed to me, "thats a MAN right there!" now, normally i would have been happy that someone recognized the gender i was trying to emulate, but in this situation it was being used as an insult! *sigh* ignorant stupid ghetto black-people! (its ok, i'm black, so i can say that!)

Link to comment
Guest Lonewolf13

Absolutely agree. Those words hurt like hell when in relation to me and I try to ignore/avoid them entirely if possible but if its referring to someone else then its no problem. Somehow I think the unnecassery words like ' miss, girls, she, lady 'etc ( seanjamie - I feel for you, your my little girl is one of the worst thing to be called) as it just feels like an insult or a stab in the back. I have to really hold back my anger when anyone says these things to me. luckily Ive persuaded my mum to mostly say 'guys' not 'girls' when shes talking to me with my friends etc.

Link to comment
Guest mynameisjay

I don't do well with anantomical words either, but the worst thing ever was when my ex-girlfriend and I had recently broken up and were trying to still be friends. We were going somewhere and I was driving. I was telling her about then night before when I'd been out at the bar with friends and been hit on. Her response was "But you're my girl." I swear I thought about hitting the brakes so hard she'd go through the windshield. It was just this moment of red rage. I hadn't told her about my being transgender at that point, so it wasn't intentional, but boy did it rub me the wrong way. Of course that moment passed. Now I am out to her and she's very supportive.

Jay

Link to comment
Guest Masculinity

I have no problem with those words, but I do hate the word ''lesbian'' because it sounds bad...couldn't they come up with a better name for homosexual women?

I hate it when people call me beautiful, princess, little girl, woman and those kinds of female names...yet, I'm still waiting for the day when people can just call me dude, man, etc.

Link to comment
Guest Call me DEAN

Personnaly, I've always hated my name. It's soft, it's long for nothing and there are no male equivalents (such as Martin for Martine or Charles for Charlotte). Now only do I realize why I've never liked it: way too feminine. I cringe almost everytime I hear my full name.

Like others have mentionned, I also don't like the word lesbian when it's used to describe me. It doesn't fit. Again, now only do I know why I've always dislike it. And Masculinity's right, the word itself does sound pretty bad. I don't like words about female genitalia either. Yuck. Nope. It's not like I have anything against women or anything. Those words just rub me the wrong way.

Dean

Link to comment

Dean, I feel the same way about my given name. The girl name. I mean, I am changing my name right now and everyone will soon call me the right name and pronouns. But I cringe as well when I hear my given name. The very most, of course, when it is used on me. And also when people say she. I know they don't do it out of evil but it still feels like some sort of abuse. But also when I hear my given name for other people with that name, it makes me cringe because my every association with the name is negative, painful and full of bad memories. Maybe in time it'll be better, maybe you kind of distance yourself from your given girl name a bit more and can think of it more as a general name and maybe your old name, something that doesn't apply to you anymore. I hope that eases up a bit. Time will tell. If I meet a person with the same name as my given girl name, I even feel uncomfortable calling that person by her name because every part of me hates saying or writing that name.

Link to comment
Guest Amethyst_Redemption

Like the lesbian thing i hated the term 'gay' in reference to myself because of the implied 'male liking ...' aspect of it.

I feel ya

April

Link to comment
Guest Kael147

Language is so strange. There are words I don't like, but they only the bad "c" words both male and female. I used to have a hard time saying either one, but the other words just feel awkward. When I'm called she or he these days I feel like I'm squirming. See - I'm in limbo land. I look like a woman (butch woman, but a woman), dress like a man, am a man, but can't pull off man completely. So anytime someone refers to me by a gender, I squirm. If it's as a woman (any term) I feel like they are judging me that I'm not "feminine enough" to be a "woman" and when they refer to me as male gender terms, I feel like they are going to realize their mistake and it'll be all weird.

Does that make sense? L I M B O LAND sucks!

Kael

Link to comment
Guest mynameisjay

Kael, I totally get it bro! I hate having to open my mouth and speak, because that instantly takes me from "sir" to "oh, I'm sorry maam." It's like a rollercoaster...happy to be recognized as male but waiting for the other shoe to drop (and as soon as they hear my voice it does).

Jay

Link to comment
Guest Juniper Blue

I think the theme here is that MEN prefer to NOT be referred to as women and are uncomfortable to have female terms, including pronouns driected at them. This seems perfectly reasonable and should not be an issue ... in a "perfect world." I feel that it is very abusive when people refuse to refer to others as they wish to be addressed and with the terms and PGP's that they request. As an androgyne, I feel more flexibilty but if I was 100% male identified, I believe that my feelings would be very different ... most men that I know would take great offense to anyone calling them "girl" etc. or using female terms to describe thier male anatomy. It really bothers me when people act in dense ways regarding peoples names, PG"S etc. in fact, it makes me feel quite angry. This happend a lot to Chaz when he was on DWTS for instance, and I was vocal about it on MSN and other on-line web-sites.

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Who's Online   5 Members, 0 Anonymous, 183 Guests (See full list)

    • MaybeRob
    • Abigail Genevieve
    • MirandaB
    • Jet McCartney
    • MaryEllen
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.7k
    • Total Posts
      768.7k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,033
    • Most Online
      8,356

    ArtavikenGenderflui
    Newest Member
    ArtavikenGenderflui
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. Adele Svetova
      Adele Svetova
      (25 years old)
    2. BROOKSGLASS
      BROOKSGLASS
      (34 years old)
    3. FinnyFinsterHH
      FinnyFinsterHH
      (16 years old)
    4. fool4luv
      fool4luv
      (26 years old)
    5. itsaddison
      itsaddison
      (20 years old)
  • Posts

    • Abigail Genevieve
      Over here muttering about "a new Jim Crow against a persecuted minority."    
    • Abigail Genevieve
      Rants are not a problem.  My favorite hobby! :)   What's out there is bad enough that I wonder why some people feel they need to embellish it.  Be alert.   Some of this will need to be fought in court if they try to implement it. If people are out to get me, paranoia is justified.  And this may not be the only document.   Abby
    • Ivy
      Not in so many words, therefore it's not there at all.  Excuse my paranoia. And the states passing laws against us are nothing to worry about either. Having to change my gender back to male (like in Florida) is reasonable.  I should just accept it, I mean I was born with a dk.  So that "F" is lie, and a fraud.  My delusions need to be dealt with for my own good.   I'm just frustrated these days.  Just a bit of a rant.
    • Abigail Genevieve
      You probably remember the Target PR fiasco.  I remember reading an account from a woman who shopped there.  She went into a stall and did her business, and someone came into the bathroom and began swinging stall doors open, and when she came to her stall, the woman peeked at her through the crack. "What are you doing?" "Checking for perverts." The writer was so stunned by the absurdity that she finished up ASAP and got out of there, while the other woman entered a stall and locked it, made sure it was locked, and locked it again. 
    • Adrianna Danielle
      Been a good day.Cleaned my closet of clothes that I do not wear anymore and do not fit me.It looks better now.Came down to my newest property beside mine,owner passed and I inherited it.There was a double wide there that was removed,it was in bad shape.It is the shop part I am keeping which I got the tools,shop equipment,benches,hoists and shelving too.
    • Abigail Genevieve
      Nothing about eradicating TG folk. 
    • Ivy
      If 9 out of 10 parts are ok, that doesn't mean I need to accept the bad parts (that are aimed directly at me).  That seems suicidal.
    • Ivy
      True, most of it has nothing to do directly with us.  It's the parts that do that are the problem.   I see the  few problematic statements as being a big problem.  Just because a lot of it may be okay, doesn't change that. Even supposing the rest of it might be good for the country, it doesn't help me if I'm being "eradicated".  I suppose I should be good with that, because it's for the "greater good".  If me being gone would please a number of people, then it's my civic duty to disappear, and vote to implement that.
    • Ivy
      Yeah.  There are already laws against assault.  I don't think the overwhelming majority of trans women have any desire to harass cis women.  Speaking for myself, if I go into a women's washroom, it's because my eyeballs are already floating - not for kicks.  And I worry about getting clocked and assaulted by some guy being a "hero."
    • Abigail Genevieve
      Only three, maybe four, sections even mention transgender.  Most is a conservative agenda I have no problem with.   In the sections that mention transgender, there are very few lines.  Those lines ARE problematic, in every case. Unequivocally.  I can't see some of them standing up in court.  In one case a recommended policy goes against a court decision, which strongly suggests the implementation of that policy would be stopped in court.    Anyone maintaining that this is written simply to support Trump, to support him becoming a dictator, to crush transgender people is feeding you a line.  Nor is it an attempt to erase transgender people.   People will have to decide if the overall goals are worth the few problematic statements.  Overall, I support it.  Of course, I have some reservations.
    • Abigail Genevieve
      It is unfamiliar, therefore threatening.   For 90% or so of the population, gender id can be simply and quickly determined by a quick anatomical observation.  They have no understanding and cannot imagine what it would mean to have a body different from the id.  It is unimaginable.  Therefore, wrong.   So there is this strong headwind.   I haven't entered this discussion, but here is a script: A: I can't imagine what it must be to have TG. B: You're a man, right? A: Well, of course. "amused" B: Imagine you were required by law and custom to wear women's clothing all the time. A: It wouldn't happen. B: Okay, but for the sake of the argument... A: That would be disgusting.  I would be very uncomfortable. B: You have it.  That is what TG people go through all the time. 24-7-365. A: Really? B: And then they are told they are perverts for having those feelings.  The same you just described. A: I see. B: And someone comes along and tells you you need conversion therapy so you will be comfortable wearing women's clothing all the time. A: I think I would break his nose. B: You understand transgender folk better than you think.
    • EasyE
      I have found some people correlate TG = child predator ... just as some have correlated homosexual = child predator...    I am baffled by the TG = unsafe connection ... my wife tends to think this way, that this is all about sexual deviancy ... I try to ask how my preference for wearing frilly socks with embroidered flowers and a comfortable camisole under my lavender T-shirts is sexually deviant (or sexual anything) but I don't get very far... 
    • EasyE
      Best wishes to you as you take this step ... many blessings to you! 
    • Abigail Genevieve
      Not sure.  The perp is a minor.  The problem here is NOT transgender, the problem here is incompetent and criminal administration.  See https://www.nbcwashington.com/news/local/family-of-loudoun-co-student-sexually-assaulted-ineptitude-of-all-involved-is-staggering/3231725/ It is more than annoying that people think the problem here is TG and that other people think the solution is some stupid statewide law.  Like an appendectomy to deal with an ingrown toe nail.    Since Loudon, I recall a boy was asked not to use the girl's restroom at a high school by one of the girls.  He, overwhelming her with height and weight,  assaulted her, claiming he had a right to be there.   Later I think eight girls beat him severely in another girl's restroom.  Again the problem is not transgender, the problem is assaults in restrooms and common courtesy.  TG is used as a smokescreen and it seems to paralyze thought among administrators who do not want to do anything to provoke controversy.
    • VickySGV
      Time to get with your Primary Care doctor and be referred to a neurologist or an orthopedist.  It could be many things, too many for any of us here to guess at. 
  • Upcoming Events

Contact TransPulse

TransPulse can be contacted in the following ways:

Email: Click Here.

To report an error on this page.

Legal

Your use of this site is subject to the following rules and policies, whether you have read them or not.

Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
DMCA Policy
Community Rules

Hosting

Upstream hosting for TransPulse provided by QnEZ.

Sponsorship

Special consideration for TransPulse is kindly provided by The Breast Form Store.
×
×
  • Create New...