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!

Feminine Gay Guy or Transgender Female


Narissa

Recommended Posts

Hello all,

 

I'm battling with myself over the issue of who I am in regards to gender. There are two things I know: 1) I was born male and have been identifying as such up until this point an 2) I am attracted to males and only males. This, of course, led me to come out as gay, and I thought I had figured that out. However, now I'm starting to doubt if that is the full extent of who I am. I started to think I might be transgender after I went shopping without my parents for the first time and I went directly to the women's section to buy clothes. I got a few women's blouses and I loved them when I tried them on. I was wearing one when I came I got home and my mother was shocked. She came to me later that night and told me that she had "looked it up online" and discovered that "only transgender people wear women's clothes and not gay people." I immediately brushed it off as ridiculous; I was gay, not transgender. Where did she even get that from? But that made me doubt and consider my gender for the first time. I know I want to be feminine; I always like my voice being high, and I want to wear makeup, jewelry, and dresses. I also have always felt uncomfortable in my body, especially hating my body and facial hair and my lack of pronounced hips. I thought there were basically two options for me: straight or gay male. But, after doing research into more aspects of the LGBTQ+ community, I see there are other options that might suit me better. I know I should shy away from labels, but I think it comes down to this; I want to know if i'm transgender or not because I want to know if I should pursue any sort hormone therapy or such to begin transitioning while I'm still young. I know that only I can really figure this out, but I just wat some advice, especially from people here that might have dealt with this idea of delineating whether they were feminine men or full on women.

Link to comment
  • Admin

Hello Narissa, and welcome!

 

To kick things off, I'll throw out a disclaimer: everyone's experiences are unique, so take what you will from them but don't apply them to yourself as if they're gospel.

 

That being said, I identified as a gay man until I was almost 30.  Until around that time, I had incredibly limited self-awareness.  I knew what the trans condition was, and I supported the trans community, but it never once occurred to me that I might be part of it.  Then I met a trans woman who assumed - correctly - that I was also trans, and I denied it.  But she introduced me to more of her trans friends, and one day it just hit me like a ton of bricks.  After that, so much of my life up to that point suddenly made so much more sense.

 

Now then.  Your mom is wrong.  There are cisgender people who enjoy crossdressing.  "Crossdresser" is the word for it.  We do include crossdressers under the trans umbrella for purposes of community, but they identify firmly with the gender they were assigned at birth.  Some enjoy wearing clothes typically "meant" for the opposite sex because they're in touch with their inner femininity, some do it because they find it sexually appealing, and others can have countless other reasons for doing it.  The point is, enjoying wearing clothes that aren't assigned to your gender doesn't, by itself, make you trans.

 

What you want to ask yourself is, are you happy with your body as it is?  Are you at all distressed at the thought of having male anatomy?  Do you think you'd be more comfortable in your own skin if you had breasts and wide hips?  If simply living in the body you were born into causes you discomfort or pain, that's your sign that you're trans.  Needing your body to change to align with your personal experience of gender is the definition of transsexual; anything else is just window dressing.

 

If you have more questions, please don't hesitate to ask!

Link to comment

Narissa, When I was a young boy I went through the same issues that you are going through right now. I grew up with two older sisters who for anything I wanted so much to be like them and play house, have tea parties, play with dolls, and later wear skirts, dresses, and heels, and make-up like my big sisters. I still dismissed it as being Gay because like you I was only attracted to men, but I had a little side thing as what I called a cross dresser. I also got no support and was practically shamed my my parents for all of this. Once I really looked inside myself and came to the determination that I was attracted to me but I was also disgusted by the fact of doing anything sexually with them in the outward body that I was in. This led me to research and eventually to knowing all along was was a female living in a males body. I had to wait until I was 18 years old and able to move out of my parents home and into with my supportive oldest sister. Both of my sisters have been extremely supportive throughout this entire process. I now am 40 years old and been through the entire full transition MTF process and have been living as a women for 5 years now and loving every minute of it. I hope this helps or at least helps you explore your own inner self.

 

~Daisy Mae

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Hello Narissa and welcome.  Good advice and commentary from my friends.  I hope to see you around the forum.

 

Jani

Link to comment
  • Admin

Welcome toTrans Pulse, Narissa.  Like my friends, I certainly understand your confusion.  It IS a confusing subject for many, and sexual attraction does get mixed up in it, which often makes the confusion worse.

 

All the advice you've received is good stuff.  I would add one more; if you can, talk to a gender therapist about your feelings.  They shouldn't tell you whether you are trans, because only you can do that, but they will help you figure things out and get you to ask yourself all the important questions.  Not only that; if you do determine that you're trans, they can help you figure out what comes next, and what you need to know, and do, to make transition successful, if that is the road you want to take.

 

Ask questions, and we'll be here with (hopefully) good answers.

 

HUGS

 

Carolyn Marie

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   4 Members, 0 Anonymous, 234 Guests (See full list)

    • RaineOnYourParade
    • Abigail Genevieve
    • Pip
    • Carolyn Marie
  • 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. afraid of self
      afraid of self
    2. Chaidoesart
      Chaidoesart
      (14 years old)
    3. Faith57
      Faith57
    4. Joyce Ann
      Joyce Ann
      (70 years old)
    5. Kelly21121
      Kelly21121
      (56 years old)
  • Posts

    • RaineOnYourParade
      Major mood, right here ^^^    I've listened to Lumineers to a long time (a major portion of it by osmosis via my mom), so that is almost painfully relatable
    • RaineOnYourParade
      As for getting a button-up/formal pants suit, you can try to talk to her more -- Cis women in tuxes have worn tuxes in recent years, after all, (for example, Zendaya) so it can still be a relatively safe topic. For jumpsuits, I'd recommend going with a simple one with a blazer, if you can -- this'll make it look overall more masculine. There's a lot of good brands, but going for one without a lot of extra glitz on it will make it look less feminine under a blazer. I don't know many specific brands though since I usually just get my stuff from chain stores, sorry :<   When it comes to your hair, if you can't cut it, you can look up tutorials on fluffing it up instead. If you can pull it off, it can look a lot shorter and more androgynous instead!
    • RaineOnYourParade
      As far as I'm aware, he wasn't -- he just sometimes wore skirts, which was why it was a question in the first place.   In my opinion, part of that is because of the way press spares attention on issues like that. As a bit of a true crime nut and what I see: Child predator cases' (and cases of a sexual nature in general) press focus on those with an AMAB perpetrator generally, and very rarely are AFAB perpetrators given much press time or even getting tried due to a whole bunch of issues I'm not gonna get into. Because of this, when you see these types of cases and a boy is the victim, it's almost always a queer person who is the one who committed a crime that gets press. Therefore, with the amount of cases seen with this type of perpetrator (and due to the fact "99% of queer people are not sexual criminals" doesn't attract eyes), the human brain can kind of naturally makes an association with it. It's not right, but it's also a fault I think falls partially on the media.   That's all my opinion, though!   This is extra confusing to me, as a feminine man is usually viewed as gay. If someone is refusing the acknowledge the existence of trans people, then gay would be the societal connection that comes after, I think. So, that sorta implies that trans women wouldn't be interested in women in the first place by those assumptions? Of course, trans lesbians exist (most trans women I know like women, actually), but it's a little ridiculous to me that people will deny trans people's existence, call all feminine AMAB people gay, and say that trans people are looking to peep all in the same breath.   Wow, this was a lot longer of a response than I was planning to write--
    • Abigail Genevieve
      For one thing, the practice of putting into office wholly unqualified people simply because of racial, sexual or national characteristics.  It is no accident that Karine is a Haitian immigrant, Black and lesbian.  Kamala Harris is a Black female. Pete Buttigieg is gay.  Often you find that Biden explicitly stated that this is why he hired them, not because of competence, but because they checked so many boxes on his little list.  It makes a mockery of people and is a disservice to the US. 
    • Abigail Genevieve
      I am not sure why people are in favor of unaccountable agencies with bloated budgets and wasteful spending. 
    • Abigail Genevieve
      What about it?
    • SydneyAngel
      Hey girl  I had a problem like you happen to me also. In my first year of estrogen I had a period where my level were good then they got really bad where my testosterone spike high.  I felt like you with all that disforia coming hard. Our bodies need time to adjust. The process is a real pain in the beginning. It levels out eventually and you don't even think about it. Hang in there hugs 
    • Ivy
      Biden's woke agenda?
    • KatieSC
      I wonder if there will be law enforcement procedural shows coming this fall. I can imagine Law and Order: Genital Crimes Unit, or perhaps, FBI: Domestic Genitalia. Then again, maybe they will dedicate a CSI program about the dedicated members of the Oklahoma State Police Genital Screening Unit. Good to know that those Oklahomans have their priorities squared away.
    • KatieSC
      Protections? Well, when they mandate that some who is transgender can get facial and genital electrolysis paid as it is essential to affirming care, or when they mandate and pay for facial feminization surgery, speech therapy/voice affirmation surgery, I will believe that the order is effective. One of biggest hurdles for many transgender individuals is the cost of care. I remember when my one insurance company tried to say that my speech therapy and voice surgery were "cosmetic". I remember when they blocked paying for my facial surgery. I remember the fight I had to get electrolysis. These procedures could save someone's life if the procedures help the individual successfully transition, and are no longer misgendered. 
    • Abigail Genevieve
      I don't think it should be.  Nor do I see Project 2025 as pushing Christian nationalism.
    • Abigail Genevieve
      The agencies are supposed to work for him.  The problem, as conservatives found out in Trump 1, was they will ignore the president and do their own thing.  The agencies are supposed to be under his control.   Congress delegated some of its law making authority to the agencies, which is another problem.   The bloated federal government needs to be trimmed.  Dept Education is worthless - test scores have dropped since it was instituted in the Carter administration consistently, and it is currently implementing Biden's woke agenda more than doing anything else.
    • FinnyFinsterHH
      I hope to eventually wear a suit for dance but don't know what exactly to look for. I feel like jumpsuit is safe option but I have been interested in wearing button up and formal pants. Is there a certain brand i should look for or sites I should look at for tips? My mom is not exactly keen on me wearing too masc clothing like suits just yet but is okay with jumpsuits. Also is there hair styling tips availible, my hair looks like image below. I might be able to get shorter haircut like pixie but am not sure yet.  
    • MaeBe
      It’s never been about him, but he is the Presidential nominee for the Presidency that starts in…2025. I don’t see a lot of conflation that this is a “Trump doctrine”, it a doctrine that benefits him surely, but it is a plan to instill crony governance and enact very Christian conservative (if not purely Christian nationalist) “order” on the country. If you don’t see this as the Right doubling down on Big G government, I don’t know what to tell them. Getting rid of agencies and giving the authority directly to the Executive isn’t shrinking government. It’s consolidation power. 
    • MaeBe
      It is the made up ideology they believe trans people are pushing on the world, those “poor young girls who are being coerced into believing they are men” and the “perverts who put on dresses and think they’re girls”. The anti-LGBTQ+ movement came up with the term. Being trans = you believe in trans ideology/transgenderism, supporting trans people = the same.   In the end anyone that acts on or thinks gender is anything but what is in your pants is a “transgenderist”, why not make it a word if it’s not, there is no real grey area. Unless you acknowledge there is transgenderism, but use your knowledge to “correct it”.  So I guess there could be transgenderist conversion “therapists”.  Face it, we deface the America they want. Land of the Free and Home of the Brave? I think being out and queer is pretty brave. And freedom shouldn’t just be for those who push a narrow “Christian ideology” as the “true” governing model.
  • 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...