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Good morning All. Coffees on.


KymmieL

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Kymbrill is just the formal name I came up with for Kymmie.

 

Anyway thermometer on the fence is showing 20. and it doesn't seem to bad outside.  No w i n d.

 

Still on the search but I am not giving up. I know when the right position for me comes up I will get it.

 

Kymmie

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Call it Valentine's Week, I guess. In the midst of personal trauma and moving apartments a month ago—my Christmas cactus bloomed. Here she is!

I now call her my Miracle cactus. She a beautiful sign from the universe, to me and to all of you.

--Davie

 

image.thumb.png.861082fa183793b0a1af0cdd4c6e8be7.png

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Ours bloomed a while back. The cats immediately tore the blooms off playing "jungle cat" among its fronds. I do not know what to make of that as an omen.

 

Hugs!

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@MaddeeI hope your annual check up goes well.  Don't over do it shoveling out your car.  Take is easy. 

 

Jani

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Still no snow here, which is fine with me.  But it has been cold (by our standards).

I went over to the Tractor Supply store this morning to get an extra tank for my backup propane heater.  They had to get it off the lot.  While I was out there with the lady, she called me "sir", but then stopped and asked if I preferred "ma'am".  I told her yes, I did, and she apologized, and used "ma'am" from then on.

I told her I wasn't offended or anything cause I was used to that.  She said that I come there frequently (true) and they should call me what I prefer.

 

Anyhow…  That was pretty nice.  

 

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3 hours ago, Jandi said:

She said that I come there frequently (true) and they should call me what I prefer.

That was nice Jandi.  Another step forward!

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8 hours ago, Jandi said:

She said that I come there frequently (true) and they should call me what I prefer.

 

Anyhow…  That was pretty nice.  

That was nice Jandi,

 

I think more and more retail stores are being proactive with their pronoun awareness a customer relations.

 

Stay warm,

 

Mindy???

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11 hours ago, David K. said:

Call it Valentine's Week, I guess. In the midst of personal trauma and moving apartments a month ago—my Christmas cactus bloomed. Here she is!

I now call her my Miracle cactus. She a beautiful sign from the universe, to me and to all of you.

--Davie

 

image.thumb.png.861082fa183793b0a1af0cdd4c6e8be7.png

Wow! That's beautiful. 

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8 hours ago, Jandi said:

Still no snow here, which is fine with me.  But it has been cold (by our standards).

I went over to the Tractor Supply store this morning to get an extra tank for my backup propane heater.  They had to get it off the lot.  While I was out there with the lady, she called me "sir", but then stopped and asked if I preferred "ma'am".  I told her yes, I did, and she apologized, and used "ma'am" from then on.

I told her I wasn't offended or anything cause I was used to that.  She said that I come there frequently (true) and they should call me what I prefer.

 

Anyhow…  That was pretty nice.  

 

That's awesome.

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Looks like we got 5 or 6 inches overnight. Shoveled, fixed lawn tractor plow, and pulled snow blower out of ice and snow and got it running. Good day today.

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Hi everyone! I finally decided to join a support group just for trans feminine people my first meeting is tonight. This is online which is good because they normally meet an hour and a half away from me.

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Headed to Toastmasters and one of the most influential members just posted on Facebook some sermon notes (he’s a pasty) about Sodom and two genders and bounds. Strangely I am not the least worried. I feel secure in myself. His opioid is just that. It’ has nothing to do with me. I expect thee may be some innuendos tossed around. He’s particularly skilled at this in influencing opinion. I’ve butted heads with him before. But I don’t think he’s met Agnes yet. 

 

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6 hours ago, Emily michelle said:

I finally decided to join a support group just for trans feminine people my first meeting is tonight.

Good morning everyone,

 

Coffee is HOT, black, and strong.

 

@Emily michellethis is great news, I hope you feel as welcome on-line as you speak in real-time to others about the trans issues we share.

@AgnesBardsiebest wishes as you make your way through the Toast Master challenges you face.

 

Hug,

 

Mindy???

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that is what I need to find is an on line group that will let me join. How is one to accomplish finding one to join?

 

finally have some white stuff to accompany the cold. got about 3" over night.

 

Finally Friday for me. It has been so boring at work.

 

Kymmie

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6 hours ago, Emily michelle said:

Hi everyone! I finally decided to join a support group just for trans feminine people my first meeting is tonight. This is online which is good because they normally meet an hour and a half away from me.

This sounds good.  

I have a similar situation.  We have a support group with the VA where I go.  But that is an hour and a half (at least) drive for me.  When it went online it made it possible for me to get involved.  I don't know if I would have otherwise.  But now having met these people, I might be more willing to make the in person meetings when/if they start back.

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3 hours ago, AgnesBardsie said:

Headed to Toastmasters and one of the most influential members just posted on Facebook some sermon notes (he’s a pasty) about Sodom and two genders and bounds. Strangely I am not the least worried. I feel secure in myself. His opioid is just that. It’ has nothing to do with me. I expect thee may be some innuendos tossed around. He’s particularly skilled at this in influencing opinion. I’ve butted heads with him before. But I don’t think he’s met Agnes yet. 

 

 

Good luck, Agnes!  You'll be fine.

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1 hour ago, KathyLauren said:

Good luck, Agnes!  You'll be fine.

I got a table topic question about random acts of kindness related to talking to strangers. Teed it up perfectly. I bragged on you guys (no names no specifics) and the genuine love and compassion I’ve experienced being blown away for people struggling with alternate genders, despite all the negative messaging, suicidal ideation and other side effect, how I’ve been cloistered in a conservative milieu all my life and feeling loved and appreciated in spite of my history, something I have not seen come out of the churches I attended despite their sermons on love your neighbor. So proud of Agnes!

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2 hours ago, KymmieL said:

that is what I need to find is an on line group that will let me join. How is one to accomplish finding one to join?

 

Check your "local" LGBTQ+ resources. A lot of those went online for the pandemic. For example, the group I used to visit moved their meetings to Discord. While I was checking that out, I also discovered they used to have a game night! And I missed it!

 

Hugs!

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We had quite the ice storm last night.  Ice pellets followed by freezing rain, a combination that sets up like concrete.  We were then supposed to get warm overnight temperatures and lots of rain that should have washed it all away.  Instead, we got a little sprinkling of rain, just enough to put a glaze over the white concrete, and then a drop in temperature that froze the whole thing solid.

 

We need crampons to get around outside at all.  I had to spend an hour with a pick-axe chipping ice in the back yard so the hound could squat to pee without her legs sliding out from under her.  Then another hour wrestling with the tire chains on the car.  The driveway is an 800' skating rink, so it is impassible without chains.  Once I had them on, I drove the driveway just to check it out.  It drove fine, but the chains didn't even scratch the surface!

 

Now my back and fingers are sore from the pick-axe and chains, respectively.

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Double great day today. Got my first vaccine shot!  And it's in my new name.  I'm used to seeing my name on my medical records with the insurance company but it just felt weird (in a good way) to file with the county health department and have a nurse hand write my immunization card with my name on it.  squeeee, I feel all warm and fuzzy now.  

0177BDE0-EFEC-4AB0-9216-CF434C661ACE_1_201_a.jpeg

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3 hours ago, KathyLauren said:

We had quite the ice storm last night.  Ice pellets followed by freezing rain, a combination that sets up like concrete.  We were then supposed to get warm overnight temperatures and lots of rain that should have washed it all away.  Instead, we got a little sprinkling of rain, just enough to put a glaze over the white concrete, and then a drop in temperature that froze the whole thing solid.

 

We need crampons to get around outside at all.  I had to spend an hour with a pick-axe chipping ice in the back yard so the hound could squat to pee without her legs sliding out from under her.  Then another hour wrestling with the tire chains on the car.  The driveway is an 800' skating rink, so it is impassible without chains.  Once I had them on, I drove the driveway just to check it out.  It drove fine, but the chains didn't even scratch the surface!

 

Now my back and fingers are sore from the pick-axe and chains, respectively.

Wow. Sounds like fun if you were a kid. A nightmare for you. I haven't put chains on a car since the early 70s. haven't had studs or garnet impregnated tires since about 1973. Be careful !!!!

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    • Cynthia Slowan
      Hi Ivy!  Thanks so much! 💗Cynthia                      
    • RaineOnYourParade
      As a guy with a mom constantly throwing around "she/her", I feel you.   I think trans people in general hold ourselves to an impossible standard to be more girly or manly. There are some people who look or act a lot like the opposite gender, even if they're completely comfortable in their AGAB. That thought helps comfort me sometimes. If being a man was a set of boxes to check off (beyond the obvious chromosome things), I'm sure there'd be plenty of cis guys that would suddenly find themselves no longer being guys. It can be hard when it feels like evidence is stacked against you, but you don't have to be a certain way to turn into a guy. Some people will make it sound that way, but you're already a guy, regardless of how you look or act. After all, men don't look or act one way.   Moving on from that, your mom'll probably (unfortunately) be an issue until you're able to put some distance between yourself and her. Finding a good group of people that support you and your identity can help some -- even if you can't stop her from misgendering you, the more people that you find that respect you can sometimes make it easier to drown out that voice.   I wish you the best of luck <3
    • RaineOnYourParade
      Dang, this post started a loooooong time ago :o   I'm not the most masculine guy, and I would be way too terrified to talk about any desire to be a boy tbh. Everyone said I was girl, I was told I had girl parts, all that, so I figured there was no other option, even if I wanted to be a boy. So, I basically masked the few remaining "signs" I would have after taking away some stereotypical guy things. I was a bit of a tomboy, but I didn't mind wearing fem clothing, and I was seen as just that -- a bit of a boyish girl.   Though, one internalized sign I did have and never talked about was my obsession with Mulan. A girl who got to go and be a guy. She got to hang out with the guys, eat and sleep with the guys, act like a guy, learn the same things the guys in the movie did. I thought every girl would be jealous of that... apparently not, lol 
    • RaineOnYourParade
      It depends what you consider "rich". "Rich" as in there's plenty going on in there? Yeah, sure. Doesn't mean it's high quality junk. There's a lot of complicated stuff I'm still working on sorting out, so even if I've got a lot in my inner life, it's such a mess that it looks more like a hoarder's den than the nice, temple-like space a "rich inner life" makes me think of.     Then I'm definitely doing something wrong with thinking haha 😅 My brain is physically incapable of not thinking about something. I can focus on one thing if I try really hard or if it's a specific interest of mine, but I have to keep thinking on it, otherwise my brain just starts jumping around. If I leave my brain alone, it sometimes jumps to some stuff that kinda scares me, so I don't think my thoughts will ever go to silence     Great minds think alike, I suppose! :D
    • Ivy
      I will add, Sometimes it's just a look of recognition from a woman, say like in a coffeeshop, store, etc. that helps me feel like I do belong.  I don't get that recognition from men anymore - and don't miss it.
    • Ivy
      I wanted to say this too. One thing that is hard for trans women is not having had the girl's socialization growing up.  A lot of the time we just don't know how to act, and that shows. For myself, sometimes I hold back maybe more than I should out of fear of seeming "creepy." Acceptance varies.  Some women are quite accepting, others less so.  I usually wait to be invited to participate.  I don't want to push myself on anybody.   These days I don't have much interaction with men anyway.  Perhaps my seeing men as "other" gets picked up on by women.  I don't know.  I seem to fall back on "it's complicated."   I think when you understand what women go through in this patriarchal society it helps to understand better.  As trans women, we do get some of this as well, but most of us didn't have to grow up with it. Over time, and even pre-transition, I've developed a very feminist view of our society.  (Also raising 6 daughters helped a bit.)  But that is a whole other subject.
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      Welcome Cynthia
    • Sally Stone
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however, who are still in the closet, or perhaps don’t know how much fun Reno is.  For those girls, I have considered starting a social group.  In fact, I have already coordinated a “girl’s” weekend for this coming September.  The plan is to spend the weekend enjoying all Reno has to offer, but centered around a Saturday evening concert.  It should be lots of fun, and I’m looking forward to it.  The challenge is getting the word out.  I probably need to coordinate with the local LGBTQ center to help spread the word.   Turns out Reno is a fun place to live even though I am trans.  The people Sally has met have all been very friendly, but I can’t imagine it being any other way, since Sally is also friendly, and based on my interaction with others, very likeable as well.  I think I’m living proof that when you are open, friendly, have a positive attitude, and smile a lot, people respond in kind, even when they might know, or have a hint you weren’t born the gender you are presenting.    One could assume that my positive social experiences have just been dumb luck, but when I consider how long I have been out as Sally, it can’t just be luck.  I know in my heart, that I am doing something right, that my female personality resonates in a way that ensures I am accepted as the woman I am trying to be.   Hugs,   Sally
    • Ivy
    • Betty K
      I’m not saying that situation will change for you — how could I know? — but I can say it changed for me. I am frequently astonished at how differently I behave since transitioning, how much more relaxed and free and confident I am, and how much of my behaviour seems — to me and to others — genuinely feminine. It can happen.
    • Abigail Genevieve
    • MaeBe
      The behaviors you mention are all socialized, they’re not natal. The women all lived lives where this behavior is expected and they learned. That’s not to say every person aligns with societal “norms” or does it well, this situation was a microcosm. I think I understand where your head is at and I’m confident nothing I wrote is news to you, but look at it this way: do what brings you joy and the rest will follow. At the end it seems like you got in the way of your own joy, the others were including you be it through politeness or acceptance, and only when the Self got in the way did the interaction change.
    • Ladypcnj
      Here are some safety tips whenever going out: 1. Make sure your cellphone is fully charged, and don't forget to bring the charger with you. 2. Tell a trusted friend or family member who is accepting about where you're going to be (if you're traveling alone). 3. Bring along a trusted friend or someone else that is in the community, go together, and afterwards leave the place together. 4. Be aware of your surroundings.
    • Mirrabooka
      I’m posting this here because maybe it is a sign that I dislike my natal self in some ways that I hadn’t thought of before.   A situation happened yesterday which ended up giving me a good ol’ reality check. It left me feeling quite deflated. As a result, once again, I’m questioning my place on the trans rainbow spectrum. It’s not so much that I feel like an imposter, but rather, I feel like an alien.   Our oldest daughter is a single mom and her daughter, our granddaughter, is going on seven. They had a special event at her school yesterday; it was Special Person’s Day, where parents or significant others were invited to participate in some out-of-class activities in the last hour with the students. Since our daughter was working, my wife and I were glad to attend in her place and our granddaughter was thrilled to see us.   My wife isn’t disabled, but she’s not especially capable of doing physical stuff. So, it was always going to be me holding onto the tug-of-war rope with half a dozen mothers against the kids, just as it was to get in the rock/paper/scissors comp where the loser went to the back of the line and the winner had to sprint madly along the line to mee the next contestant. It was nice to be doing something amongst a group of lovely women, not that they knew that I was emulating them. There was some small talk and a bit of gentle banter with these strangers, and it felt nice; I felt included. Of course, these women were just being good humans and not actually including me as one of them. Not that I expected them to do so.   Then we went to the art room and waited outside until the previous group finished up. I became observant during this time, not ogling the ladies amongst the throng at all, but just taking in their hairstyles and clothing choices and the spontaneous, intuitive conversations between them. I started to get a sinking feeling. I was nothing like them, not just in appearance, but in womanly ways. Once inside and assisting the kids, I found it impossible to interact with any of the mothers at all. It’s as if I could see their large pink auras all intermingling, and here was I with my tiny blue (purple at best) aura tied to an anvil and unable to think of myself as anything but an outlier. I almost felt embarrassed to have long hair.   It doesn’t matter how womanly I feel inside, or what feminine mannerisms automatically happen, or how I might display myself to keep my inner woman happy – I am missing the naturality of it all. And that's what gave me the feeling of being deflated.   Just had to get this off my chest.    
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