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!

Hi Im New And Don't Know What I Am


Guest GA1

Recommended Posts

Hello All. I've come over here from a refrence from someone at wrongplanet.net Who thinks I may be "genderqueer" (Not on here, neither was unsure so I choose not saying.)This was as I am a guy but am quite girly, so want girly friends(not neccasary females but those who are sterotypically girly)

this was my original post,

I am into activites often considered sterotypically girly. e.g dance,RomCom, Musical Theatre. I want to meet someone with shared interests. Hetro guys don't have these interests(or won't admit it). Girls just don't seem intreseted in these things. (Or probably think I'm up to something.) Curiously straight guys often think I'm gay but girls never do?! I thought that an openly gay friend woud be good as they wouldn't be bothered about being seen as into dance or whatever. I only ever knew one openly gay person and I didn't make firends, I thought about trying to find some more ppl but I'm not gay and so can't join a gay society.

Sometimes I think about trying to get a girlfriend just to have a friend but I don't like being touched and physical intamacy.

I really just want to meet people with the same intresets as me of any gender/orientation so I can try to make a friend

u should be able to read the thread here. http://www.wrongplanet.net/postxf88040-0-15.html

someone described a typical girl friendship and that summed it up best really .

"girls don't get it when guys like to show off in front of other boys, friendly, someone to confide in, someone to give a hug to Wink, and just be abke to talk about anything really, honesty is the key fact if you see what i mean

and to be someone who the girl can pick up the phone to call or send a message to when she needs anything, girly friendships are different, you're there for each other no matter what, different than boy friendships, you can talk about anything or everything at any time"

That is pretty much me and want I want. I do think maybe I'm too excited about meeting someone that is not going to be a typical macho bloke and that unnerves them. I also hate when guys obssess over girls and feel uncomftabale when they keep asking me about how hot is so and so.

Link to comment
Guest Donna Jean

GA1............

Welcome to the Playground, Honey!

So nice to have you here...I'll get you some coco and a plate of Sally's cookies to get you comfy....OK?

Well, are you ever in the right place...!

Lots of us have gender confusion...and we don't necessarily fit behind a label!

So, here you can just be who you need to be without stress because we don't judge folks...to each their own!

It's good to have you, Hon....

Just relax and enjoy yourself....OK?

Lovely!

XXOO

Donna Jean

Link to comment

hi GA1 you have come to the right place

this is the right place when on the road of self discovery

make yourself comfy and look around

the ladies will be here to offer food soon

Link to comment
Guest Christy.dancer
Hello All. I've come over here from a refrence from someone at wrongplanet.net Who thinks I may be "genderqueer" (Not on here, neither was unsure so I choose not saying.)This was as I am a guy but am quite girly, so want girly friends(not neccasary females but those who are sterotypically girly)

Well, HEY! Hope you find it comfie and cuddly here. Do you have a name, by the way?

I'm not the hostess here, or even an expert on ANYTHING, but if I can help, just ask away!

Link to comment
  • Admin

Welcome to Laura's, GA1. How do you pronounce that, by the way?

A lot of folks on this site are exploring where they fit into the scheme of things, gender-wise. So don't worry if

you're confused and unsure.

The best thing is to explore the forums, ask questions, check out the resources, and most of all..

HAVE FUN and meet new friends.

Also, one of the best things you can do for yourself is find a good gender therapist who can help you explore your

mind and discover your true self, whatever that may be.

Carolyn Marie

Link to comment
Guest NicolaiAE

Welcome to the Playground, GA1! :)

Everyone is extremely friendly and will do their best at answering your questions.

Hope we can help you out.

Nicolai

Link to comment
Guest Elizabeth K

GAI

WELCOME WELCOME WELCOME

We usually ask a person to talk to a gender dysphoria therapist to get a diagnosis - or 'label' as you suggest. It isn't really good to tell you that you may be this or that, we really don't have the expertise here.

And you certainly will want to look around here and see all the diversity. We actually are 'gender' confused not 'sexually' confused, as it is two different things. You noted you were not homosexual, although being so is okay, so perhaps that would be a starting point with your therapist.

So many of us here share that same gender confusion because we don't seem to fit in - and we work hard at finding solutions and ways to be happy with ourselves as we are.

You may be younger, and if you are I suggest looking especially in the Teen Forum. There are some really smart people in there and they are really good at advice.

Glad to meet you. Stay with us ...

Lizzy

Link to comment
Guest Ashlee

Hello GA1,

The best way to find out about yourself is to ask lots of questions and tell us more about yourself.

We are here to help you. This is a place you can feel safe.

{HUGS}

Ashlee

Link to comment

Hey GA1,

Welcome to the forums, I left a batch of cookies in the oven this morning and I forgot to tell anyone about them, I see that Dee Jay found them in time.

We are a friendly group and we try to bring as much sunshine into the forums as possible and on a nice day I like to have picnics by that little stream near the edge of the playground.

In my mind this place is real it's the reat of the world that is virtual.

So glad to have you in the family.

Love ya,

Sally

Link to comment
Guest Leigh

Hello GA1,

welcome, welcome.

so you're feeling confused? been there.

i have to ask, are you only confused because you seem to have more stereotypically "girl" interests? or is there something else that's confusing you?

you aren't automatically gender-confused just because you like to do things that society might think is girly, and you aren't gay. don't let anyone try to put you in a box. you have to figure yourself out for yourself.

but if you have deeper confusion, let us know, we'll help you out as much as we are able.

best of luck,

see you around,

peace&love

leigh

Link to comment
Guest Melanieshaman

Welcome!

by the way, you could NOT have picked a better community to join. I haven't been here long either, but these folks are wonderful, warm, and very caring... again WELCOME!!!

Link to comment
Guest Nikk

Hey dude, welcome :D

Cheyah, labels.... They're not exactly necessary. You're doing kind of what I used to do: fit yourself into a box that doesn't have to exist. You can just be whatever you like without slamming a label on it, as long as you're being legal. Because legal is good.

That being said, if you like people only in the romantic and not sexual fashion, look up asexual, as that seems to be what you're looking for instead of genderqueer. But really, who needs labels anyway?

Just ask lots of questions and make yourself a niche.

~Nikk

Link to comment

GA is just initals with a 1 added to up the numbers to keep registration happy :)

I'm not entirley following the gender/sexual confusion diffrence thing, can some one explain that?

I wish, no I'm not that young. However I didn't even know anybody who was gay till I was 18. I figured since, I didn't like guys I wasn't gay or bi, so must be straight. :P

I hadn't thought of all these other terms. I guess I could be asexual biromantic or something.

hmm. maybe it is a society thing. After all Tomboy's are well accepted,maybe I'm just a Tomgirl.My body doesn't feel wrong and I'm hapy with how I am, even if I don't have the confidence to be myself publicly. I do feel quite girly at times.

My biggest problem I guess is more of a mismatch between how I see myself and how everyone else does. After all a guy talking to a girl can only be after one thing. :rolleyes: No I'm just glad to be able to let my feminine side out other guys won't let theirs out, so yeah I'm really glad to have this chat and been longing for one, but know I don't care for sex, I doubt you'd be as intresting conversationlist then. things might be diffrent if I had a good r/l friend.

Does anyone know where a listing of (UK) gender therapists would be.

who needs labels anyway?

Well I don't know what to say when people ask are you gay?

It would probably be easier to come out as x (even if just an approximation)rather than, well i'm not entirely sure I hae these feelings see.... :)

I keep trying to come out and they tell me it is "worrying" that I'm talking about or know about girly things. It could be a good retort.

Link to comment

Hi! Let me start by saying welcome to the site, since I'm late in welcoming you.

To answer some of your questions, there is definitely a distinct difference between gender identity and sexual orientation. They may be linked to some degree, but they are not the same, are not interchangeable and are not necessarily related to one another at all. Gender identity is how you perceive your own gender, whereas sexual orientation is who you are attracted to.

Gender identity is often completely ignored by society because they are generally close-minded and uneducated enough to believe that there is only male and female. The reality is that gender is a massive spectrum that extends everywhere between and even goes far beyond male and female. Nobody fits perfectly into any one "category" of gender, but they often take the label of that they most closely identify with. Some people (like yourself, it would seem) find themselves in "no man's land", where there really isn't a title anywhere nearby that they can identify with. This can be difficult for such people as, like you said, it is a lot easier to explain to society what you are when you have a name for it. Also, people like to be able to fit you into a little box, and when you have no box to give them, they often get confused very easily and very quickly. Unfortunately that's just how it is for right now. I suppose once you find where exactly you fit on the gender spectrum, you could always 'make up' a name and hope it catches on, but there's not a whole lot else that can be done, and you really shouldn't try to fit yourself into another category that really isn't you, just for the sake of having a title.

Here's a brief overview of several types of genders (this is incomplete as it's only as thorough as my own knowledge. I may be a little off in describing some of them and may even miss some genders entirely. for that I apologize). Please note that the first three on the list are not only genders, but physical/anatomical sexes, meaning that it can manifest physically. The entire list deals with gender, which is the internal sense of one's sex, whereas anatomical sex is purely physical. It is important to note the difference between physical anatomical sex, and mental gender identity.

Male

You should probably know this one. Males are generally masculine, though not necessarily "macho". There are many many different personalities and traits that can all fall under "male". This gender is generally accepted by society and has it's own roles and stigma attached to it, though nobody should be expected to adhere to what society thinks they should be doing. Their gender is their own business and they are no more or less "male" for not meeting social stereotypes. Cisgendered males and transgendered female-to-male transsexuals (and I use that term loosely) generally identify as "male".

Female

Another one you are probably familiar with. Generally seem as graceful and feminine by society, women are expected to be beautiful and serene, or even sexy. However, it is generally accepted for women to display more masculine tendancies, and while there are definitely social "norms" and roles for women to adhere to, it is widely accepted for women to steer away from those concepts and behave in a more 'boyish' manner, or to just simply do things in their own way. This does however depend on one's location and company, as some groups are more or less accepting depending upon their social upbringing. Cisgendered females and transgendered male-to-female transsexuals (again using 'transsexuals' loosely) generally identify as "female".

Intersex

Intersexed people are, unfortunately, commonly referred to as "hermaphrodites". Hermaphrodite refers to animals with this condition and thus is seen as offensive. Intersexed people are born with ambiguous, combined, indeterminable or two different sets of genitalia. It is an extremely rare condition (though not as rare as was once believed) and it was for a long time, and still is, seen as a 'disorder' that is usually surgically "corrected" long before the child has a say in the matter. This quite frequently causes problems for the child in the future, as the child may identify as the gender opposite from what they were surgically assigned at birth. There are many other horrific complications that can arise from doctors' unnecessary interventions. Intersexed individuals may identify as 'intersex', or they may identify as 'androgyne', 'neutrois', or any of the other gender titles that exist. They may also consider themselves "male" or "female" if they feel it is appropriate (if that is how they feel and identify). I don't believe that you can surgically become intersexed... at least not effectively. Medical science isn't quite at the point where we can actually construct a second set of "functioning" (for sex, reproduction or otherwise) genitalia without removing the original set in the process.

Androgyne

Andro - male, gyne - female. Androgynes feel that they are neither male nor female, but somewhere in between. Androgynous people generally display a mix of masculinity and femininity, usually in equal balance and harmony; but not always. Androgynes usually prefer to take an appearance that combines aspects of their male and female personalities, blending the two in a way that suits them. Androgynes usually have likes and dislikes that fit the stereotypes of both the male and female genders, which shows clearly that they are truly right in between male and female. Just about anyone can fit into the androgyne category to some extent.

Neutrois

Neutrois people are really 'void' of gender. They are not male, they are not female, and they are not a combination of the two. Neutrois don't really feel the need to fit into any gender role and thus they are pretty much "genderless". They may prefer to take an androgynous appearance, or they may simply not care. As far as I know, most simply don't want to have a look that distinguishes them as any specific gender, as they don't like to be labeled or shoved into a box with certain roles, ideals and other social constructs attached to it. They are simply people who do not feel they have a gender. Gender isn't really part of who they are, so they choose to omit it to keep from being seen by society as "one or the other".

Genderqueer

Genderqueers are, to my knowledge, more extreme/radical forms of androgynes (I may be completely wrong about this, though). Genderqueers generally see themselves as both male and female while really making no distinction between the two. They may want many defining characteristics from both the male and female genders at the same time, such as breasts and a full beard. Genderqueers are completely against the gender binary (the belief that there is only male and female) and express themselves in a very forward fashion.

I did not include 'crossdressers' on the list as I don't think that they are a gender as such. I believe that crossdressing is when you specifically dress as the opposite/other gender, while still identifying as another gender (like a male crossdressing as a female is still a male, but simply crossdressing). I'm not entirely sure how accurate this is, or if crossdressing should be considered a gender identity, but that is my current understanding of it and how it works.

So now you understand a bit more about gender identity and expression. As you can see, the above all relates to how one expresses their gender, and has little to do with one's sexuality. It should be noted that sexuality is almost (and in some cases is) completely separate from gender identity. Sexuality is also not all about sex, but can be split into two defining categories: sexual orientation and romantic orientation. Below I will explain the difference.

Sexual Orientation

This is the one that most people are familiar with. Sexual orientation refers to one's sexual attraction- for instance, a heterosexual male is attracted to females and would partake in sexual intercourse with them. Sexual orientation defines who you have a physical, sexual attraction to. It has to do specifically with sex. People may identify as heterosexual if they are interested in the opposite gender, homosexual if they are interested in the same gender, bisexual if they are interested in both male and female genders, trisexual if they are interested in both the male and female genders as well as one other (generally intersex/androgynes/people who blend male/female), or pansexual if they are interested in all genders (and there are many more on the list that I won't go into detail with here). There are also those who really are moreso "lacking" sexual orientation, who identify as asexual (someone who does not experience sexual attraction). There are also pomosexuals who shun the idea of labeling people based upon sexual orientation and who would prefer that their sexual orientation remain unlabeled.

Romantic Orientation

Romantic orientation is all about who you can be attracted to in a romantic sense. Romance and sex are not the same when you think about it, and cannot be used interchangeably. Even asexuals can have a romantic orientation, and likewise aromantics may have a sexual orientation. One's romantic orientation defines who they are capable of falling in love with under certain requirements based upon gender/sex/expression. People may be heteroromantic if they are romantic with people of the opposite gender, homoromantic if they are romantic with people of the same gender, biromantic if they are romantic with people of both the male and female genders, triromantic if they are romantic with three different genders, or panromantic if they are romantic with all genders (again there are more on the list). Those who are incapable of being romantically attracted to someone may identify as aromantic.

I hope that my above explanations help you at least somewhat. Hopefully with this information you will find it easier to find what you identify as/where you are in the gender spectrum and how you identify sexually and romantically. Good luck with everything, and I hope that I have helped you come closer to finding who you are.

愛 Eth

http://www.lauras-playground.com/intgender_therapsits.htm should help you to find Gender Therapists in the UK.

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, 77 Guests (See full list)

    • Mikayla2024
    • Vidanjali
    • Ivy
    • KathyLauren
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.9k
    • Total Posts
      771.3k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,160
    • Most Online
      8,356

    katheryn
    Newest Member
    katheryn
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. Amber_Dawn
      Amber_Dawn
      (27 years old)
    2. AnnaOlivia
      AnnaOlivia
    3. cananna
      cananna
    4. CerealKiller
      CerealKiller
      (21 years old)
    5. country6389
      country6389
      (35 years old)
  • Posts

    • Mikayla2024
      LOVE IT!! 💯💯💯
    • Ivy
    • Lydia_R
      I'm 53yo as I write this.  I have been on a M->F transition journey for several years.  My last two female partners died in 2017 and in 2019 and I've been single since then living alone in my medium small sized house until 5 months ago.   For various reasons, mostly financial, I opened my house up to roommates even though my house is technically a one bedroom house.  Since then, I've had 3 Gen Z transwomen live with me off and on.  They have brought their transwomen friends over.  Last week I had a new transwoman friend over who is just a couple years younger than me and we had a good cuddle together.  I dated an older transwoman last year for 3 months.  I had another Gen Z transwoman over a couple weeks ago.  And there is a transman who has become a friend and has been over several times and might be by today.   You can go back to my first posts on this site and read about how concerned I was that transitioning would make me even more isolated than I had been.  And I have been very, very isolated for several decades.  But obviously quite the opposite has happened.  I don't know how representative of the larger world what I see in my house is.  I've played music with almost all of the people that have come through my house.  Most of them are excellent musicians and playing a style on acoustic instruments that is a new sound for me to listen to.   It certainly hasn't been perfect either.  For various reasons, the living arrangement here has been a struggle.  Finances have been a problem for all of us.  I think every last one of us has lived in cars for extended periods of time.  Anyway.  I'm in reflection mode closing this scene down.  Last week was frantic with packing, inventory and cleaning.  I'm mostly in relaxation mode now.  It's 11:07am.  I just finished lunch and I'm a little sleepy.  I've only been sleeping 4 hours a night for the last 3 months because of a crazy unpaid work situation I've been in, so perhaps I'll treat myself to a nap and try to get back to a healthier sleep schedule.  It's been a whirlwind of activity this year and much of that is going to continue on for me.   I feel blessed to have the virtual community on TGP and this physical community in my home.  I wasn't quite expecting this aspect of transition.  I think the first thing my last GT said to me was "you should find some transgender community online."  The first 2 GT I had didn't work well for me and I dumped them pretty quickly, but my last one did great with me.  She always pointed out that I was pretty well adjusted.  It's not like this transgender experience needs to be some mental crisis or medical problem.  I haven't seen my GT in probably 7 months now mostly because of financial problems, but I'm doing fine with it all.  She did a really good job guiding me through this journey.   Just so you know, I tend to not ask questions much unless someone is saying something that I am interested in and have an idea for clarification.  I tend to just spill my guts about things and think that others do that as well without being asked questions.  So....   What has your experience been like meeting other transgender people?  What does the community feel like in your environment?  Is this just crazy liberal Portland stuff or are there pockets of this all over the place?   Hugs, Lydia
    • Ivy
      I think I do live in the moment - perhaps too much sometimes.     As for the demons…
    • Ivy
    • Ivy
      It certainly can be.  But it doesn't have to be.   The sports always come up, it's kinda the gateway.  And yeah, it's not simple.  I think there is no blanket solution for that one.   I also think there is no blanket solution for HRT.  As such it should be left up to the individuals involved.  I don't think puberty blockers, and hormones should be given out like candy - especially to kids.  However, with counseling, and the involvement of the parents and doctors, the state should stay out of it.  For a trans person there is an advantage to starting fairly young.  I wish I could have.   The idea that the human race will die out if we let people transition is ludicrous.  Cis people have no desire to transition and I expect there will still be plenty of people with the urge to [procreate] to keep things going.    Trans people may be more visible these days, but trans people have always existed.  And the last I looked, there are still enough people around to screw things up.
    • Mmindy
      Good afternoon everyone,    While I’m here late today, my morning was filled with tasks. I hope your Monday is going well and you have a wonderful week.    Hugs,   Mindy🌈🐛🏳️‍⚧️🦋
    • Vidanjali
      Grievous, illogical, counterproductive, and shameful. If ciswomen truly require protection via government policy, then by the same token so do trans people. Both the feminist and trans communities essentially want the same things - access to healthcare; autonomy over one's own body to benefit from that healthcare; freedom from violence and discrimination; and the right to be as they are regardless of status quo societal expectations, stereotypes, myths, and biases. These so-called protections do nothing but enforce patriarchal domination while further splintering communities who, logically speaking, SHOULD be allied as not only do they fundamentally have the same goals, but a wealth of knowledge and experience of how to organize and achieve.
    • Justine76
      I was just thinking about how I present in dreams the other day. Interesting topic for sure. In many of my dreams I'm often depersonalized to some degree; like a camera or observer not fully integrated with the content. When I am 'me', I'm usually much younger, late teen'ish - young adult. But gender doesn't seem to come into play much. If anything, I'm agender in most dreams.       
    • Lydia_R
      Commenting on this kind of thing is a very delicate business for me, but I have strong feelings about it all.   I think my problem with commenting on it is that I feel it is a fairly complicated subject and I would have to write a lot to cover the entire topic.  I don't just blanket support trans rights.  I follow the logic of "our" antagonists.  I think that especially, transgender sports is a "problem".  I'm not at all a sports person beyond enjoying board games, bike rides and throwing a frisbee.  But I can see the point of having transwomen competing along side cis gendered woman being an unfair advantage.  Not this this subject is directly related to this thread....   This thread mentions treating a "condition".  I dislike the label "gender dysphoria" and would never use that to describe myself in the same way that it would be very unlikely that I would ever call myself disabled even if I was confined to a wheelchair.   I was a proponent of marijuana legalization in the 1990's and still am to some degree.  I disliked the term "medical marijuana" and choose not to participate in that system.  When recreational marijuana became legal in Oregon, I eventually went to a store and bought some.  I was in my mid-40's and by that time was so sober and health conscious that I didn't want to hurt my lungs or really even feel intoxicated, so it really didn't do much to me when I smoked it and I didn't smoke much of it or spend any significant money on it.  The law allows us to grow 4 plants, so I did that several times.  I enjoy the process and the smell of the fresh leaves and buds.  When I harvest it, and then smoke it, it's the same thing.  I don't want to hurt my body or feel intoxicated.  So the jar of it sat on the shelf and I got the idea of burning it for incense.  I love the smell of it and it was fun to burn it.  It's been several years since I've done that, but I'll likely do that again some day.   This article also mentions classifying puberty blockers along with cocaine and heroine.  They are all chemicals to consume and in that regard could be considered a medicine.  Food, sugar and caffeine are also chemicals to consume as is paint fumes.  Gun violence is absolutely awful, but you can certainly kill someone pretty quickly with a metal shish kabob or a letter opener.   So, do these arguments, laws and proposed laws hold any water?  Is there something wrong with puberty blockers?  Is the problem that young people are making permanent decisions about altering their body in a synthetic way that destroys their ability to have children?  Is the goal of government to promote a growing economy that is based on population growth?  Is the problem that people are afraid that if a large portion of people experiment with these chemicals and procedures, that population will drop to a point and we'll enjoy not having children so much that we as a species will go extinct?  I'd say that that last argument holds some water, but that we are hardly in a position to go extinct any time soon.   Is the problem that we are afraid that these young people will regret their decisions that kill their fertility and will miss out on getting meaning from life from having children?  If people aren't getting meaning from their children, can they find it anywhere else?   Or is the real problem that people are triggered by distasteful cross dressing?   One of my favorite movies is Easy Rider and the line that Jack Nicholson delivers "they have this scissor happy beautify America thing going on."   I think that stereotypes exist naturally.  Discrimination is a natural thing.  We use color and smell to discern "good" objects (food), from "bad" objects.  It's a material universe.  All objects have borders starting with the round stars and planets.  There is good food and bad food, isn't there?  But we can use that logic as a weapon.   So, what can we do about it?  What can we, as members of the transgender community, do about these laws?  I mentioned in another thread on this site I believe....  Yes, it's here:   https://www.transgenderpulse.com/forums/index.php?/topic/90578-what-do-you-think-is-the-biggest-block-to-lgbtq-acceptance/#comment-856442   Perhaps it is just my personal culture with the whole thing, or perhaps there is a bigger thing going on in the world.  I'm a musician who does not like playing concerts.  I enjoy making solo music for my website.  My last roommate and I got into a lot of intense political discussions and he mentioned that virtually everybody goes to the grocery store.  So that is the most public place there is.  We also got into discussions about different sections of the USA doing a segregation type of thing.  I certainly perceive my environment in Portland Oregon to be a liberal place and all 4 of the transwomen who have lived with me this year said they moved here from the south for the acceptance and medical care.  Is segregating the country like this a dangerous road to go down?   And this kind of thinking can go on and on and I certainly want to mention abortion now and then press on to environmental issues and indigenous cultures.   As someone who claims to be sober, is HRT a designer drug and I'm actually not sober at all?  My driver's license says female on it.  Should I be paranoid about using the women's bathroom?  All the stalls in there have doors on them.  And hooks.  I passed some WPATH steps sincerely.
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      Inner demon? I don't think I have one of those...    I do worry some about the future, and sometimes that can make me a bit nippish.  But mostly I am in the present.
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      From what I see, the legal system gives wildly varying results.  And the difference between civil proceedings and criminal proceedings changes things as well.  I have never been on a jury, but I have been through the court process after I was attacked in 2022.  The guy was found guilty and sent to prison, but I definitely didn't get a million dollars.  Of course he had basically no property or money that could be taken, so even if there had been a ruling of that sort it would have been like asking for blood from a turnip.  Maybe Summer Bushnell has a lot of money?  Who knows.   I understand that comparing being hurt by lies and being physically hurt and left with some permanent damage is like comparing apples and oranges, and that comparing results from one location to another has similar issues.  Still, it seems strange that one thing is worth a million dollars and the other is not. 
    • Jani
      Very sad about Jim Gordon, such a talent.
    • Lydia_R
    • Vidanjali
      I had an inspiring weekend. Our vet detected a large splenic mass in our beautiful husky Saturday morning requiring immediate emergency surgery. We transferred her to the hospital our excellent vet recommended where she had a successful, uncomplicated surgery to remove the spleen and mass, and stayed over one night without any post-op complications. We were able to bring her home last night and she's so happy and content. So now I'm focused on nursing her through her recovery. Throughout this episode, after an initial brief feeling of panic, I found my mind calm, focused, and optimistic throughout. I spent time meditating and being with my girl in spirit while she was still in the hospital. She is so brave and strong and good. I thank God for the mental stability I've developed through grace which was tested this weekend, for the superb healthcare providers we are blessed with, for the means to be able to afford healthcare, and for the life of this amazing girl who is the embodiment of sweetness, determination, and endurance. All so very inspiring. We await the pathology report, but I have not been dwelling on that. Just so blessed to be together with this girl.
  • 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...