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Did You Choose Your Gender?


Abigail Genevieve

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1 hour ago, Ivy said:

Perhaps I still struggle with accepting myself?

 

Maybe. In my case I think it's two things: (1) I don't always feel like a woman, but seem to drift in and out of perceiving myself that way, no doubt the result of decades of conditioning; and (2) I don't want to get into any, to me, pointless and unwinnable arguments about "what is a woman". But also I'm proud to be trans. I'm quite happy to own that aspect of my identity.

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27 minutes ago, Vidanjali said:

 

Introduce free will? Free will is considered sinful by some religions?

 

What is free will? And what does it have to do with transgender?

 

Free will is seen very differently, even among branches of Christianity.  To what extent we possess it, to what extent it is usable, and to what extent it is beneficial are sources of endless debate.  In my own faith, I believe we have a certain amount of free will, and whether it is good or bad depends on what we do with it. 

 

And what part of who we are is God's plan, and what part is just stuff that happened basically at random?  For me, I don't believe God made me the way I am, or even that God necessarily gives us life.  He created life, but we have a part in the process so now babies just happen.  God gives the soul, but I don't think much else about us is created or planned.  I don't believe He is responsible for me ending up intersex/trans.  Its essentially a system error, and we do the best we can to cope with it.

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44 minutes ago, Vidanjali said:

The experience of happiness, joy, and freedom impresses the mind and opens the heart.
...
As happiness increases, one's heart turns towards goals beyond the gross physical body which ultimately will pass away.

 

Seeing you had written this as I was writing my post where I invoke the joy I've come to experience, my eyes are welling up. This is truly what has happened to me, simply by embracing this part of myself. I am better for it. I have never felt the need to serve before, without being forced by guilt or expectation. I am excited to be giving myself to the community through volunteering, by acknowledging this trans part of me I am becoming a better person. How can this be "wrong"?

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This topic is getting deep!! 

 

I do wish that the "outside world" could see posts like this and how much each of is wrestling with what is inside of us. That all of us are genuinely trying to figure out who we are, who we are called to be -- and that each of us is trying to do the right thing, find the right path, be the best person that we can be, do the most good in the world... 

 

I think a lot of the vitriol would quiet if folks on all sides of the aisle would speak a lot less and listen a lot more (truly listen for understanding and empathy, not to just to formulate a response to put someone in their place)...

 

Anyways, carry on friends!

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Sometime in the last three weeks it occurred to me that God does assign gender to people, and so He made me trans. I don't want to get too deep into theology on this right now but to say He knows what He is doing, He knows the best thing for me and everyone else, He is good and I can trust Him with this. 

 

He made some people with their gender aligning with their bodies.  Well and good.  And then there are the rest of us, and we have to work out the right way to deal with whatever He has given us.

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2 hours ago, MaeBe said:

Seeing you had written this as I was writing my post where I invoke the joy I've come to experience, my eyes are welling up. This is truly what has happened to me, simply by embracing this part of myself. I am better for it. I have never felt the need to serve before, without being forced by guilt or expectation. I am excited to be giving myself to the community through volunteering, by acknowledging this trans part of me I am becoming a better person. How can this be "wrong"?

 

That is beautiful. Indeed, in my opinion the best thing you can do with your life is to serve. And to be most effective you must endeavor to learn what is love. That entails learning what is self-love for which inquiry into yourself and self-acceptance are essential.

 

6 minutes ago, EasyE said:

I do wish that the "outside world" could see posts like this and how much each of is wrestling with what is inside of us. That all of us are genuinely trying to figure out who we are, who we are called to be -- and that each of us is trying to do the right thing, find the right path, be the best person that we can be, do the most good in the world... 

 

I have often had the same thought. I would venture to guess that almost all people who have negative thoughts about trans people have never actually (knowingly) engaged with a trans person.

 

1 minute ago, Abigail Genevieve said:

He knows what He is doing, He knows the best thing for me and everyone else, He is good and I can trust Him with this. ...we have to work out the right way to deal with whatever He has given us.

 

Amen to that.

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I have decided to reply to this thread without reading through it, but I have briefly paid attention to the last few posts and have made the observation that it has gone off on a tangent. 

 

OK, back to basics.

 

No-one chooses their gender, just as no-one chooses their sexuality or skin color or parents or siblings or birth date!

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I'll answer this a little differently. I didn't choose to have gender dysphoria, but I did choose to deal with it by transitioning into the gender expression in which I feel most comfortable and am leaving behind the expression that made me miserable.

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11 minutes ago, emeraldmountain2 said:

I'll answer this a little differently. I didn't choose to have gender dysphoria, but I did choose to deal with it by transitioning into the gender expression in which I feel most comfortable and am leaving behind the expression that made me miserable.

I totally accept that too.

 

To me, what that means is that you didn't choose the gender which you are now, you just accepted it. Maybe you were told that you were a different gender to what you actually are now, but that was a lie.

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1 hour ago, Mirrabooka said:

I have decided to reply to this thread without reading through it, but I have briefly paid attention to the last few posts and have made the observation that it has gone off on a tangent. 

 

OK, back to basics.

 

No-one chooses their gender, just as no-one chooses their sexuality or skin color or parents or siblings or birth date!

Exactly! I just had a similar conversation with a CNA this morning helping to transfer in and out of the shower. 

She made the comment, "you know you are sinning for what you did to your body."

I quickly informed her that I'm not on HRT, nor have I had surgery. I was born this way, If she has a problem with it she needs to take it up with God. 

 

And it's none of her business anyways. We are all born different, and we all need to just be comfortable in our own skins. 

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36 minutes ago, Birdie said:

And it's none of her business anyways.

People too readily make (often wrong) assumptions about us.

And it's presumptuous to claim to speak for "God". I think they can speak for themselves.

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1 hour ago, Mirrabooka said:

I have decided to reply to this thread without reading through it, but I have briefly paid attention to the last few posts and have made the observation that it has gone off on a tangent.

 

Just fyi, the reason for the seeming tangent is due to the prevalence of encounters like the one Birdie describes. It was revealed in the discussion that the thread question was posed in the context of trying to discern the veracity of such claims equating transgender with sin.

 

30 minutes ago, Birdie said:

Exactly! I just had a similar conversation with a CNA this morning helping to transfer in and out of the shower. 

She made the comment, "you know you are sinning for what you did to your body."

I quickly informed her that I'm not on HRT, nor have I had surgery. I was born this way, If she has a problem with it she needs to take it up with God. 

 

And it's none of her business anyways. We are all born different, and we all need to just be comfortable in our own skins. 

 

@Birdie I recall you've shared similar encounters with the staff there. And you do so in an unembellished and matter of fact manner. Are you able to let such comments roll off you and if so, how? I am truly sorry you have to deal with such ignorance on what seems like a fairly regular basis. And for sure your body is none of her business apart from what she's there to assist you with! Honestly, telling her to take it up with God is good advice because what she really should be working on is how to control her tongue, let alone her thoughts. 

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42 minutes ago, Birdie said:

Exactly! I just had a similar conversation with a CNA this morning helping to transfer in and out of the shower. 

She made the comment, "you know you are sinning for what you did to your body."

I quickly informed her that I'm not on HRT, nor have I had surgery. I was born this way, If she has a problem with it she needs to take it up with God. 

 

And it's none of her business anyways. We are all born different, and we all need to just be comfortable in our own skins. 

Yeahhh, babe! :) 

 

it's easy to say from behind a keyboard, but I would have reinforced to her that it was HER God who made you that way! She'd have absolutely no room to move then!

 

 

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15 minutes ago, Vidanjali said:

And you do so in an unembellished and matter of fact manner. Are you able to let such comments roll off you and if so, how?

I've been dealing with this since puberty when I really developed, I'm quite used to the comments. I'm just glad that times are changing and everyone's gender situation is slowly becoming more accepted. 

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I guess my hang up about choosing gender is that there is major entanglement with the binary “standard” and Christian morality. They see the choice to choose to align the inside with the outside as the choice, one that goes against God.

 

I am choosing to express myself in this manner, unlike when I presented masculine; I just did it, followed what I was told I was and didn’t ever think about it. So there is a choice, it’s just not the one that people assume it is: willfully choosing to go against themselves. The problem with that mentality is that we aren’t going against what we are, we’re simply not conforming to what the world demands we must be.

 

The world demands much of us without consent: comply with social roles, maintain the principles of aggression as a means to order, have babies, smile more, rub dirt on it, don’t cry, don’t be hysterical, be in charge, don’t be bossy, be a man, be pretty, don’t question why…

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  • Posts

    • MaeBe
      They may feel disappointed or aggrieved, but that's on them. It's on society really.   In the end, who should really care other than you and the higher power(s) you believe in? I haven't been a willful volunteer at all in my adult life (if ever), I surely did so as a youth but can you consider that willful if you're required to? Since allowing this part of me to shine I have been more active in the community, volunteering and participating in society in ways I never did before. Perhaps you'll feel the same when you allow yourself to.   My wife and my kids all see me and how I've changed. I haven't hidden it away from them, but I realize I may have lucked out with their general acceptance. Where the struggle comes is from my internal fight with putting it out in the world. "What are your pronouns? Have you changed your name?" are all asked of me and it feels like a lot when I just want to be me, but I understand where it comes from. That is why I resolved to register as my nickname and use She/Her at the HRC conference, because I owe it to myself to have permission to embody who am I. Now it's just finding a new job as this person that I am and not the person I thought I was--not eschewing the past, but realizing that there's no reason to feel that that was a better me.   It wasn't.
    • EasyE
      Bingo for me!!. In some ways I wish it were more cut and dry. Like some folks on here who knew when they were 2 years old that they were a girl (and everyone else around them knew too). I don't have that. I do have a fascination & enchantment with the feminine that started very young. It is both something I am attracted to (like tonight at Target I couldn't keep my eyes off all the beautiful females in my midst) and something I aspire to be and connect with at a deep level.    For me, there has always been a drive to express this feminine dimension outwardly through clothing. I can see that thread from all the way back when I was a kid. I have always wanted to wear girls/women's underwear. And I have always pushed the boundaries of wanting to wear girl stuff under my clothes, though I've known that if I ever got caught (in high school, on my swim team, by my wife!) there would be hell to pay...   This drive continued through college, into adulthood, into marriage (even though I thought that would solve it because I could finally be intimate with a woman and it not be a "sin")... I always felt such shame about this part of me until about two years ago I finally started asking myself, "what is so wrong with this?" Once I gave myself permission to explore this further, and with the help of a therapist who for the first time validated my experience instead of shaming me, my "egg cracked" and the embers were fanned into a wildfire (sorry about all the mixed metaphors, lol)...    Now I have a whole closet and drawers full of women's clothes (many of which I only wear when I am alone), I am separated from my wife, my kids have an inkling of my feminine side but not much more than that, and I am two months into "covert" HRT wondering when/if there will come a day of reckoning when it becomes obvious what I am doing...    I guess deep down I just feel like a misfit and that my life could have been/could be so much more impactful and that I am a giant disappointment to everyone around me... 
    • Lydia_R
      I made the pumpkin pie this morning.  I like getting older and getting better at making this pie crust.  I've never purchased a pre-made pie crust.  I make 3-4 pies a year.  Mostly pumpkin pies, but apple and blackberry when those come into season.  For about 15 years, I was buying about 2 medium carving pumpkins a year and cooking/pureeing them and putting them in 2c measurements into the freezer.  I started getting lazy a few years ago and am just doing cans of pumpkin now.    
    • Lydia_R
      "Children growing up, old friends growing older.  Freeze this moment a little bit longer.  Make each sensation a little bit stronger." -Neil Peart   Dead bat x2
    • Ladypcnj
      My parents didn't show me my birth certificate until I started going to school, in the meantime until that happened,   I was mostly seen wearing boys' clothes, but my mannerisms mostly female without the use of hormones. My parents thought I was going through as phase, until one day things took a physical turn in my puberty years, which resulted in a family car ride to the hospital emergency. I had my share examinations, treating doctors could not come up a diagnosis what was happening to me. I would soon discover I was born with a hidden variation or undescended, which could had been ovaries inside. Things got to the point which resulted in surgery, I didn't know about. I asked for my surgical medical records, but access denied. So, I live with a surgical scar, and take medication.  
    • kristinabee
      It's something John Green said somewhat recently referring to the Emily Dickenson poem "Hope Is the Thing With Feathers." The poems first stanza reads   “Hope is the thing with feathers - That perches in the soul - And sings the tune without the words - And never stops - at all -"   It's a beautiful and helpful poem, but what was life changing for me was what John Green said in relation to the poem. "Emily Dickenson doesn't say that one never stops hearing the song of hope, only that it doesn't stop playing... The song of hope is still singing. And I know you can't hear it, but one day soon you will."
    • Ladypcnj
      another link that helped me: Intersex Support and Advocacy Groups Around the World (interactadvocates.org)
    • Ladypcnj
      I like shopping for fashion clothes, finding something nobody else is wearing 
    • Adrianna Danielle
      Going to have a paternity test done tommorrow.Having someone come up and get a sample from me.I remember having unprotected sex with her.Her daughter,she seen a picture of me going to adjust well her supposed dad is now a woman
    • KathyLauren
      I don't even need half a hand to count mine.  A combination of Protestant prudery, total lack of sex education, and my being the wrong gender.  And, it turns out, asexual, though that may be a product of the other factors.
    • ClaireBloom
      That's a great suggestion. One thing I did was start a Pinterest board.  If I see something I like, I pin it without overthinking it too much.  Eventually a pattern emerges of the kind of clothes that appeal to me.  I'm very concerned about being age and venue-appropriate so I concentrate on more "everyday" outfits rather than the sexy stuff.  Not that the sexy stuff isn't fun though.....
    • Sol
      Thank you, @Vidanjali! I'm in the process of applying to universities to transfer to (I got to a local community college currently), and I've got my eye on a specific one but I'm apply to 2-3 more just in case.  I'm also trying to apply for a job!  Another minor update is that I'm able to purchase trans tape now! I got it in blue because I like colors and pink was sold out, but hopefully the adhesive reacts well to my skin and I can use it to bind. This is another weapon I may have in the ongoing battle with dysphoria, but I think if it works, it'll work really well!  Fingers crossed, and y'all have a good day!  
    • Davie
      “I can't play bridge. I don't play tennis. All those things that people learn, and I admire, there hasn't seemed time for. But what there is time for is looking out the window.” — Alice Munro
    • Ladypcnj
      I can relate to looking in the mirror at a young age in life, whenever I explained to my parents, it resulted in a car ride to the hospital emergency room.
    • Mmindy
      Welcome to Transgender Pulse Forums @Nicola_Atherton   Best wishes, stay positive, and motivated.   Mindy🌈🐛🏳️‍⚧️🦋

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