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!

Do you Practice everyday?


ShawnaLeigh

Recommended Posts

I have been doing this.  All day long.  Everyday. At work, in public, and at home.  In everyway possible.  I'm talking about the over all presentation. (Less the clothing or make up as I am not completely out yet.) (Sigh)

Of course there are things you only do a little bit at a time. Some more often. So I am so hyper-focused on all these things now.  "How would a women do this or that", I ask myself several times a day.  My thought is to do everything I can, all the time, and make it become a part of who I am, physically speaking.  Make them automatic/subconscious actions eventually.

So things like the way I walk.  I practice "the glide" and keeping my steps not as spaced out as before.  Keeping my knees together or closer together vs. that cave man step guys tend to display.  Straight posture and chest out slightly.  Elbows not only in closer but slightly back too.  Even the way I hold my arms and hand positions while walking. Wrists and hands/fingers have more flow then looking like I am gripping a wooden club.  Even women who are walking in a hurry seem to keep the top of their heads level or from bobbing up and down like men do when they are walking fast.  I definitely do not over do any of this either as that would clock me very fast.  I definitely do not try to swing my hips or butt.  Rather I try to keep my foot prints one in front of the other but not to an extreme.  I try to emit and more feminine air to my gait.

 

I am always trying to interject my female voice, especially on the phone, but like @VickySGV had mentioned in another posts.  Not just the physical production of the voice, but trying for a softer sound and higher pitch.  Vicky mentions the choices of the words, sentence structure and inflection and pronunciation of those words.  Even the way I write I try to come across as female.  I am not sure if I am doing a good job or not as no one really comments on writing structure.  My hand writing is terrible and definitely not female looking to me.  This I need to work on a lot.

 

Eye contacts is different too.  Which this one is strange to me.  I seem to be more submissive around men then I do women now.  I am not sure where this is coming from honestly but it seems and feels right.  

 

The way I sit.  Even when alone.  I try desperately to keep my knees together as much as possible sitting.  Trying to get away from that manly wide spread leg and slouch sit.  Crossing my legs in a more female fashion even.  Even though I see men crossing their legs in this fashion too sometimes.  It seems to be a more female way of sitting.  I could never do it before, but I can now with my weight loss.

Eating much smaller bites and very slowly as compared to how I ate before.  Though this is recommended for everyone.   I find women do not power eat like men.  I have no choice but to eat a certain diet and portion size and its extremely healthy.  Developed by my doctors for my bariatric surgery.  But I also notice food choices are vastly different from men to women.  I'm not just talking salads either.  LOL

 

I still watch other women doing certain things.  (Without trying to be creepy.)  I have noticed there is no one "way" to act like a women.  They are all different. Being CIS they are all correct.   I listen to their voices and some have lower voices then me talking like a guy.  So I suppose its not good to hyper-focus on these things.  Being organic or natural is probably best.   However being born male and living as one for 52 years, it is hard to just change every male aspect over night.  Even your mind set keeps you leaning towards male actions when you are not paying attention to it..   Its hard to feel feminine when you display many traits of your male self.   Even if they are subconscious.

Like my friend @Jackie C. has said a few time in past postings.  "I feel like I have to Girl Harder then ciswomen".  LOL

(I love this quote)

Like anything in transition.  It will come, I know.  Slowly.  But I am so impatient.  LOL

 

Is there anything I missed or that you do differently?

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

I do as well. I'd be walking and then I think crap dummy your a girl walk like one. So I slow down some taking smaller steps putting the glide in my walk. Same with sitting. Then somethings are starting to come naturally. My speech therapist says that my normal talking voice has a softer more feminine tone to it.

 

Kymmie

 

 

Link to comment

The only thing I consciously work on is my voice, and I am at the point that I don't concentrate as much on it any more either.  I have been working with a speech therapist for over a year, and do have a more forward resonance, and the pitch is consistently in the 'female' range.  Intonation needs work, but the more I speak the better it gets without having to really concentrate on it.

 

As far as how I walk, I have stopped trying to change that.  My normal way of walking is best described as the stereotypical "prance" of a very effeminate Gay man.  I spent my whole life trying to change that so I walked like a 'normal' guy.  Now I don't try to cover that up.  I just let it flow. 

 

I also don't try to change the amount of hand gestures when I speak any more.  I have always tried to tone that down as well.  It's much easier when I just let that be natural as well.

 

I've never done the man-spreading thing when sitting, so nothing to report there.

 

So I guess my 'practicing' is mainly just being aware of when I am trying to change the way I would naturally move, sit  or walk to try and make it into a more 'normal' male fashion, and just doing it the way that is most natural for me.  But hey, I'm not a male, so why do I have to change the way I am?

Link to comment

I totally agree with achieving the organic self as being a women.  Just being natural without having to think about all this all the time. 

This is why I am being so proactive now to try and teach my brain and train my body how to move and sound.  Some things you may never change from how you were before.  I know this.  That's ok too.  Just basic skeletal build and muscle grouping of a man with dictate most movement when you are not fully concentrating on changing them.  

Old habits die hard too.  I slouch sitting and standing.  I have fought this my entire life.  I want it gone but I fear I will always do it when I am not making an effort to not do so.

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

I practiced a lot in the beginning. For me it was more about relaxing all the rules I'd learned about acting like a guy and just being myself. Over the last year and a half, all those old reflexes to "fit in" with a group of guys are gone and I can relax around people. I walk with my legs closer together, no real movement in my upper body, I just let my hips carry me. I've got less range than a natural woman, but I do well enough. I've got a girl walk, but not a SEXY girl walk. I think I'm mostly OK with that.

My mannerisms are already pretty female. I dance my way through conversations. My hands go where they're supposed to when I'm reacting to something someone else said. I balance things I'm carrying on my hip or in the crux of my arm. I used to force myself to carry books like a dude in High School. I still kept catching myself holding them like I was cradling a baby.

 

I had about half the female voice markers anyway. There are several voice lessons that were super-easy for me because I already did the mannerism that Nina was trying to teach. Some were harder and I still practice. Right now my singing voice is a little flat. I'd like to improve that. I also don't project as much as I probably should. If I'm being honest, I could work on my enunciation more to. Still, I'm very happy with my voice. My therapist put me in the top 5% of trans women voices she's heard. She's part of a LGBT+ choir with about two dozen trans women (and others naturally), so she's heard a few. Honestly, I think she's more active in the community than I am. Of course she's also closer.

I still say your resonance is more important than pitch when you're speaking in your female voice. That and all the little feminine markers. 

 

I think I'm down to small refinements. I'm still finding the occasional splinter of guy mannerisms here and there. I'm embarrassed when one slips out and I correct. Every day is just a little better than the day before. It's like emerging from a cocoon. Well, emerging from a cocoon, but much, much slower.

 

Hugs!

 

 

Link to comment
  • Admin

Being simply out and full time for 10+ years by now, I am not sure it is practice, it is just simply life as I now have it.  Be kind to yourselves, the cares and worries you have in the beginnings are not really as great a barrier as you imagine at first.  There is really NOT that great a separation of the two genders as we have been taught to think about.  Some of it is the battle we had with trying to please our parents and families and their ideas of who we were that makes it seem we cannot be ourselves without jumping off cliffs.  Those are more the barrier than the little things we dwell on.  Those are the reasons and goals for therapy not really to know if we are one gender or another or many, but to assure us we can live truly on a daily basis. 

Link to comment
5 hours ago, Jackie C. said:

I still say your resonance is more important than pitch when you're speaking in your female voice. That and all the little feminine markers.

And your intonation. I was watching a voice lessons video focused on pitch. The woman who was being trained looked totally cis and hot, but her voice was man-deep. The thing is, every other aspect about her speech and demeanor were 100% feminine and the deep voice only made her sound like she had a cold or emphysema. Even with the low pitch I would not have even considered she might be trans.

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator
40 minutes ago, Belle said:

And your intonation. I was watching a voice lessons video focused on pitch. The woman who was being trained looked totally cis and hot, but her voice was man-deep. The thing is, every other aspect about her speech and demeanor were 100% feminine and the deep voice only made her sound like she had a cold or emphysema. Even with the low pitch I would not have even considered she might be trans.

 

That would be one of the feminine markers. One of the exercises I did early on was to intone everything at the right pitch until I got the hang of doing it while I was talking. My feminine voice is basically the same as my singing voice. I guess that makes me a rapper?

 

Hugs!

Link to comment

Yea I am looking forward to finding a voice therapist and starting all this training.  The phone apps are ok but I need more positive reinforcement while training.  

Link to comment

@ShawnaLeigh, I do practice some every day. Any time I am waking and nobody is near I am practicing. But even when people are meat I have been getting braver like the other day at the store.

 

I have a cold right now so I stopped practicing my voice as much, instead just paying attention to my word choices. But that's not hard for me because it turns it I never was able to get rid of my female vocabulary. Nor was I able to stop talking with my hands.  Nor was I able to start being direct rather than circular.

 

The walk has been interesting for me. I have always been deathly afraid I looked feminine. As a result I have always consciously thought about how I walk, always trying to make it manly. But it's already starting to feel comfortable for me walking like a woman. I'm not sure if I'm doing it right. My wife will probably be triggered soon if I keep going with it.

Link to comment
53 minutes ago, Jackie C. said:

 

That would be one of the feminine markers. One of the exercises I did early on was to intone everything at the right pitch until I got the hang of doing it while I was talking. My feminine voice is basically the same as my singing voice. I guess that makes me a rapper?

 

Hugs!

How do you figure out the notes to use?

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Here's a thing you can do to build up the right muscles: It's silent so you can do it whenever you like. First, swallow. Feel what your muscles are doing (use room temperature water if you need some help). Once you've got that, swallow but don't release the muscle. Keep everything high and tight in your throat. You CAN breathe while you do this but it takes some practice. Hold it for as long as you can, but don't strain yourself. Work on increasing the length of time you can maintain tensing the muscles. It helps increase your stamina when you're speaking.

 

Have fun!

 

Hugs!

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator
39 minutes ago, Belle said:

How do you figure out the notes to use?

 

The goal is an A, about 220 MHz as a baseline. I can't do an A. Well, I CAN, but I have to go into falsetto to do it. Falsetto doesn't sound natural so I speak on a G sharp. That's just a little under my break zone. One of the feminine markers (and one I already did naturally) is going up and down when you speak. Basically you do your best. Rising and falling as seems appropriate for what you're trying to say. It also helps if you interject the occasional high note when you're speaking for emphasis, but use that sparingly. It sounds ridiculous if you do it all the time.

 

Part of voice training involves figuring out what YOUR female voice is. We all talk a little differently and use the markers in a manner that's personal and unique to us.

 

Personally, it always floors me when I meet a trans-woman who just uses her guy voice. I met a couple in group though. I get that it's a personal choice, but it seems lazy to me. It also seems like it would be borrowing trouble. Then again, my goal is to pass as best I can and get on with living my life as a woman. Others might have different priorities.

 

Hugs!

Link to comment
49 minutes ago, Jackie C. said:

Here's a thing you can do to build up the right muscles: It's silent so you can do it whenever you like. First, swallow. Feel what your muscles are doing (use room temperature water if you need some help). Once you've got that, swallow but don't release the muscle. Keep everything high and tight in your throat. You CAN breathe while you do this but it takes some practice. Hold it for as long as you can, but don't strain yourself. Work on increasing the length of time you can maintain tensing the muscles. It helps increase your stamina when you're speaking.

 

Have fun!

 

Hugs!

This is excellent Jackie! One question: addy which point during the swallow? There's king if the "top" of the swallow where everything inside is pushed outward, including the parts on top going upwards. Is that it? If so, do we hold all the muscles or just the ones at the top? Also,  at the top of the swallow my nasal passages are closed. So I guess we just ignore that muscle so we can breathe? 

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator
42 minutes ago, Belle said:

This is excellent Jackie! One question: addy which point during the swallow? There's king if the "top" of the swallow where everything inside is pushed outward, including the parts on top going upwards. Is that it? If so, do we hold all the muscles or just the ones at the top? Also,  at the top of the swallow my nasal passages are closed. So I guess we just ignore that muscle so we can breathe? 

 

Just like that. Hold it at the top of the swallow. Keep everything tense. You can breathe while you do it, but like I said: It takes some practice. I couldn't for WEEKS until I figured out the trick. You need to move it forward a little so your nasal passages are clear to pass air. You might have some trouble right now because you're congested.

 

Hugs!

Link to comment
50 minutes ago, Jackie C. said:

You might have some trouble right now because you're congested.

 

Hugs!

LOL, yes I am swallowing every five seconds when I'm trying this. 

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

You're just halfway through a swallow. There shouldn't be any sound. Usually, my jaw is pretty loose and my tongue is touching my upper jaw a little behind my teeth. It's not curved, but it is flexed. 

 

My voice coach always advises caution if you're congested. Never strain and either yawn, sigh or drink some room temperature water if you're feeling tired or just want to cool down a little. Also face massages, but those are harder to do when there are people about. They're wonderful, but people will think you're a lunatic.

 

Hugs!

Link to comment
3 hours ago, Jackie C. said:

Here's a thing you can do to build up the right muscles: It's silent so you can do it whenever you like. First, swallow. Feel what your muscles are doing (use room temperature water if you need some help). Once you've got that, swallow but don't release the muscle. Keep everything high and tight in your throat. You CAN breathe while you do this but it takes some practice. Hold it for as long as you can, but don't strain yourself. Work on increasing the length of time you can maintain tensing the muscles. It helps increase your stamina when you're speaking.

 

Have fun!

 

Hugs!

Whoa.  That’s helpful thank you!

Link to comment
  • 2 weeks later...

I won't go into anything voice related. But as far as mannerisms:  at first I thought I needed to teach myself a new way to walk, move, sit etc. But now I think it's more about unlearning everything I knew about acting like a man and just let myself be who I really am. 

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   9 Members, 0 Anonymous, 177 Guests (See full list)

    • MaryEllen
    • Mirrabooka
    • Susie
    • MaeBe
    • Adrianna Danielle
    • Mmindy
    • Ivy
    • MaybeRob
    • SamC
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.6k
    • Total Posts
      767.9k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,014
    • Most Online
      8,356

    Quillian
    Newest Member
    Quillian
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. l.demiurge
      l.demiurge
  • Posts

    • KatieSC
      I was just notified by WPATH about this new resource. It is also World Voice Day!  Please see link: https://vocalcongruence.org  
    • Jani
      Oh Yes!   This one is so obvious to anyone who has had a cat and observed any Big Cat.
    • Jani
    • Charlize
      Welcome Violet.  It's been awhile since i found this space with so many who understand the struggle to simply be ourselves in a society that often disapproves,  It isn't an easy path but being together we can share all the bumps and the joys. You are not alone.   Hugs,   Charlize
    • Ivy
    • Mmindy
      I'm sorry it didn't work out for the new job. Nothing to keep you from being on the search. I had a coworker who used to walk out of the locker room saying; "I was looking for a job with I found this one and I'll keep searching for the next one. Never let them think you're comfortable and settled."   The coffee has just finished brewing, and we have a HVAC technician coming in about 30 minutes to do an annual system check.   It's time to get out of my Pj's.   Mindy🌈🐛🏳️‍⚧️🦋
    • Mirrabooka
      Hugs. ❤️
    • Adrianna Danielle
      Met the new neighbor's wife last night,nice and she was cool about me.Boyfriend and I talked last night,about about my transitioning plans.One was has on having the GRS and he supports my decision 100%,told him I am not going to have that done.He knows about my FFS and trachea shave coming up in September,he is supportive of this 100% too.Knows these are my choices,not his
    • Mirrabooka
      @Sally Stone, I have enjoyed reading this thread immensely. There certainly are some things in it that I can relate to, particularly when you wrote that "I wasn’t a man trapped in a woman’s body." This simple statement confirmed two things for me; I am not an imposter here, and I could end up much further along the path than what I imagine now.   I very much look forward to your future posts here.   I hope that by posing this question I'm not committing you to spoil future posts, but can I ask, why you have settled on Bigender as a label? I keep changing my label and have no idea what it might be tomorrow or next week or next month!
    • Betty K
      This whole Cass Review thing is breaking my heart. I keep imagining how it must be to be a trans kid in the UK atm. I am halfway through reading the review so that I can effectively refute it if and when people cite it here in Australia.
    • Mirrabooka
      One thing I took on board from a former boss who was an absolute gentleman and fluent conversationalist but a hopeless leader because he was the classic yes man to his superiors, was to take the emotion out of the equation when arguing. Don't use hyperbole. Don't exaggerate. Stick to what you know and defeat your adversary with logic. Of course, your adversary will double down and make an even bigger fool of themselves, and not even realize that they have lost the argument, nor will they realize that people are laughing at them and not with them. It also helps if you can separate them from their minions.   A conservative elderly uncle, who left school at the age of 12, swears black and blue that taking Ivermectin (sheep dip) prevents Covid because he knew someone who knew someone else who took it and despite that person being momentarily in close contact with people who had Covid, didn't come down with it. "Well, you're the one with the science degree!" I said.   A lot of people argue out of ignorance. They base their points on populism and rumor. I rarely argue, but when I do, it is in an attempt to push back. Another favorite saying that I use is "Rumors are started by haters, spread by fools and believed by idiots." I then ask, "Which two are you?" 😉
    • April Marie
      Good morning, all!!! Cloudy today with some light rain coming. Not a day to work outside.   I will vacuum the house and the head out to our local hardware store after I get cleaned up. Time to buy a new bird feeder for the back porch.   I'm sorry the job didn't work @KymmieL! Hang in there.   It sounds like a busy time for you at work @Willow. Finding reliable people is so hard these days.   Time for another cup of coffee before I start cleaning!!   Enjoy this beautiful day we've been given.  
    • Heather Shay
      RIP Dickie Betts  
    • Heather Shay
    • Heather Shay
      Which  do you pefer to refresh yourself - Music, Movies, Reading, Gaming, Nature, Other?
  • 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...