whatever girl
u are the only transsexual i can not stand and id like to keep it that way
drinky drinky
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whatever girl
u are the only transsexual i can not stand and id like to keep it that way
drinky drinky
I'm relatively new so i'm not qualified to make decisions as to who's instigating and who's not . But u make way too many good points to have them nullified by useless bickering. Let's try to keep this intellectual . Maybe we can actually come to some conclusionsQuote:
Originally Posted by Vicki Richter
lol do some searches embrujada
u will pleasantly surprised
especially the vicki apology to allanah- where she herlself claims to cycle hormones weirdly and act stange to certain girls
Well thank you for injecting (pardon the pun) some calm rationality into the last few posts. I do think that this divergence proved exactly what the poster had intended. Some TS's, the vast majority perhaps, are emotionally unstable and start mindless, unprovoked attacks against their peers. Why am I disliked? Because I haven't been infected with crazy transsexual disease. I can stand on my own merits as well as my mental prowess and make real, if not practical, arguments.Quote:
I'm relatively new so i'm qualified to make decisions as to who's instigating and who's not . But u make way too many good points to have them nullified by useless bickering. Let's try to keep this intellectual . Maybe we can actually come to some conclusions.
I do find it amusing that craziness infects a post about transsexuals having issues. If this were a Greek tragedy, one might say, "ironic".
Vicki
http://www.vickirichter.com/forums
Yes... Also do a search for "drinky drinky" if you want to see whacky tranny disease, and totally unproked attacks of jealousy in action.Quote:
Originally Posted by AllanahStarrNYC
Vicki
http://www.vickirichter.com/forums
lmao
girl u know drop the jealosy bit because the LAST thing i am is jealous of you. you can call me crazy, insane, ugly, whatever u like- but to say that i am jealous of you is the ultimate insult- because trust me the last thing on earth i am is jealous of vicki richter.
:roll: Well of course you wouldn't admit it.Quote:
Originally Posted by AllanahStarrNYC
I'd never call you ugly Ms A... nothing could be farther from the truth.
Anyway, I am sorry you're jealous of me but it's just getting old and I had to point out that is why you make the comments you do. You're pulling on my braids and crying for my attention when you attempt to provoke me out of the blue when I am posting here. It's a natural reaction and pattern of jealousy. You target my threads and posts like someone infatuated... It's cute in it's own simple way.
Vicki
http://www.vickirichter.com/forums
Ok My take on the whole situation :
What does 'homosexual' mean?
A homosexual is a person who exhibits "sexual desire orbehaviour directed toward a person or persons of one's own sex."
The problem with using the word homosexual is that it assumes there are only two types of diametrically opposed sexual orientations, homo-
and heterosexual, and that people are either one or the other.
Sex researchers believe that people exist on a continuous spectrum of sexual preference. The Kinsey Scale rates people's sexual responsiveness on a scale of 0 to 6, with 0's exclusively heterosexual, 3's equal homosexual and heterosexual, and having sex exclusively with someone of the opposite sex, and 6's exclusively homosexual. Most people lie somewhere between the two extremes.
Are transsexuals and transvestites homosexual?
The majority of transvestites (those who wear clothes of the other gender) and transsexuals (those who feel a dissonance betweentheir gender assigned at birth and the gender role they wish to assume) are heterosexual.
Their situation has in common with homosexuality the fact that they are challenges to traditional gender roles, and that many transgendered people are homosexual. As well, activists who label themselves "queer" have undertaken to include transgendered rights issues with those of homosexual rights. As with definitions of homosexuality, there are problemswith definitions of these transgendered people.
While transvestism is for some a paraphilia, others dress as the opposite sex for broader social reasons. Transvestism and transsexualism may
overlap. The current medical definition of transgendered people as deviants and disordered people could be amenable to similar criticisms used against the medical definition of homosexuality as disease, which existed until recently.
For example, when treating transgendered people who are depressed or suicidal, it may be useful to examine whether these feelings are an inherent part of the "disorder" of transvestism or transsexualism, or whether they are merely a result of the discrimination and disapproval faced by
these patients. Efforts to change these traits must be balanced with the testimony of transgendered people who report greater happiness and satisfaction after they embraced their desired gender roles.
It all comes down to knowing yourself and being honest to yourself.
Damn CTFU>Quote:
Originally Posted by AllanahStarrNYC
Excellent post, Embrujada. You really nicely summed up several very cogent points.
Ari, I hear you about being bi. I am bi (though I haven't been with a man in more years than I can recall and have never been emotionally/romantically attracted to a man--another point on that sliding spectrum I think, in that I'm pansexual when it comes to sexual activity, but hetero with a ts-twist (whatever that is) when it comes to love, romance, emotional attraction). Some think that being bi is the "easy" GLBT category, or that it's simply an excuse for, as you say, "doing anything that moves." In fact, most of society seems to consider a bi man as gay (whereas a bi woman isn't--good old double standard). And TS often seem to look down on bi men because, well, we're confused, or not sufficiently masculine (which I can understand, since so many TS want so much to move away from being defined by their male sexuality).
Still, being bi is "easy" in the sense that it's not visible to anyone unless you tell them or they see you with a member of the same sex. Being TS on the other hand is the "hardest" (no pun intended, please) in that you're the most out there in the public eye. So I can only grasp a small part of what it must be like to be TS in this society (speaking of the US and perhaps Western Europe).