View Full Version : No tolerance
Rachel nylons
02-09-2011, 02:07 PM
In a world thats supposed to be more tolerant, being a crossdresser can be double edged sword. As crossdressers/transvestites are not tolerated by the majority of men, women and the homosexaul community as crossdressers are treated by these people as circus freaks. Thats one edge of the sword, the other is that some crossdressers do not accept some of us who only wear women's clothes and don't wear make up or wear a wig as not being a true crossdresser. It's hard enough as it is being a crossdresser with the issues that are against us, as well as the conflict that goes on in our heads from time to time. I've certainly have this conflict go on in my head now and again, the feeling of being caught by ones you love and the guilt of wearing women's clothes thinking what would your family and friends think if you were caught or that you've been seen in them. Then another time you don't care and you look at yourself and think to hell with it, this is a part of me. To those crossdressers that can go all the way I admire you, I only wish I could do the same. As I'm too afraid to do so. To those who can go all the way but have the opinion that unless you have the wig, the make up and the clothes you're a true crossdresser, please back off not all of us has the confidence to go all the way like you have.
Many thanks
Karren H
02-09-2011, 03:36 PM
Obviously I missed the announcement where the world was supposed to be more tolerant? Personally I tolerate everyone but morons!!! Which sadly makes up a pretty large portion of the population...
Debra Russell
02-09-2011, 03:43 PM
Obviously I missed the announcement where the world was supposed to be more tolerant? Personally I tolerate everyone but morons!!! Which sadly makes up a pretty large portion of the population...
Amen -- what Karren said
ReineD
02-09-2011, 03:46 PM
Rachel, I've noticed that the CDs who are happy with their lives have found a niche for themselves with support groups or CD friends they can hang out with. This brings the confidence to work on presentation, which makes it easier to go out, and this in turn makes it easier to ignore those who are misinformed about CDs. All it takes, really, is to bring just one person into your confidence, hopefully your wife, so that at least you can have the freedom to join a support group.
kimdl93
02-09-2011, 03:57 PM
Intolerance of all kinds is a characteristic of human societies. Always has been and probably always will be. So, no matter what racial, economic, social, political or gender groups you happen to belong to, be assured that someone will be opposed to it in some way. I'm as guilty of intolerance as anyone else - but I'll spare the gentle reader my list of those I can't tolerate (its embarrassingly long).
So how does one survive surrounded by intolerance? By finding peace and acceptance in yourself. If you accept yourself for what you are then, you can dismiss those other intolerant @)&?#'s and live your life on your own terms.
Jessinthesprings
02-09-2011, 04:01 PM
LOL and oddly enought the state of being a moron spares no group. I deal with it everyday!
Deanna B
02-09-2011, 04:06 PM
Hi Rachel
Yes, its a tricky world out there with everyone seeming to be against you. As long as you are happy with you that is all that really matters. I work in the building trade which is totally intolerante to CDing so I cant be me there. Also work coleagues can be nice to your face but watch the daggers in your back as everyone is vyeing for position - I just want to turn up and do my job and if poss have a giggle along the way. I also grew up in a household with a very angry father who hated everyone and everything which did rub off.
In real life Ihave no friends except from the Mrs. I give friendship but it tends to be abused. I have joined this forum to try to chat to other like minded people and make friends. But You can tell by the way they write if they are just filling in time or are actually interested in you but on the whole they are a friendly bunch.
Amanda22
02-09-2011, 04:07 PM
By finding peace and acceptance in yourself. If you accept yourself for what you are then, you can dismiss those other intolerant @)&?#'s and live your life on your own terms.
That's exactly how I feel. It's a waste of energy to wait for or expect Joe/Jane Q. Public to tolerate anyone. Intolerance is everywhere. I've found that how others perceive me and react to me is largely up to me. Having confidence and not looking for evidence of tolerance/intolerance around me means I almost never see it. And I'm in the Bible Belt of the southern US! An attitude of "I don't give a crap what anyone thinks of me" and "I have every right to wear anything I like wherever I like" works for me.
Kate Simmons
02-09-2011, 04:31 PM
The real skill is to learn all about the sword, all edges included and turn it around to make it work for us.:)
sissystephanie
02-09-2011, 04:32 PM
I very much like the answer that Karren gave! But Kimdl also gave a very good answer. We are all individuals, and as such we have our own attitudes!! My attitude is now, and has been for a longtime, this is Me!! If you don't like the way I am, get lost!! I do crossdress without a wig or makeup because my dear wife, who always did those things for me, passed away. But I still like to CD, so I do!! That is Me, and I like Me!!
DonnaT
02-09-2011, 04:40 PM
In a world thats supposed to be more tolerant, being a crossdresser can be double edged sword. As crossdressers/transvestites are not tolerated by the majority of men, women and the homosexaul community as crossdressers are treated by these people as circus freaks.
I disagree with the idea of " the majority" not being tolerant. We've no proof that that is the case.
AllieSF
02-09-2011, 05:02 PM
I agree with DonnaT. I have been tolerated and sometimes accepted as me by all genders, benders, ages, sizes and shapes, with only a handful of very minor personal negative moments. I think that a lot of people just let their own fears get in the way of realizing that in reality there is only a small percentage of truly non-tolerant people out there. I am not saying that people do not experience intolerance when dressed, just that it is not that common of an experience for those that do get out in the real world and interface with all those other "normal" people out there.
dawnmarrie1961
02-09-2011, 05:29 PM
It is not so much intolerance as it is a matter of misinformation and preconceived ideologies that has created this atmosphere of mistrust towards the cross-dressing and transgendered community.
Nobody likes a liar. And this is how the world views us. If we want society to accept, trust and take us seriously us we need to be honest about “whom” and “what” we are.
Not an easy task because our community encompasses many groups, from the occasional cross-dressing for sexual fantasy individual to a transgendered super-model.
Our underlying desire for acceptance causes us to take in so many other groups that the boundaries between them become so blurred it is hard to tell which is which, where one ends and the other begins. It is no wonder that the world looks at us with confusion.
But what can be seen as a flaw in our structure is also our greatest strength.
Nick2Nikki
02-09-2011, 06:55 PM
I totally agree with both Karren and DonnaT. I'd say that the majority of the population is tolerant of us. Why would I say that? Because I haven't yet met a person who has been outright intolerant of me, and I go out dressed quite often. And really, if you're comfortable with yourself and present a confident air about you, who cares what others think?
Kate Lynn
02-09-2011, 07:32 PM
Life has taught me one thing,those who yell and scream the loudest about tolerance,are the most intolerant.
TGMarla
02-09-2011, 07:45 PM
GROUP HUG!!!!!!
:bighug:
Sophie86
02-09-2011, 11:02 PM
Nobody likes a liar. And this is how the world views us. If we want society to accept, trust and take us seriously us we need to be honest about “whom” and “what” we are.
That's why we're not liked? Because we're liars?
When I was in my late teens, A friend of mine told me that one of his favorite things to do on a Saturday night was go to the local gay bar on drag night and beat up the drag queens. I asked him why he would do something like that, and he told me because it was fun. Did he hate drag queens because they're liars? Should I have piped up at that point and told him the truth, so he wouldn't hate me? "Oh, btw, I like to wear women's clothing too." Or did he hate them because he thought they were sissified, perverted, freaks of nature? I was sure it was the latter, so I kept my mouth shut.
As far as I knew, society in general shared his attitude. It was what I had always heard growing up. So why would I tell the truth to anyone? What did I have to gain from it? Should I be ashamed now for lying? No, I won't accept even the smallest bit of guilt for it. I did what I had to do in order to have a good life.
DianeDeBris
02-09-2011, 11:28 PM
Personally I tolerate everyone but morons!!! Which sadly makes up a pretty large portion of the population...
A few years ago I asked a cab driver what percentage of the population he thought were total jerks. His insightful answer: "Only 15% - but they get around a lot!"
ThiHi
02-09-2011, 11:45 PM
Funny Diane! I'll remember that
Nick2Nikki
02-09-2011, 11:52 PM
When I was in my late teens, A friend of mine told me that one of his favorite things to do on a Saturday night was go to the local gay bar on drag night and beat up the drag queens.
I believe the appropriate response is to put on your wig & heels, grab your pepper spray, & give him a taste of his own medicine. Remember, stillettos aren't just nice shoes, they're a type of knife.*
*Note: If you chose to follow this advice, you do so of your own free will. I assume no responsibilty for anything bad that results from following this advice. Nick, Nikki, or any of my other alter-egos endorse this advice. This has been a public service announcement from Please Don't Take This the Wrong Way Comedy.
NathalieX66
02-09-2011, 11:55 PM
Funny Diane! I'll remember that
I second that. :).......this is coming from someone whol lives in the populated northeast US, not far from NY City.
Go & live life, and not give a rats a$$ about the intolerant people. Just build up your defense mechanisms, as in Foghorn Leghorn's "I always keep a spare set of feathers oor just such an emergency"...however the line goes.
Chickhe
02-10-2011, 01:30 AM
The way I see it... doesn't metter if you CD or not, if you want to be tollerated you have to appear to be like the average or have some other quality that compensates. So if you CD, then you have less problems if you actually look like an average woman...not required, but if you walk about half and half then you are unusual and people will notice. Try wearing a chicken costume to Walmart and you get the idea... nothing to do with CDing... you can be a happy chicken and fit in or be a grumpy chicken and the police will escort you home.
Tanya C
02-10-2011, 02:32 AM
You may confusing intolerance with preferrence when describing how cders regard differences in presentations. Some cders prefer to go all the way when dressing but that doesn't mean we don't accept others who don't. It's a matter of personal choice and there's nothing wrong with that.
Remember this, you don't have to progress according to anyone's schedule except your own. Believe me, we full presenters understand where you're at because we were once there too.
Danni Bear
02-10-2011, 02:57 AM
tolerence!!!
what is tolerence? it is the acceptence of something for a short while before you can change it or them. racial tolerence is the same for bigots, they accept until they can eliminate or exclude. the same is true of sexual or gender tolerence.
what is needed is acceptance not tolerence. being human should not be subject to being tolerated. we are no more wrong in being different than being wrong due to any other genetic trait. be that of racial,ethnic,color male or female
Danni
sterling12
02-10-2011, 02:58 AM
But first we have to learn how to "tolerate" ourselves, if we expect tolerance from others. If you believe The People in The World look at you as if you were a Circus Freak; is it just possible that you believe that you fit that description? Until you get someone to directly come up to you and scream in your face about how strange you are, I don't see how you can state this as fact. You certainly can't generalize and say that ALL people believe you to be a "Freak!"
As usual, Reine gives you good advise. ( I would have said almost the same thing, but she beat me to it.) Start finding some "like-minded" friends. Join a Support Group, get out there among those "people" you have been describing. Perhaps, as you grow, and learn. Perhaps, as you start to "blossom" and think better things about your femme-self; you might just find that The World is not nearly as threatening (and frightening) as you thought.
Peace and Love, Joanie
Sophie86
02-11-2011, 12:34 AM
I believe that people have a right to their beliefs even when I disagree with them, even when those beliefs cause them to disapprove of me. I don't know how to legally require people to approve of crossdressers without violating their rights. Toleration as a political concept has a long and distinguished pedigree. It is the foundation of liberal society: The doctrine that we don't have to approve of a belief or practice in order to recognize that other people have the right to indulge in it. Acceptance, on the other hand, implies something more positive than I think I have a right to expect. Certainly they have to accept my right to exist and my right to engage in a peaceful practice that violates no one else's rights; but they don't have to accept me personally.
Rachel nylons
02-11-2011, 12:58 PM
When I was married, my ex wife never tolerated or accepted my crossdressing when she found out, and at that stage I was only wearing tights and high heels. The first thing she said to me was how could do I this to her and was I gay. She absolutely hated it, so with that I only used to dress when she was out and I had to hide the items of clothing from her because when she first found them and questioned me about the crossdressing she made me throw them away. Our relationship then became very strained for a while. I did ask her once if she had told her mother as they were very close, with that she replied no as it would be too embarrassing to mention it to her as she could be very scornful on such subjects. This is why I've put out this thread because I've read lots of other threads where someone has been caught by a wife or relative, even friends and has suffered terrible consequences.
Sophie86
02-11-2011, 02:08 PM
I'm sorry you had to go through that Rachel.
Just to clarify, my defense of toleration above was meant to apply in the wider political context. In our personal relationships, we need acceptance. The person most dear to us has to be able to love us and approve of us as we are, or the relationship is poison.
ReineD
02-11-2011, 02:33 PM
Sophie, what you say is perfectly true, but it's difficult for a wife (perhaps if she's a little older and was raised in less tolerant times), to go from believing that gender and sexual variance is wrong to fully accepting it. But, this doesn't mean it can't be done in stages. The first thing Rachel's wife needs to recognize is that Rachel has a need to express herself. Rachel's wife certainly doesn't need to participate right off the bat, but she can acknowledge that Rachel needs to explore this side of herself and attend support groups.
It's not unheard of that a wife, after some years of having her husband safely attend TG meetings or go out and have coffee with a TG girlfriend, will lose her fear that either the CD police mobs will find her husband and lynch him, or that he will be swallowed up whole by the immoral ghouls who inhabit the world of gender & sexual freedom of expression. (:p I say this with tongue in cheek.)
Rachel nylons
02-12-2011, 08:03 AM
Hi Sophie, It was a very hard time for me to go through that and try to stop my crossdressing. My ex wife used to say to me that I'm not the man she married, in fact I'm not a man at all if I have to do things like that and she did not want to be part of any of it. Then comes the lying bit as in your earlier post, where one still crossdresses and not tell the wife because of the upset and anger it would cause. I have a girlfriend now and to start with when it came out she was ok with it and didn't mind when I dressed, she even got me to shave my legs and said my legs would look better. Then about a year ago she got very angry one night and said that the crossdressing was starting to take over in our relationship. So with that I stopped as I didn't want to upset her, even when she said I could dress I didn't feel like it because of what she said at the time of her anger, that she wanted a relationship with man and not a woman and felt like she was a lesbian and that hurt me a lot. So now and then I go back to my house to dress, she has asked if I dress without her and to that I reply no as she think that dressing should be something we should do together but how can I when she has expressed those feelings to me before. So with that I'm on a double edged sword again.
Sophie86
02-12-2011, 06:44 PM
Sophie, what you say is perfectly true, but it's difficult for a wife (perhaps if she's a little older and was raised in less tolerant times), to go from believing that gender and sexual variance is wrong to fully accepting it. But, this doesn't mean it can't be done in stages.
That's true. If she's so squicked out by it that she can't still love and respect her husband, though, then it's well-nigh impossible that they will ever be able to reach that future stage where she's okay with it. When I say "approve of us," I mean on the whole. They don't have to love the crossdressing, they just have to love us enough to be able to accept the crossdressing as part of the package. Becoming comfortable with it is a longer process, but it's not impossible if there's good communication both ways, patience on both sides, and lots of love.
Hi Sophie, It was a very hard time for me to go through that and try to stop my crossdressing. My ex wife used to say to me that I'm not the man she married, in fact I'm not a man at all if I have to do things like that and she did not want to be part of any of it. Then comes the lying bit as in your earlier post, where one still crossdresses and not tell the wife because of the upset and anger it would cause.
Lying is bad. Except when it works, and everyone ends up happy. I knew at the time, and my wife will confirm it now, that if I had told her within the first ten years of our marriage, she probably wouldn't have been able to deal with it. Even my therapist back then said not to tell her. Of course, if she had found out on her own, there would have been hell to pay. In that event, people could have told me, "Girl, you should have been honest up front," and I guess they would have been right.
Lying works best when they are clueless. Once the cat is out of the bag, they're going to be looking for evidence, and they will find it. At that point, I believe it's best to stick scrupulously to the truth, because discovery is inevitable.
I have a girlfriend now and to start with when it came out she was ok with it and didn't mind when I dressed, she even got me to shave my legs and said my legs would look better. Then about a year ago she got very angry one night and said that the crossdressing was starting to take over in our relationship. So with that I stopped as I didn't want to upset her, even when she said I could dress I didn't feel like it because of what she said at the time of her anger, that she wanted a relationship with man and not a woman and felt like she was a lesbian and that hurt me a lot. So now and then I go back to my house to dress, she has asked if I dress without her and to that I reply no as she think that dressing should be something we should do together but how can I when she has expressed those feelings to me before. So with that I'm on a double edged sword again.
You didn't ask for my advice, so I hope you won't be offended if I offer it. I know how devastating any criticism can be, and how it makes one want to withdraw that part of oneself. That's a mistake though. From what you wrote, it doesn't sound like she was trying to shut you down completely. She may not have expressed herself in an optimal way, but she gave you important information about how the male/female balance in the relationship wasn't working for her. Instead of closing that side of yourself off, see if she will help you fine tune the balance. Communication is the only way to make that work, so be honest with her.
Hugs,
Sophie
Rachel nylons
02-14-2011, 01:44 PM
Thanks for your advice Sophie it's great to feel that I have a friend out there in the world. The problem I have with my girlfriend is that she never lets me know until its too late. Thats the problem I have, she used to say to me at weekends but not every weekend that I could go and get dressed and sometimes she would get dressed in a dress, stockings and heels with me. Then I think it all changed when she read a book about this woman that was a make up adviser in a department store that caught her neighbour crossdressed and then started doing his and his friends make up, my girlfriend thought that the crossdressers in the book sounded like a load of freaks. Then my girlfriend started asking me questions, asking things like would I like to become a women and stuff like that. I said no but I wouldn't mind trying make up and a wig as I've never done that before. One Saturday night I asked if she would put make up on me and I did say that if she didn't then she doesn't have to, With that she said she would but after she put on the make up thats when she freaked and said I looked like a women and she would feel even worse if I was to buy a wig. Thats when she came out with the statement was she a lesbian.
Thanks Sophie
suchacutie
02-14-2011, 02:09 PM
Hmm, she said you looked like a woman? Stepping back for a minute, in one sense that's wonderful!
My wife and I discovered my femme side together after many years of marriage, and it was a bit of a shock to us just how much of Tina is imbedded in the "man" she married. That said, since it all hit us at once without any ability to educate ourselves, we immediately worked at finding out what this might be all about. We decided that to find out who Tina really was we needed to let her "have a life". However, my wife made it clear that she was completely heterosexual, and when she wanted her man I'd need to understand that was what she needed at that point. To me it seemed like a completely equible arrangement and it has remained in effect for almost 6 years in complete harmony.
After all, your femme self would like to look like a girl! I wonder if the same arrangement that I have with my wife would work for you, i.e. she agrees to help you find out who Rachel really is, but that when she needs her man, she gets your masculine side!
Oh, and the intolerance issue...omg I was shocked when I first ran into it! With a completely supportive wife it's less likely to run into direct intolerance, so when I was about 3 years of Tina, I was in New Orleans with long-term friends who I don't get to see often. I thought they were liberal and tolerant completely, but as we were walking from dinner to the casino we walked by three guys in drag (they were not attempting to pass at all, but we clearly looking at the performance aspect of multicolored wigs, etc) and the vitriol that exploded from my friends was frightening! However, I have to say that everyone else on the street seemed completely unaffected by these three in drag!
So, intolerance is where you find it. When I find it here, it is sad as we all are struggling with who we are and how we can fulfill the part of ourselves that society, in a formal sense, would rather not have to deal with.
However, it is not illegal nor immoral to wear a dress, stockings and heels. Hang in there!!
tina
Rachel nylons
02-15-2011, 03:53 PM
A big thank you for all your help Sophie and Tina for your comments, advice and posts.
Lots of love Rachel XXX
Bootsiegalore
02-15-2011, 04:13 PM
Obviously I missed the announcement where the world was supposed to be more tolerant? Personally I tolerate everyone but morons!!! Which sadly makes up a pretty large portion of the population...
ALSO known as the "Dipshit density"!
Rachel
Jessica86
02-15-2011, 05:45 PM
There will always be a reason why society thinks you are not perfect. People are going to stare, regardless if you are overweight, skinny, short, freakishly tall (like me...I'm almost 6'07"), gay, bi, crossdresser, religious, non religious....whatever. Hey, in my opinion....if people like Dennis Rodman and Lady Gaga can dress in......that...stuff they wear....then we certainly have nothing to worry about. At least we are trying to look good, whether wearing just the clothes, or going all out.
hhdave
02-15-2011, 10:31 PM
Interesting thread, I think I can relate to some of this. Rachel, I had an experience similar to what you went through with your wife. My ex-girlfriend wanted no part of my fondness for women's shoes, and decided right there that I must be completely gay. Mind you, between the flurry of text messages which I eventually had to block, and the nasty gram from her mom, I can only say it stinks having to deal with intolerant people, but she certainly showed her true colors, so no regrets there.
I figure it's pointless trying to reason with people like her, but there are people like my ex-wife who accepted my heels, and was even slightly jealous that I could walk in them. We're still friends, and even asks if I've added to my shoe collection. So, I have remind myself that people like her exist, and not to let some immature ex-girlfriend judge me.
Rachel nylons
02-23-2011, 12:41 PM
My girlfiend and I had a big argument other day, it was all about lingerie and stockings. My girlfriend was looking through an online catalogue and she came across the lingerie section and I said jokingly, do you remember lingerie well it was like I had just put a match to the blue touch paper. She went off like a rocket saying that, all that mattered to me was either her or me was wearing stockings or tights and that I had a problem with nylon to the point that it was a fetish. I tried to tell her that I was joking but she was having none of it. So it just goes to show that even when we think that, what we do is being accepted or tolerated. Bang it blows up in your face :-(
ReineD
02-23-2011, 01:14 PM
Rachel, sorry but you're making it worse for yourself by thinking this way. You and your gf need to stop talking about the lingerie, and start talking about your more fundamental need to express a feminine gender, no matter the form, even though in your case it may well be through wearing lingerie. It's more than just the clothes. This is especially not a good time to be making jokes about this if you know that your gf is struggling with the concept.
Of course she thinks it's a fetish if the two of you aren't talking about it and it makes sense that she will want to shy away from it, if she thinks that you get off on the lingerie more than her.
There are good books in the self-help sections of bookstores on improving communication between partners, and you may find them helpful.
kimdl93
02-23-2011, 01:15 PM
Rachel, one thing I've learned is that angry words aren't always "about" cross dressing. There are times when a loved on is upset, troubled, on-edge for whatever reason, and they have a need to vent. Unfortunately, they may habitually resort CDing as a verbal weapon - in a sense to inflict some of the pain they are feeling. If cross dressing is a problem with her at that moment, so be it - you'll have to deal with it (I like Reine's suggestion). But be alert to the possibility that other things might be going on as well.
Rianna Humble
02-23-2011, 04:17 PM
Life has taught me one thing,those who yell and scream the loudest about tolerance,are the most intolerant.
In that case, given my track record, I must be the most intolerant person in the world.
Vickie_CDTV
02-23-2011, 05:26 PM
When I was in my late teens, A friend of mine told me that one of his favorite things to do on a Saturday night was go to the local gay bar on drag night and beat up the drag queens. I asked him why he would do something like that, and he told me because it was fun.
He literally beat up the drag queens? In the physical sense?
Fab Karen
02-23-2011, 09:11 PM
Do not stereotype other groups as being intolerant. Individuals are intolerant, and you're only serving to spread fear. WHen you actually talk to some people of groups you've mentioned, you'll find those that embrace, those that just accept, & some who look down on it. If you choose not to dress fully because you're not into that, fine. If you don't do it out of fear, then you've locked yourself in a personal prison- only you hold the key to freedom. There was a time some of us were living in fear. Eventually we got sick & tired of being sick & tired, and took steps forward. A thousand miles begins with one step.
What causes trouble in relationships every time, regardless of CD'ing being involved? Lack of communication.
StephanieT
02-23-2011, 11:16 PM
This is a very interesting thread to me. My marriage currently sucks and not because of dressing. She does not know and will never know but my wife has become the bitch I did not marry. I have told my story including the dressing to several women friends and I now find women falling all over me. Including wanting to go shopping. I wasn't looking but acceptance happened.
sometimes_miss
02-25-2011, 11:53 AM
I disagree with the idea of " the majority" not being tolerant. We've no proof that that is the case.
Perhaps we should change it a bit, to rather than not being tolerent, they simply would rather not associate with us in any way. They tolerate us as long as we stay to ourselves. It's not that they hates us, it's that they'd rather not have anything to do with us; they'd rather not have us near their kids, at their parties, in their companies, they don't want to talk to us, they don't want to look at us, etc.. It's not hate; it's disinterest. A very simple example would be for me to not want anything to do with fanatical sports fans of curling. I think it's odd, I don't like playing it, I don't like talking about it, I don't want to watch other people playing it.
Sophie86
02-26-2011, 12:34 AM
He literally beat up the drag queens? In the physical sense?
Yes, that was my understanding. They would go into the parking lot, and yell things at the girls who were outside in order to pick a fight.
Rachel nylons
03-01-2011, 02:36 PM
Crossdressers can not walk down the street without being judged. It is quite the norm to gay men or lesbians holding hands or even hold an intimate embrace without the members of the general public even battering an eyelid (unlike a few generations before).
So why is this. Well somewhere between being PC and Media exposure, we have become accustomed to accepting things as the norm which we did not in yesteryears. If a soap opera has a crossdresser character in it, this would certainly help start the transition of the acceptance of crossdressers.
Jessica86
03-01-2011, 04:31 PM
There's only two people whose opinions matter to me. My wife, and my sons. My wife because she has needs as well, and deserves the best. My son because I believe every son should have a father figure (even if its an uncle or whatever.) I won't let my son see me en femme. My wife, well, she usually decides when she wants that side, which is not very often at all. Simple fact is...she married a man....so she wants a man...99 percent of the time and I respect that. Don't take this the wrong way, but if I was on my own, I would be going out all the time!
KerryLynn
03-03-2011, 10:14 AM
when you are true to yourself don't worry about other people. If you hold your head high and remember Where you are is where you belong and everyone else will not bother you. ((save the few assholes in the world)) You'll be fine. Just remember Rachel (you) first.
Sapphire
03-03-2011, 01:22 PM
tolerence!!!
....what is needed is acceptance not tolerence. being human should not be subject to being tolerated....
Danni
Well said. It's hardly much of a concession to be "tolerated". What's wrong with a TG wanting to be loved and respected for who and what he or she is? We did not choose to be transgendered.
Brynna M
03-05-2011, 04:25 PM
Obviously I missed the announcement where the world was supposed to be more tolerant? Personally I tolerate everyone but morons!!! Which sadly makes up a pretty large portion of the population...
I whole heartedly agree. Morons have a way of trying to push their views on you that other subsets of the population just don't
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