One of the guys I'm out to said if he was out with Rihannon and some guy was giving me hassle he'd go up and punch them for me
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APOLOGIES, people. I shouldn't have posted this this morning. I wasn't thinking. I'm going to be away for the next couple of days, and may not be able to check on this forum before Wednesday. Sorry. I'll be back as soon as I can.
Best wishes, Annabelle
:heehee:"[10]Thou shalt not crossdress for it is an abomination in the eyes of Society, blessed be its name."
Unless thou be-est an Pope, an Priest or ye Anglican Bishop ..:heehee:
Thanks for the translation. It was easier to" get". I agree with your viewpoint. I hear all the doomsday "expectations" but then never really see the doomsday results. Do people get attacked for being different? They sure the hell do and all too often. However, in my opinion, as much as they happen, I see no reason to use that as an excuse to not be who one wants to be. A lot of happy people get killed in car accidents and you do not see everyone proclaiming that they will not go in an automobile because they "might" get killed. Now if they said job, wife family, etc. I get that too and am more than happy to let them live their lives as best that they can under the circumstances they were dealt and even those that they may have control over. If they ask how to go out into the fearful world, I am more than willing and happy to try to support their desires and request.
I think that face to face interactions is a great way to help others diffuse their fears of the unknown and maybe even ask some curious questions that may help get them on out side, not the love us side, but I respect that person for being different. But that is not the only way. Being part of the larger LGBTQ umbrella also works in our favor, as does those that want only their "T" umbrella to work for more rights, toleration and maybe even acceptance. I also believe contrary to a lot of people out here that roles, good, bad and humorous, in movies, television sitcoms, specials on transgenders are all good for the overall goal that we someday hope to obtain.
Nigella, I think she answers your question here-
I think Annabelle's point was to be a wake up call for the TG community- And, as opposed to being "Another long post on what's wrong with society and why gg's don't accept us", she isn't concerning herself with that question. She's simply saying that if you get out and talk to people it probably isn't as bad a we tell ourselves it is on this forum and it can only get better... Then again, you might live in Texas.
People tend to treat social aggregates as individual entities -- the "government", the "church", "x country" and "y country", "big business", etc.
It's a way to simplify the world around them and avoid thinking critically.
I encounter it a lot, particularly insofar as the government and big business are concerned, and, as a dual economics and political science major . . . it's pretty frustrating.
SarahMarie42
It's kind of ironic because we crossdressers always say on this site "just talk to us and you'll see that we are all different and everyone here has their own motivations for crossdressing and blah blah blah...", but we still scornfully project onto others our own sense of inadequacy and lazily assume that "they judge us because society judges us". We need to get over ourselves! People are people and everything comes down to communication. We will inform the people we meet and in turn they will inform us and then maybe we can get past conversations about social aggregates and start understanding and identifying communities in a more deliberately thoughtful way.
May(be), I have to ask you, did you add the parenthetical portion of your name as an Arrested Development reference? xD
..................... maybe.