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I´m a lawyer.
I don't dress at work, but I have been dressed in a court building, not for work, just to know how I feel there. Wow, it was great!!!! And one day, after a meeting with another lawyer, I went back to the hotel, I dressed and I went down to the hotel lounge, asked for a dink and wrote in my computer the report for my client. I hope I could do that every day :daydreaming:
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Retired
Retired Marine, dress just at home when no one is around
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Building Surveyor..... no dressing at work, builders and tvs dont mix lol..... very occasionally underdress but no bra (knickers and stockings/tights only).... but really only like it when i do the full monty! x
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fire fighter - paramedic no could not even if i wanted to job to risky:sad:
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Commercial real estate broker, once in a great while I can get away with wearing pantyhose under my clothes.
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A boeing 777 co-pilot. Nothing can explain the feelings of wearing pantyhose at 35000ft! :D
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I'm a civil engineer and work in construction. CD's are definitely not welcome on a construction site.
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My sweetie is in security and from this tread I see that all walks of life are represented here. I am going to look closer at the hands of the males I come in contact with to see if I see any acrylic on their nails.
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I work for what Forbes rated is the 2nd best engineering employer in the nation. It's an indefinte contract job as a Proe Designer / Detailer, but I might use my Mechanical Engineering knowledge here. I'm currently remodeling Lunar Lander stuff in Proe.
I joked at work that if the Army drafted me I'd become gay to be booted; that I'd only start wearing women's clothes. Also joked I must be Britney Spear's size - a 6. There is a TG that works in my company, so maybe if I came to work in a skirt suit, it wouldn't matter unless my coworkers look down on that.
I sometimes wear panties to work, but I don't like getting these dirty!
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I'm studying Pyschology & Law at the University of Melbourne, whilest balancing a part-time job that I landed at a lingerie boutique.
[size=1]which I only got on a technicality because I asked them how many transfolk they had on their payroll, and then they offered me the job :x[/size]
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I've held a variety of executive positions in the business world.
I don't dress at work and nobody I work with -- apart from a few women that are now friends -- knows about my femme side.
I've never really enjoyed partially dressing, so never had worn undergarments to work, although I could very easily do so.
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I am a chef
God provides me with good food I make it taste the best it can .
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In a factory where everybody wears the same uniform, including the GGs. Not a skirt in sight for 8 hours, aagh, TORTURE.
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pinkish blues
I work as a packer in a factory and everyone gets along with everyone else reasonably well. There is also a healthy divison of females and males
that work in the factory.
I don't dress when I am working, although I do show off my crossdressing side in stealth by having my hair long and tierd back to look kind of girly from the back.
I sometimes push the boundries by wearing a pink cloth to tie my hair off and that I forgot my hair tie as there are many cloth's used in my work. Once I tired
my hair in a bun with a pinkish cloth and nobody said a thing and there are 20 employees around me all the time.
I think my employers would just think it's wierd and would not care if they knew anyway.
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I'm a graphic artist. I don't dress at the job but I sometimes dress when I'm doing artwork at home. Sometimes I'll get so wrapped up in a drawing that I'll forget I'm wearing a dress!
-Audrey
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Nurse Suzy !
I'm a technical rep for a medical company.
I'm lucky in that most people I interact with are female nurses, so I always feel comfortable.
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I'm a team leader in IT but don'[t go to work dressed. My Company would be very good with it. A t girl in anpther office has just had time off to go through the operation. Maybe onre day I will start dressing for work but that is a long way away
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software engineer for an enormous company. Always underdress. Company has a good policy regarding TG folks, but it does not work in practice. no outward dressing for me at work.
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I work in a cubicle maze. I push buttons on a computer all day... At least we have windows so I can look outside and see what I'm missing.
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Network Engineer here. I neither dress nor underdress at work. For me, enjoying it in the comfort of my own home is good enough for me.(<----redundant sentence.) It gives me something to look forward to when I get home from a stressful day at the work place.
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I am a computer programmer/ report designer/ data wrangler type girl-computer-geek for a really really really (I mean BIG) big organisation within our own business classification (10th largest nationwide).
I don't go to work en-femme as such, although I wear stuff that passes for male -- women's dress pants, a blouse that you wouldn't know was a blouse unless you noticed that the buttons went the other way, oh -- and I do carry a purse that passes as a man's handbag. Oh -- and underdressing of course.
I have worn my hockey jersey that says 'xxxx Girl's Hockey' when we've been allowed to wear such, and as far as anyone knows I support the team.
The first hurdle that I came across years ago was when I work for a major US chain of electronic stores whose name has two words in it and is found in almost every mall. I was sternly spoken to about the length of my hair -- which was not even as long as it is now! I explained my situation and was told in no uncertain terms that until such time as I would be required by medical (as opposed to psychological) procedure to dress fully as a woman I must not have long hair. If I did, I would be fired.
This persecution led to my drinking going through the roof and my eventual firing.
Once sober, and now back at my true profession (the sales job was a stopgap as no programmer jobs seemed to be available due to the mid80s economic downturn) I vowed that in order to be accepted as just me (dressed or not) at work, I had to be the best programmer and the best employee I could ever be -- indispensable as it were. And so today, people see my work, admire my skills and ability to solve problems and think outside the box (which I think comes with being a crossdresser), and like me! They want me to work on their team. That in and of itself is a direct contrast to my school days when in gym class 'fatty fag' as they called me was always the last to be chosen.
Huggles
Toni-Lynn
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I'm a software developer for a local government. Drab, drab, drab until I get home.
Hugs,
Cathy
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lots of us computer technology/software types here...
software development, and no, not at work.
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I'm a drama teacher. There are times I think I might be able to justify wearing something...interesting, I am somewhat limited by both decorum and the desire to avoid stereotypes. I do, however, get to show my expertise with make-up when I teach the boys and girls how to apply it for the stage :D
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Custodian for a high school . . . so it wouldn't go over for me to dress at work. (Competing with the girls). But I do wear panties 24/7. But once the bell rings, I am home and into my dress or skirt.