23-01-2018, 12:16 AM
@Katie I insist that crossdressers and TS are two completely different beasts, and we touched this topic in another (in)famous thread.
First of all, let's see where transgenderism sits in all of this. If we consider transgender a person that is gender-dysphoric but hasn't done anything to alter their primary sexual characteristics (secondary are up for debate, particularly on this forum) then being TG is on the same side of being TS for the sake of this topic.
There are crossdressers that are not gender dysphoric. They, "we" as I am one of them, dress up for reasons different from wanting to be of the opposite sex. It is usually a sex-driven act, probably due to the fact that in our society dressing up is taboo. I like heels because they put me in a situation where I must give up control, and I like softer fabrics because they feel nicer, but the idea of dressing "against the rules" is what defines my crossdressing a kink and makes it sexually interesting for me when it comes to be fully dressed in a social situation. I am not expressing my true self when in drag. I am expressing one side of me, one that breaks the rules and feels different from my usual self. To some degrees I compare this to having sex on a plane.
To those like me, the sex drive push is necessary to keep fully crossdressing. As I already described, many of us lose interest in doing so after masturbating because the sex drive drops. Note: in this case "crossdressing" is meant as "fully dolled up". We do not seek to change sex because we are foundamentally happy as our gender assigned at birth, though we like to bend the rules for some reason that lead to excitement depending on the situation.
TS and TG (let me put them together for the sake of this post) are not driven by sexual urges, even if they sometimes are highly sexually active. They, you, identify with the opposite gender (and/or sex) and dressing up is merely a self confirmation of their true perceived identity. You went through transition because you felt you were a woman. Hormones probably had no part in your "dressing". And maybe you, like many TS, even despise the depiction of ultra-stereotypical femininity that many crossdressers like to mimic when in drag. If Testosterone is toxic for you or not, I can't tell. Maybe your brain is just wired in a different way for genetic or social reasons.
Personally I believe that gender is a spectrum and that we all sit somewhere between black and white. I believe that we are transgender as much as we "relax" when crossdressing. In my case it is some 5%, because I like the soft touch of women's clothes and a bit of heel in my everyday wear and I like the idea of being a bit softer on occasion, in your case it's probably near 99% as I imagine that dressing as a male would put more pressure on you rather than not. Imagining that percentage as the markers on a pressure gauge, I can think that at 50% the need to physically transition arises.
This website in particular presents a "strange" variety of human beings, that is the non fully transgender-yet-transexual oriented individuals. Some of us, many in the "male staying male" section, are not interested in primary sex characteristics transition but seek body modification of the secondary ones. I think that we escape the definitions that many have for crossdressers and transexuals, even for transgender, as we are not gender dysphoric but we still want to adopt something of the other sex for our body.
Bottom line: I think that there are infinite versions of being transgender, transexuals and cisgenders. Not all combinations are mutually exclusive and there isn't a word for all of them.
First of all, let's see where transgenderism sits in all of this. If we consider transgender a person that is gender-dysphoric but hasn't done anything to alter their primary sexual characteristics (secondary are up for debate, particularly on this forum) then being TG is on the same side of being TS for the sake of this topic.
There are crossdressers that are not gender dysphoric. They, "we" as I am one of them, dress up for reasons different from wanting to be of the opposite sex. It is usually a sex-driven act, probably due to the fact that in our society dressing up is taboo. I like heels because they put me in a situation where I must give up control, and I like softer fabrics because they feel nicer, but the idea of dressing "against the rules" is what defines my crossdressing a kink and makes it sexually interesting for me when it comes to be fully dressed in a social situation. I am not expressing my true self when in drag. I am expressing one side of me, one that breaks the rules and feels different from my usual self. To some degrees I compare this to having sex on a plane.
To those like me, the sex drive push is necessary to keep fully crossdressing. As I already described, many of us lose interest in doing so after masturbating because the sex drive drops. Note: in this case "crossdressing" is meant as "fully dolled up". We do not seek to change sex because we are foundamentally happy as our gender assigned at birth, though we like to bend the rules for some reason that lead to excitement depending on the situation.
TS and TG (let me put them together for the sake of this post) are not driven by sexual urges, even if they sometimes are highly sexually active. They, you, identify with the opposite gender (and/or sex) and dressing up is merely a self confirmation of their true perceived identity. You went through transition because you felt you were a woman. Hormones probably had no part in your "dressing". And maybe you, like many TS, even despise the depiction of ultra-stereotypical femininity that many crossdressers like to mimic when in drag. If Testosterone is toxic for you or not, I can't tell. Maybe your brain is just wired in a different way for genetic or social reasons.
Personally I believe that gender is a spectrum and that we all sit somewhere between black and white. I believe that we are transgender as much as we "relax" when crossdressing. In my case it is some 5%, because I like the soft touch of women's clothes and a bit of heel in my everyday wear and I like the idea of being a bit softer on occasion, in your case it's probably near 99% as I imagine that dressing as a male would put more pressure on you rather than not. Imagining that percentage as the markers on a pressure gauge, I can think that at 50% the need to physically transition arises.
This website in particular presents a "strange" variety of human beings, that is the non fully transgender-yet-transexual oriented individuals. Some of us, many in the "male staying male" section, are not interested in primary sex characteristics transition but seek body modification of the secondary ones. I think that we escape the definitions that many have for crossdressers and transexuals, even for transgender, as we are not gender dysphoric but we still want to adopt something of the other sex for our body.
Bottom line: I think that there are infinite versions of being transgender, transexuals and cisgenders. Not all combinations are mutually exclusive and there isn't a word for all of them.