transenby_liberation

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Community for trans and non-binary folk to band together and break free from the oppressive shackles of cis-heteronormative capitalism. Or shitpost and converse with each other. Just stay comfy, y'all. :)

Asking trans and non-binary related questions is highly encouraged by our community, but please direct all questions to c/askchapo. <3


EDUCATIONTransgender Liberation: A Movement Whose Time Has Come by Leslie Feinberg

Trans Liberation: Beyond Pink or Blue by Leslie Feinberg
Trans Liberation Chapo Discussion

Stone Butch Blues by Leslie Feinberg

Transgender Warriors: Making History from Joan of Arc to Dennis Rodman by Leslie Feinberg

Whipping Girl by Julia Serano

Feminism for Babies


RESOURCES

Hudson's FTM Resource Guide

Transgender Map by Andrea James

r/asktransgender wiki


RULES

1. Familiarize yourself with the Code of ConductCode of Conduct

2. Don't link to transphobiaPlease don't link to transphobia (or other bigotry), even if your personal intent is to challenge the bigotry in some way. Provide a content warning label in the title of your post where applicable.

3. Be dank; don't be not-dankNo liberalism, capitalist apologia, imperialism, etc.

4. No sexually explicit contentAs badly as some of us want to get saucy here, do not post sexually-explicit content that could reveal your personal or confidential information. Until there is a way this could be safely executed, all sexually-explicit posts will be removed to keep our comrades safe.

5. We are not a crisis serviceWe can't guarantee an immediate response. This does not mean no one cares. If you need to talk to someone at once, you may want to take a look at this directory of Hotline Numbers.

6. If you need help but don't feel comfortable making a post for any reasonplease message the moderators. We will be glad to talk with you privately, or help in any other way that we can.

founded 4 years ago
MODERATORS
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I don't think I did so last time.

Here you go:

Left: Gage Skidmore. Donald Trump [photograph], Flickr, CC BY-SA 2.0 DEED, Right: Mark Burns on the Stew Peters Show.

On Monday, former President Donald Trump announced his endorsement of Pastor Mark Burns for South Carolina's 3rd Congressional District. The pastor has previously exhibited extremist rhetoric towards LGBTQ+ and transgender individuals, calling for the arrest and execution of those he accuses of LGBTQ+ and transgender "indoctrination." Trump's endorsement threatens to swing a crowded Republican primary in Burns' direction. Given the heavily Republican lean of the district, Burns would emerge as the clear favorite to win the congressional seat should he win his primary.

Pastor Mark Burns made headlines in 2022 for calling for the return of the House Un-American Activities Committee to arrest and execute LGBTQ+ and transgender allies and individuals whom he accuses of "grooming." In a video released after his appearance on The Stew Peters Show, Burns stated, "The LGBT, transgender grooming of our children's minds is a national security threat because it is ultimately designed to destabilize the republic we call the United States of America. That's why, whenever I'm elected, I want to start holding people accountable for treason to the Constitution. I'm going to push to reenact HUAC... We need to hold people accountable for treason, start having some public hearings, and begin executing those who are found guilty of treasonous acts against the Constitution of the United States of America..."

You can watch clips of his statements from that 2022 interview here:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=39RHsfm-RH8

Burns has run for Congress twice before, in 2018 and 2022. Although he campaigned as a Trump-inspired candidate in those years, he failed to secure an endorsement from the former president. This year, however, it appears he has finally received that endorsement. Donald Trump posted, "There are many great conservatives exploring a run for that seat, but Mark Burns has been with me from the very beginning of our movement to Make America Great Again," adding, "Pastor Mark Burns is an America First fighter and has my complete and total endorsement." That endorsement is significant in a crowded field of nine Republican candidates. Furthermore, the previous election did not even feature a Democrat on the ballot—the winner of the Republican primary will be the prohibitive favorite to win the congressional seat.

You can see the endorsement here:

It does not appear that Burns has changed his views towards LGBTQ+ and transgender individuals. The day before receiving the endorsement, he took to Twitter to call Transgender Day of Visibility "blasphemous" and "an insult to the millions of Christians who celebrate the resurrection of Jesus Christ," reacting to Transgender Day of Visibility coinciding with Easter Sunday in 2024. Notably, Transgender Day of Visibility has always fallen on March 31, while Easter's date varies. Just after receiving the endorsement, Burns appeared on the far-right Freeman Report, where he claimed that Democrats are "attacking real women in America" with transgender-inclusive policies.

Trump’s endorsement is the latest sign that the candidate is embracing extremist anti-LGBTQ+ and anti-transgender stances for the 2024 election. On March 30th, Trump decried a proclamation by Biden recognizing Transgender Day of Visibility, calling it “blasphemous” and demanding that he “issue an apology to the millions of Catholics and Christians across America who believe tomorrow is for one celebration only—the resurrection of Jesus Christ.” Trump has previously advocated for targeting gender transition support “at any age” and investigating hospitals and manufacturers of hormone therapy and puberty blockers. He has also previously called for national bans on trans youth care as well as a national trans sports ban.

When asked about the endorsement on the Freeman Report, Burns stated that Trump had called him and declared him "the congressman," indicating that both Trump and Burns feel confident about the impact of the endorsement. The Republican primary election for the seat is scheduled for June 11, 2024. Should he win over 50% of the vote, Burns will represent the Republican Party in the race for a seat that has been held by a Republican since 1995.

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It was a good read. Not at all what I expected. There really wasn't any gender theory at all and no attempt justifying gender identity. It was just full throated support for all gender identities, which was nice.

I also found it really interesting how antiquated a lot of the language is after only two decades, but the message itself is at least as progressive as the conversations people are having now. There's such an emphasis on transness outside of binary trans people.

I feel like this understanding of gender would really cut out a lot of the bullshit gatekeeping truscum arguments out. A lot of truscum look at enby or GNC people and say, "you're just a man in a dress" to which I think Feinberg would reply, "Yes, and?" Men in dresses also have an outlawed gender expression which deserves defending. Considering how armed fascists keep showing up to drag events, I think this view has been vindicated.

I also find it interesting how s/he changes hir pronouns depending on the social context. To me, this level of fluidity acknowledges gender as a social manifestation as opposed to anything essential.

Anyway, I'd like to read more. I was turned to Marxism through history, so I'd like to read up on pre-modern queer history. When I'm arguing with people about gender, I always bring up the fact that gender expression has varied throughout history and there are lots of examples of gender outside of the binary; however, I don't actually have specific examples that I am really familiar with.

Could anyone recommend a book that goes over non-cis gender identities throughout history and the roles they played? I'd really prefer a central source that covers a lot of cases as opposed to a deep discussion of a single one.

Thanks, comrades

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submitted 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

I can get away with wearing mens tops and shoes, but my hips are too fabulous for mens pants to look good on me. So I gotta settle for women's pants.

So I'm currently doing field work for Ecology so I need to get PRACTICAL WORK PANTS WITH LOTS OF POCKETS.

Meanwhile women's clothing shops are like "UwU, work clothes for women? You mean these business pants with no pockets?" There are no other kinds of workwear for women IN THE WORKWEAR SECTION.

No motherfucker I mean cargo pants with all the pockets and belt loops. I'm going out in the bush. I need pockets for extra batteries and I need belt loops to hook a satellite GPS to. Fuck.

Look at this sexist bullshit. Here is the women's workwear section:

Here is the men's workwear section, same store:

Apparently all women work in offices and all men work physical labour jobs and fuck you if you deviate from your assigned role in life.

FUCK GENDER ROLES AAAAA IT'S 2024 AND THEY'RE STILL DOING THE FUCKING NO POCKETS THING bird-screm-2

EDIT: Thank you comrades for all the suggestions on where to shop. Care-Comrade

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You can access the link here.

^ PDF version from MEGA.

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Fuck off. Seriously. Eat all of my shit.

Come back to me when you're an afab enby or a trans man, and then you can talk about how it feels to be emasculated.

I've been made to feel like a fucking piece of trash for showing any masculinity my entire life, except I never even had a word for it, because for someone born without a dick, emasculation is norm.

You don't know shit about shit.

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Hi everyone, I haven't posted here in a while but I could use your input.

I've been struggling recently with the clear shift toward trans genocide in the United States. I don't think we're there yet, but things are bad, getting worse, and the course seems unalterable at this point. I find myself alternating between periods of contentedness with my own day-to-day and absolute terror at the increasingly fascistic state of this country.

I also happen to teach courses that discuss gender issues, and student attitudes have paralleled the national mood. I am now routinely dealing with hardline anti-trans students who have made my life difficult. I worry about my safety in the classroom, and especially fear being doxed by Libs of TikTok or the like.

The other day I was driving to work in a panic about the gender topics I would need to teach that day and how they would be received. I felt genuinely very anxious and afraid. I was not in an ideal headspace. So what happens? I arrive at work, start heading toward my office, and immediately overhear two coworkers discussing trans issues.

One of these colleagues is a gay philosophy professor who has expressed TERFy attitudes in the past, and this was not the first time I've caught him debating the cough cough "trans question" in the workplace. In the past I felt he was mostly just a liberal doofus who got exposed to TERF arguments but hadn't pursued them deeply. But now I'm beginning to think he's fully down the rabbit hole. Why would anyone else talk about the issue this much?

Meanwhile the person he's discussing this with was someone I thought to be an ally. And sure enough, she seemed to be mostly defending trans people. But then I heard her use the word "pretend," as in cis people must pretend trans people are who they say they are and I just kind of snapped.

I walked over to them and shouted (almost verbatim) YOU DON'T GET TO DECIDE WHO AND WHAT WE ARE. THIS ISN'T YOUR BUSINESS. WE AREN'T YOUR PHILOSOPHY. STICK TO WHAT YOU KNOW. and stormed off. I then immediately walked into my classroom and skipped ahead to a different unit not focused on gender.

My boss is supportive and said I won't be getting into trouble for this. He felt I was in the right and was annoyed that the other faculty seemed less concerned with what I'd said and more concerned that their freedom of speech was being intruded upon.

It doesn't appear there will be repercussions, but I feel a bit guilty about how things transpired while also simultaneously still very angry about what I heard. I'm just pissed as hell. What should I do?

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I believe this Substack article is free, but I'm subscribed so they're all free to me.

But I only subscribed recently and it was free before I did so.

Anyway, check it out, if you can.

I can also provide a MEGA link if not publicly available.

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I'm a queer spirit warrior, and I need monsters to slay

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On Thursday, a legal filing by PFLAG National revealed that Attorney General Ken Paxton of Texas was seeking identification of transgender members. The organization alleges retaliation.

Full TextIn a legal filing Thursday, PFLAG National sought to block a new demand from Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton that would require the organization to identify its Texas transgender members, doctors who work with them, and contingency plans for anti-transgender legislation in the state. The civil investigative demand, issued on Feb. 5, calls for extensive identifying information and records from the LGBTQ+ rights organization. PFLAG, in its filing to block the demands, describes them as "retaliation" for its opposition to anti-transgender laws in the state and alleges that they violate the freedom of speech and association protections afforded by the United States and Texas constitutions.

The demands are extensive. The letter to PFLAG National demands "unredacted" information around claims made by Brian Bond, PFLAG's Chief Executive Officer, in a legal fight against the ban on gender-affirming care in the state. Bond's claims highlighted that PFLAG represents 1,500 members in Texas, many of whom are seeking contingency plans if SB14, the ban on gender-affirming care, takes effect.

Per the lawsuit, PFLAG National states that it would be required to disclose Texas trans youth members, including "complete names, Social Security numbers, dates of birth, jobs, home addresses, telephone numbers, [and] email addresses." It also states they would need to hand over documents and communications related to their medical care, hospitals outside the state, and "contingency plans" discussed among members for navigating the new laws on gender-affirming care in Texas.

You can see see some of the questions asked in the civil investigative demand here:

  • Demand for full information. -Demands that include substantiation of claims by Brian Bond, CEO of PFLAG National; these claims include the existence of 1,500 families in Texas.
  • Demands that include contingency plans on going out of state or moving.

The demands also encompass communications with out-of-state healthcare organizations, including QMed in Georgia, Seattle Children's Hospital, and Plume. Previous reports have revealed similar civil investigative demands issued to these out-of-state healthcare providers, seeking information on all patients from Texas who have received their gender-affirming care in Washington State at Seattle Children’s Hospitals. Seattle Children's Hospital, in a legal response, argued that such care, conducted entirely within the state of Washington, falls outside Texas's jurisdiction. It further contended that Washington has a shield law prohibiting the sharing of protected private information related to transgender and abortion care with out-of-state entities. That lawsuit is still ongoing.

This is not the first attempt by Attorney General Ken Paxton to identify transgender people in the state. The filing points to a previous attempt to “compile a list of individuals who had changed their their gender” on Texas driver’s licenses. This is part of a “pattern of seeking identifying information about anyone who is transgender in Texas,” according to the filing.

PFLAG National alleges that the demands are an "overly broad, unreasonably burdensome fishing expedition” that violates its member’s rights to freedom of petition, association, speech, and assembly. It also alleges that they are a violation of prohibitions on unjustified searches and seizures, and that the use of civil investigative demands are an attempt to get around judicial decisions that have blocked Paxton from making similar requests in ongoing court fights. The organization also alleges retaliation for standing up for transgender families in the state.

“These Demands are a clear and unmistakable overreach by the OAG in retaliation for PFLAG successfully standing up for its members, who include Texas transgender youth and their families, against the OAG’s, the Attorney General’s, and the State of Texas’s relentless campaign to persecute Texas trans youth and their loving parents,” the filing reads.

In an interview with Mandy Giles, founder of Parents of Trans Youth and former PFLAG Houston president, she concurs with the allegation of retaliation, stating, “Paxton would retaliate against PFLAG… the families can’t defend themselves. They are too scared to be visible. They can’t fight back, they can’t fight for their kids, they can’t fight for themselves, or their trans loved ones. When PFLAG stepped up to help, it was a saving grace. To have them be attacked this way feels like we all are getting attacked.”

When asked about the specific demands for contingency plans, she paused to collect herself, stating, “This is the families worst fear… that something that was offered to them for protection could come back and hurt them…. the nerve of Paxton asking for families escape plans when he was the reason they were escaping.”

Sadie Hernandez, communications manager for Transgender Education Network of Texas, stated that while Paxton was targeting transgender people now, the methods overlap with other fights in the state for reproductive healthcare and bodily autonomy. “The way they are coming after trans folks has been seen in the way they are going after abortion rights. We have an idea of what is in their playbook.”

She also emphasized the unique impacts these enforcement efforts have on marginalized communities within the trans community, such as undocumented immigrants, “When we talk about folks disproportionately impacted, immigrant and undocumented trans folks who can’t leave the state, or if you are in a border checkpoint can’t even leave the area to receive any kind of gender-affirming care…there will be a lot of folks left out of being able to access care.”

Responding to the Lawsuit, Lambda Legal Senior Counsel and Director of Constitutional Law Practice Karen Loewy stated, “The Attorney General’s demand of PFLAG National is just another attempt to scare Texas families with transgender adolescents into abandoning their rights and smacks of retaliation against PFLAG National for standing up for those families against the State’s persecution.But PFLAG members’ rights to join together for mutual support, community, and encouragement are strong and we will fight to protect them.”

PFLAG National is represented in the case by Lambda Legal, the ACLU and the ACLU of Texas, The Transgender Law Center, and Arnold & Porter Kaye Scholer LLP.

The Transgender Education Network of Texas provided several funds that they work with, including the Frontera Fund, Fund Texas Choice, TEA Fund, Avow, and Lilith Fund.


The stupidest part is where they make leaving your shitty ass state feel illegal. What are we, serfs?

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:cc any comrades want to float me enough BTC to start trading on bisq so I can buy my own?

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Introduction

This journey is dedicated to the tremendous healing, vitality, creativity, and passion embodied in queer people. It is a journey of self-discovery for people who believe life beyond the cishet norm is a cause for celebration! You are beautiful. You are worthy of love and no matter how alienated and oppressed we are by capitalism, we have the duty to give it to ourselves. Queer self-love is resistance to capitalism.

This group is a guided journaling practice for queer people to work towards self-acceptance, self-understanding and empowerment to live openly. I intend to explore my gender identity, but this group is open to cis people looking for greater security in non-heterosexual sexuality. The framework is loosely adapted from the book 'Gay Spirit Warrior' by John R. Stowe. Pacing and overall structure is at the discretion of the group!

Week 2: Early Beliefs

This week is dedicated to examining the origins of our internalized beliefs about sexuality and gender & killing the cop inside our head (reprogramming our inner critic). Take them at the pace that makes sense for you! Also please reach out to support and help other people reflect and interpret their own answers. This is meant to be personal reflection but also community building.

IntroductionWhen we're young, we unreservedly look to adults to tell us about life. "This is a tree. The color of the sky is blue. You are a woman. Woman like men." and so on. These words and the wider world are a mirror we search dilligently for what it tells us about ourself. Unfortunately for most queer people, the mirror is often warped and skewed. If we were very lucky, we had some of our family to support us, a lesbian aunt to serve as a role model, or a trans neighbor to show us 'hey its something else out here!'

But most of us aren't that lucky, and not even the most supportive family can change the messages of the patriarchal culture at large.

Most of the messaging we receive supports the belief that we are broken or flawed in some way. Even as we start to accept ourselves, much of this messaging lives on as internalized queerphobia.

As we begin journalling this week, you might ask "why stir up old negatives?" The answer is that these beliefs are the underpinning of our internalized ideology around queerness. Because they act as a mental filter to our perceptions, our beliefs end up being self-fulfilling. This is true regardless of whether we have conscious awareness of them or not, but only through conscious awareness can we begin to struggle against corrosive beliefs.

Just about everyone has some amount of internalized negative beliefs. Let's get empowered and liberate ourselves from them! Take the initiative to hunt out the negatives! Actively shape your beliefs!

Dare to struggle, dare to win! Gay is good!

Early Beliefs

Exercise 1: Unconcious Negatives—Taking Inventory

A) 'Being Queer is...' We're going to start by trying to examine our unconscious beliefs about queerness. Using whatever language makes the most sense to you, label a notebook page or word document 1-10 then complete the sentence 'Being Queer is...'. If queer isn't how you describe yourself, use what language fits best.

Write as quickly as you can and put down whatever comes up. Your mind will try to edit every word to make your responses acceptable. You're looking for what your really believe, which won't always be positive, consistent, or affirming. The best way to beat your inner censor is to write so quickly you don't have time to think. If you're really spitting, keep going after the tenth sentence!

B) 'Because I'm Queer, I can't....' Repeat the exercise above, this time using the sentence 'Because I'm Queer, I can't....'

When you finish, read the lists over. Put a mark by each statement you consider negative. Resist the urge to judge or critique yourself. Just because you harbor negative thoughts, you are not a bad person or queerphobic! Uncovering your hidden negatives will allow you to push past them.

Exercise 2) Role Models

Take a little while to reflect on your life and your early queer role models. Where did you learn what it meant to be gay, to be bi, to be ace, to be trans?

Kill the Cop in your Head! Retraining your Inner CriticOften, internalized queerphobia takes on a life and voice of its own. For this discussion, we will personify this voice as your Inner Critic. For most people, the Inner Critic is maladaptive adaptation to protect us from the perceived dangers of being queer. This is what is operative when we tell ourselves things like 'that guy will never like you because...' or 'I'll never be a real ____ because of my ____'

Your Inner Critic fights dirty. Because they know you so well, they will always hit below the belt. Their accusations are usually slippery—vague enough to be hard to disprove, while containing enough (perceived) truth to feel weighty.

When we were young, we learned to maintain a high degree of vigilance in self-defense to protect us from social pressure or violence for our deviance from patriarchal gender and sexual norms. Deep inside, we record every correction or reprimand aimed at us from peers, parents, and other authority figures. We learned to watch out and police how we held our bodies, how our eyes lingered, how our voices sounded.

This vigilance may have helped us survive, but it can also inhibit us from living in liberated queer joy and self-acceptance. As Mao exhorts us 'No investigation, no right to speak'. In the first exercise, we will begin by examining our self-critical beliefs. In the second, we will begin their re-education.

Exercise 1) Taunt the Critic Out This one works best on paper. On a blank page, draw a column that takes up a third of the page. In the larger part, begin writing some variation of the following affirmation at least ten times 'Being Queer is natural and good.' If this statement doesn't make your heart jump with excitement, revise it to one that resonates with your goals and journey.

As you write, over and over as quickly as you can, listen to what starts bubbling up in the back of your mind—comments, rejections, protests, criticism, editorializing. You might hear 'yeah, right' or 'so what? I'll never fit in even if I embrace this.' Whatever comes up, write it immediately in the right-hand column and keep trucking. Don't judge or argue. Just get as much down as you can.

When you finish, compare what's left with your unconcious negatives from the previous exercise and see what patterns come up or what statements are really striking or cutting. These are the most incisive statements your Inner Critic uses to control/inhibit you.

If time permits, spend some time trying to interrogate where each of these statements come from. Did someone tell you these things growing up? Did you read it? Don't worry if there isn't an answer for some of these. You don't need to find the origin to release them, but the insight can be helpful!

The goal of this exercise is not to find someone to blame, but to examine and release—ultimately you are the person carrying these beliefs

Alternate mantra suggestions I am a trans man and that is beautiful. Ace is good. I love my queer soul.

Exercise 2: Write Your Own Script A key step in escaping the Inner Critic is to create an alternative, liberatory framework from their oppression.

Let's assemble beliefs that support us to supplant our internalized queerphobia. Begin by writing "I'm willing to replace negative beliefs with new ones that support my actualization and queer joy."

Similar to how we reframed our challenges as goals in week one, come up with a positive alternative to each of the core critiques brought up in your early beliefs or investigation into your Inner Critic. For example, I struggle with the belief "I will never embody real femininity." I am working to supplant this belief with the belief "My femininity is an authentic and real part of myself (whether or not I feel safe to express it)".

Make your new words enthusiastic and positive. Add any positive beliefs that came up earlier to the new list you are forming. Read the list aloud to yourself. How does it make you feel? If you need to revise anything, do it now!

ConclusionBe patient with yourself. Letting your new scripts supplant your self-criticism and internalized queerphobia takes time. Making your affirmations a working part of your consciousness and understanding takes time and effort.

Two factors help us install these new ideas more effectively. The first is repetition of the new mantras. Try to make time to actively reflect and apply the new beliefs to your self understanding. Repeat the affirmations you developed to yourself. The second, remember that the part of our mind we are accessing is not rational. While we can logically understand and apply a queer liberatory framework, we need to have grace for when it is not fully internalized.

Be creative! Be playful and silly in finding ways to practice the new beliefs you are working to build and instill into yourself. Make little posters, Make songs. Look in the mirror and hit on yourself if that's your thing.

Optional Exercise: Policing the Cop in Your HeadThis exercise is intended to help you realize how superficial and repetitive your inner policeman is. Create a dedicated space (digital or on paper) to record what your Inner Critic is saying. Then whenever you notice that you're self-bashing, acknowledge the Critic. "Oh, hi Critic. Back on the bullshit? So, whaddya gotta say this time?"

Give them their say. In your running Critic's Corner, write down whatever it wants to tell you. You don't have to believe it. After the first few times, you'll see the the Critic is pretty much a broken record. Instead of writing out what it has to say each time, you can just put a tally next to the relevant passage from the last time. The Critic is a paper tiger! Putting it under the spotlight will let you see how flimsy it is.

In the spirit of TC_69, I love my trans and queer comrades! trans-heart

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Dear all,

I am inspired by how much thought and reflection folks put in last week! With Valentine's day tomorrow I got a bit caught up making a scavenger hunt and will have the second post out Thursday evening.

In the meantime, please use this thread for any feedback or reflections you have had so far :)

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Introduction

This journey is dedicated to the tremendous healing, vitality, creativity, and passion embodied in queer people. It is a journey of self-discovery for people who believe life beyond the cishet norm is a cause for celebration! You are beautiful. You are worthy of love and no matter how alienated and oppressed we are by capitalism, we have the duty to give it to ourselves. Queer self-love is resistance to capitalism.

This group is a guided journaling practice for queer people to work towards self-acceptance, self-understanding and empowerment to live openly. I intend to explore my gender identity, but this group is open to cis people looking for greater security in non-heterosexual sexuality. The framework is loosely adapted from the book 'Gay Spirit Warrior' by John R. Stowe. Pacing and overall structure is at the discretion of the group!

Each week (or bi-weekly if slower feels better), I will post a journaling exercise and some of the framing freely adapted from the text. This might be similar to group therapy but with more of an emphasis on personal reflective work. Below is an example of one of the prompts and framing prose to give folks an idea of what this looks like!

I will try to post one journaling prompt and the accompanying exercises from the book each week as long as it feels worthwhile & I have energy.

Please feel free to discuss the overall structure of this group AND the initial journal prompt spoilered below

Tentative Structure

spoiler

  1. Map the Territory: Goals & Challenges
  2. Early Beliefs: Impact & Overcoming
  3. Gender/Sexuality: Developing an Empowered Ideal
  4. The Body: Tuning In & Taking Care
  5. The World: What is 'Out' for me?
  6. Affirming Love

There is a lot of the Jungian Archetype, and spirituality stuff left out to keep a realistic commitment. If folks are interested, I can transcribe the complete list of 14 chapters and exercises.

Week One: Beginnings

[cw: abstract discussion of homophobia & transphobia]

spoiler

For queer people, the journey to empowerment has two stages. Initially, we must create safe space to heal whatever wounding we carry from life in patriarchal society, to liberate ourselves from internalized transphobia and internalized homophobia. As we break our chains, the second stage begins: the realization of self-actualization. It entails learning to define yourself on your own terms and exploring your passion for life in every way. As queer, you claim the power to make your life an ongoing adventure of discovery and fulfillment.

As revolutionary anti-capitalists, we struggle to bring a new world out of the ashes of the old. Part of that pursuit is individual liberation from anti-trans and anti-gay ideology. I have a vision of a radiant, loving, beautiful person secure in their gender and sexuality, able to survive in a transphobic, homophobic world. I want to embody that vision; I want all of my comrades to embody that vision!

Almost every one of us is carries scars inflicted by society's homophobia, transphobia, fear of genuine pleasure, and fear of difference. Whether it was the casual reactionary attitudes of families and peers, or direct experiences of bigotry many of us have incorrect attitudes instilled in us.

In order to survive, many of us became chameleons to blend into the harsh background of our 'correct' gendered behavior. We learned to hide or modulate our true selves. We learned to doubt or fear our natural desires of love and intimacy, to embody our true selves and genders. We internalized the queerphobia directed at us until we came to feel flawed, defensive, or unworthy. Our authentic selves became shackled.

Overcoming queerphobia is a journey of opening and transformation. We'll approach it step-by-step gently & compassionately examining the sources, content, and ongoing consequences of our own wounding. Understanding is a powerful tool in overcoming. Ultimately, our wounds will form a map to trace backward and inward to the core of our being where we will begin to build a positive ideal of queer identity.

**Let's begin making that vision real by first mapping our starting point: our goals and our challenges. **

Exercise: Goals and Challenges

The first thing we're going to do is to choose a destination. It's important to know where you want to go in order to get the ball rolling. Even if you change your mind and decide halfway to Yanan you decide to spend a month in Sichuan, keeping a destination in mind gives you an important sense of direction. As you gain clarity, you can refine or rewrite goals that don't make sense anymore!

Make a list titled 'CHALLENGES' and freely write problems, issues, or concerns you have that feel related to your gender or sexual identity. Be honest with yourself! Until you choose to share it, no one gon know what's on there. What's bugging you? What's not working right now? What do you not like about how you are living your life right now?

Make a second list titled 'GOALS'. Make each statement in this list a positive statement of something you would like to create in your life. "I choose to make friends with people I can be open with." "I'd like to work somewhere I can be publicly out."

Write whatever is important to you. Be sure to include each statement in "CHALLENGES" reworded as a positive goal. For example if you have the challenge "feeling isolated" you could have the positive goal "create meaningful relationships with other people."

Conclusion

Daring to embrace your queerness is an act of radical audacity! Setting out on this quest of empowerment is exciting. I am excited to be here with you comrades.

Expect to be triumphant on this quest. But some considerations: this is a physical process! It takes real work and energy to liberate yourself of negative beliefs. Dealing with trauma can cause sommatic and emotional reactions. Honor any requests your body makes for additional rest, breaks, or attention.

Dare to struggle, dare to win! Queer liberation now!

Optional: Support

Come up with a list of ten soothing or self-care activities you can do or prioritize during this process as you spend extra energy on building your self comprehension and liberation.

In the spirit of TC_69, I love my trans comrades! trans-heart

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cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/1764898

Looking for trans and queer comrades working on self-acceptance to start a reflection and growth group. It will be sort of like group therapy but with more emphasis on personal reflection. There would be weekly threads to share reflections and to find support with each other.

I started this sort of hokey new-age self-help book titled 'Gay Spirit Warrior' which provides a framework for becoming a liberated, anti-patriarchal Gay Man through processing internalized homophobia, and anxieties around being publicly out.

As I was reading the introduction, it was so easy to replace 'loving other men' with 'letting yourself be genderqueer.' I am really excited to start working through the book! But like all forms of reflection and growth, it is done best through community.

I am committed to spend about two hours each week reflecting, and imagine others could have a worthwhile experience with about half that time. If there are a few interested comrades, I would begin freely adapting the chapters of the book to be about general queer self-acceptance.

I will try to adapt the first chapter by Friday so comrades can have a better idea of what it entails! Probably this will be done by block quoting with interpretive notes.

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cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/1750473

Here is the archived link:

https://archive.is/MiCtL

Great article! I wonder if I'm queer myself or perhaps non-binary. Regardless, I highly recommend reading this, especially if you love classical music or are queer yourself (but, of course, officially for now I am a cishet male so I maybe I'm wrong about the article's quality or genuineness). But yes, do give it a read if you want to sometime. Also, let's of performers to read from here and lots of groups to follow.

Take care!

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i decided to transition into this career path as it was a way to materially impact the lives of fellow trans people and erase boundaries that they face. It sounds dramatic, but I think of myself as less of an aesthetician and more of someone who helps improve mental health and makes you harder to discriminate against in daily life.

I am not one to impose traditional norms of femininity on anyone, but the world we live in is how it is.

I operate with a severe sliding scale payment model, which slides upwards to the extent that wealthier clients are able to pay it forward to fund free sessions for folks with less means, and downwards to the extent that it costs me money to work on someone (that is okay and everyone deserves this kind of service if they want it)

In addition to my own little practice I'm also working at another clinic which is also trans focused, and does a lot of work for folks who are prepping for lower surgeries as well as general gender affirming hair removal. This also means I work with a lot of trans dudes who are prepping for their lower surgeries, so it's not only trans fem folks

Ask me anything about hair removal

edit: Have a question in the future and this post is really old? Feel free to reply or DM me - I've been posting here for years and it's unlikely to stop until i'm a corpse

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Hi! Currently I'm experiencing a lot of gender dysphoria. It was triggered after talking with a friend, a former partner of mine who is cis female and who I trusted to handle my request sensible. They were an important catalyst for daring to express myself more queer and tackling that gender issue in my adult life.

So after being more happy in the queer spectrum, being at least bi, and feeling more fine as enby with some fluidity and ideation of different body or gender recognitions - brought on by talk with fellow trans, queer and enby friends - I wanted to visit a Flinta party and help out a bit if everything works out.

Though my former partner was mentioning how since I am looking very male and don't present female she wouldn't like me helping out, as she would like to see women who are looking like women and perform the part to feel safe in a non patriarchal space. Which one part of course has valid points (the longing for safe spaces), but feels exclusionary and while I accept multiple truths at the same time I am feeling for the last two days bad and dysphoric. Since I was happy with not being cis male and was so welcomed in INTA* that the exclusionary talking point (went from being expression of feeling to it being reiterated) really hit me, especially since I wanted to share part of my identity with her as it is still an important part of me.

So now I'm feeling really bad and while I don't label myself trans (to not take away from the struggle), both enby and gender fluid really fit my identity. Sure sometimes I thought about transitioning and did perform like a binary other gender, but that was when I lacked words, concepts and such. At least I know that the masculinity and assigned gender I grew up with isn't mine. Even though I was happy with it being part of me (or parts of it being part of me), it just doesn't quite fit me and the other self identification just felt so much nicer and more fitting.

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A great piece by Julia Serano on 'male socialization', and misunderstandings about transmisogyny.

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cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/1673097

I'm confused where I should consistently posting things and it makes it harder to have a mega. Maybe one could be more slice of life, and the other more theoretical/political? Personally I would like both in one place.

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Binder tips? (hexbear.net)
submitted 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

I'm about to buy my first chest binder oh-shit

Anything I should know regarding health and safety? I live in a very hot and humid part of the country and am a little nervous that it will make me pass out or will damage my body in some way. Any advice? Will it increase the risk of breast cancer?

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Norsk

Én enbe / flere enber / den enben / disse enbene -- fornorsking av engelsk enby, fra bokstavene NB for non-binary.

Gabriel kom ut av skapet som enbe ifjor. Jeg alltid syntes enber var kule, så jeg er glad at jeg har en enbe i familien nå.

Én 'ke-bi / flere 'ke-bi'er / den 'ke-bi'en / disse 'ke-bi'ene -- de midtre stavelsene i ikke-binær. Kan også skrives kebbyer, 'kkjebi-ene, bl.a., basert på egen preferanse.

Gabriel kom ut av skapet som 'ke-bi ifjor. Jeg alltid syntes 'ke-bi'er var kule, så jeg er glad at jeg har en 'ke-bi i familien nå.

Én såvider / flere såvidere / den såvideren / disse såviderene -- ordspill på "menn, kvinner, og så videre". Kan forkortes til såvi, såvy, eller såve.

Gabriel kom ut av skapet som såvider ifjor. Jeg alltid syntes såvidere var kule, så jeg er glad at jeg har en såvider i familien nå.

Hva synes dere? Har dere noen andre forslag? Vil dere se mine andre idéer som jeg var mindre glad i? Tror dere at ikke-binær er bra nok for daglig kommunikasjon og at vi derfor trenger ikke et nytt ord? Om dere snakker andre språk enn norsk og engelsk, hvordan løser dere dette problemet i deres språk?


English

Example sentence:

Gabriel came out of the closet as enby last year. I always thought enbies were cool, so I'm glad I have an enby in my family now.

One enbe (indefinite singular; masculine or common) / many enber (indefinite plural) / that enben (definite singular) / these enbene (definite plural) -- Norwegianization of English enby, from the letters NB for non-binary.

One 'ke-bi (masculine or common) / many 'ke-bi'er / that 'ke-bi'en / these 'ke-bi'ene -- from the middle syllables of ikke-binær (non-binary). Variant spellings include kebbyer (fully regularized), 'kkjebi-ene (nynorsk, double K, no internal hyphen, a hyphen rather than an apostrophe for the suffix), among others, depending on preference.

One såvider (masculine or common) / many såvidere / that såvideren / these såviderene -- a play on "menn, kvinner, og så videre" ("men, women, and so forth" or "...et cetera"), by treating så videre as the indefinite plural of a noun ending in -er rather than as (so) + the comparative of vid (wide), which in this context means "further". Såvider may be clipped to såvi, såvy, or såve.

What do you think? Do you have any other suggestions? Would you like to see my ideas that I was less fond of? Do you think the phrase ikke-binær is good enough for daily communication and we therefore don't need a new word? If you speak a language other than Norwegian and English, how do you solve this problem in your languages?

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All in all, I'm comfortable with the word "man". I'm comfortable with the masculine aspects of my body as well. I mean, instead of being fat I'd like to look like this guy

(Daisuke Sekimoto)

But thats not a gender thing. And i dont have much desire to fuck with my gender expression. Im fine in "masculine clothes". Maybe like, eyeliner or something. But these days im mostly an autistic comfy pilled guy who wears loose fitting tshirts and comfy gym pants. large-adult-son

And i have absolutely no interest in estrogen.

Im not, however, comfortable with the whole masculinity package. There are many things that discomfort me about that.

But the question is. Do i want to express "positive manhood", or am I a demiman? Expressing positive manhood around the kids at my old job always made me feel good. Showing unconditional love, showing them how they deserve to be treated as man, and the boys that men can be gentle and loving.

But i could do all that as a demiman too of course. If i did decide that was my id, id never tell anyone offline other than maybe my enby cousin. Noone else in my family is ready for nonbinary genders lol. And ive lost touch with my irl friendgroup. I told these feelings to one of my two irl transfemme friends. But she friend dumped me over a stupid misunderstanding. Locking me off from my only irl political radical friend, along with the people she introduced me to. And my other irl transfemme friend is kinda truscummy and probably wouldnt get it.

So in a way. I wouldnt "live as a demiman" in any real way, at least offline. Unless i made an effort to get out there and make some radical queer friends.

Oh, and full disclosure. There are two "eggy" things about me

  1. My desire to shapeshift. This is mostly a sex thing though. Id not want to "live life in a womans body", just bang femme attracted people.
  2. I feel a strong kinship with lesbians. I like lesbians memes (though apparently a lot of cis femme attracted people do). I like lesbians and wlw in general. I often feel a desire for my attraction to women to feel gay. Felt a strong connection to "let straight guys be gay for women" discourse coming out of the Jocat stuff. My cis lesbian friend assures me this is just a desire to detoxify my attraction to women and "not be a creep" though. And im pretty sure thats true.
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I've ended up in a few conversations recently where someone has basically said to me "I don't mind trans people I just don't get it." My response is along the line of "the body fucks up and has birth defects all the time, some people are born with a cleft lip or an extra finger or shrunken limb and some people are born with the wrong genitals and hormones. Theres no real difference and you certainly would support a blind person getting their eyes fixed so of course you should support transpeople getting their genitals fixed." So far for most of the people I've talked too this has been like a light bulb going on.

However I don't currently have any irl trans friends to bounce this off of and I want to make sure I'm not being an idiot and framing it in an offensive way or missing something I should really be adding to the conversation.

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I’m mostly wondering how long I can stay closeted at work. Cis people seem pretty oblivious, so I’m mostly worried about breast growth and potentially wearing a binder while my nipples hurt. I know size and speed of breast growth is something that varies a lot. Is this a thing that people have to worry about often?

Edit: to clarify about cis obliviousness, I mean cis people don’t tend to recognize the facial feminization effects of HRT and stuff like that if the person isn’t presenting differently

Edit 2: Thank you everyone! This topic leaves me way to stressed to reply to everyone, but I did read all the replies and appreciate the input/encouragement

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