transgirlnausicaa:

nobody is gonna give you a medal or free HRT for acting like a fucking gender cop. the system is not your friend. we’re out here lying to doctors for survival and demanding respect from an antagonistic system and you’re arguing about who is or isnt transgender like some sort of fan club for oppressive medical gatekeeping. 

how the fuck do you profit from this. you’re wasting your time and your energy tearing other trans people down when you should have solidarity with them. you should be supporting all trans people, not just the ones whose gender you understand, not just the ones whose gender is respectable and palatable to YOU.

pro-aspec-lesbian:

taibreaker:

rantsoup:

I figured out what bugs me about the “aces want to oppressed so much lol” argument, exclusionists don’t seem to realise that not all ace people are white and cis and neurotypical, imagine saying “you want to be oppressed” to a black trans neurodivergent person just because they are a ace black trans neurodivergent person, you guys say aces all want to be opressed but you never specify.

what we mean is “aces want to be oppressed for being ace” but nice reach

And why would a black, trans, nonbinary, neurodivergent, disabled or intersex ace or aro person want to be oppressed for being ace/aro too?

Why is your side ignoring this question by repeating your 2 slogans over and over like you have no real arguments?

im willing to bet a correlation between white gays and them saying this claim.

“what we mean is “aces want to be oppressed for being ace” that sentence is so completely detached from discussions happening within diverse asexuality circles, its completely detached from intersectional politics in general

white cis people literally think being elgeebee is the worst thing to ever happen to a person 

Weight Gain on T – The Trans Community and Fatphobia

Amongst the many dramas I deal with fellow trans people, one that I’ve recently encountered was the difficulties of being both fat and trans. The trans body is always under strict scrutiny, and that also includes your perceived weight. I’ve been on-and-off fat my entire life; I know fatphobia very intimately.

Recently, I decided to talk about how I gained a huge amount of weight around my one-year mark on T. I jumped from 125lb to 185. And I credit this gain entirely to my HRT because my food and exercise had stayed constant for the past three years.

And how could I be so sure of my diet history? I wasn’t calorie counting, I was counting my money. I live on less than $200 a month after rent and utilities. Those $200 need to last me through thirty days of transportation expenses, my meds, my art supplies, my little luxuries, and my groceries. 

I know how expensive a bag of rice will cost me, and how long it will last. I know how many eggs I can eat today, if it means less protein and energy for tomorrow. I know that I can’t spare the funds to buy ‘healthy’ cereal bars if I could spend half as much to get the chocolate-dipped sugar-laden rice krispy squares instead, if I was to put an emergency snack in my backpack if I feel faint from skipping breakfast. I know recipes for dishes based on my limited budget and transportation allowance, how they keep in the fridge, how they compare to other foods that I’d like to eat throughout the week, and I stick with them.

So I know my food down to the $3.50 bag of chips I could be driven to buy. And I say with confidence that my diet has not changed – in quantity or type.

Yet no one believes me. And when I say ‘no one’, I mean more people than you might think. In every spoken conversation I’ve had with my weight gain on T (that wasn’t with medical professionals), there’s always been responses that claim I’ve done something wrong. I must have been subconsciously eating more. I must be eating more bread instead of meat. I must be swallowing my food instead of chewing it. I’m probably putting more milk in my coffee, or something.

Sure, perhaps the new brand of ground coffee I switched to is affecting my weight gain. Or my recent caesar-dressing phase where I craved mixed salad greens for two weeks. Or perhaps it’s because I’m not taking any classes on the third floor, so I’m not doing some stair-climbing cardio on select days of the week. But to be frank, my food or exercise can’t explain my weight gain.

I can understand people’s skepticism. A 60-pound weight gain is a lot, and there’s likely a reason for the sudden growth. But I have a reason – it’s HRT. For me, this is what second puberty is like. Yet people just can’t accept the idea humankind metabolizes food in diverse ways, and this metabolism could change throughout our lifetime. 

Plus, I definitely don’t ‘look like’ I’m 185 lb. This was me when I was 20, a year before starting T, and weighed 125 pounds;

image

And this is me now;  

image

(I know the picture isn’t clear, but take my word for it that most wouldn’t peg me as a 180-pound person.)

And when I was 16, I had a sudden spike of weight gain that couldn’t be explained (hmm, I wonder if there’s a pattern) because the diet cooked by my parents had been constant. And within the next year, I dropped it again to reach my pre-T weight. Here, I am 160 lb.

image

Not 185, but 160. And no, I did not grow taller between the ages of 16-22, nor did I join my highschool sports team or w/e to warrant the sudden drop in fat.

I don’t have a scale in my apartment. I only know my weight because of my regular doctor visits – if I want to talk about my anxiety medication or renew my T prescription, I need to visit the clinic, and a nurse will first weigh me, measure me, take my temperature and pulse, my blood pressure, and all that, before the doctor even comes into the room. So every 5 months or so, I see my weight.

And that 60 lb gain happened in less than ten months. But I had been steadily gaining body fat for at least a year before that point, around two months after my first T injection. So of course, I would ask my doctor what the fuck was going on with this sudden gain in weight, and both doctors (I had two because one left the clinic) handwaved the gain with ‘muscles are heavy’. 

They were never concerned. Which, of course, made me less nervous about this phenomenon, but I was still confused; how could it even happen? How is this sudden gain in weight – but not in mass – possible? 

Their answer was that current HRT data on patients accounts for very little that could be relayed to new applicants. What’s warned pre-HRT is a flimsy prediction based on what we know of hormones, and how the recent years of HRT practices have provided us with results. As far as I, their patient, is concerned, my changes couldn’t be said to be ‘unusual’ or ‘unprecedented’. There’s very little that’s ‘usual’ about HRT at the moment.

Not that HRT is some new fangled experiment that we know little about. We know how it works and what it’s likely to do. What we don’t know is what else it could do. Same story for many medications.

When I got my ‘So You Wanna Start Shooting Up On Man-Juice’ information packet, I got my little list of what to expect, and a timeline of when I can expect them to occur. You know; acne a few weeks in, being hot and sweating some time later, seeing thicker and darker body hair, and then finally rejoicing as you say goodbye to your period forever. Except my menstrual cycle was the first to go, and I didn’t get acne until almost ten months in. There’s a lot of diversity and limited information when it comes to HRT; I never got any mood swings, and no one told me that my hair and nails would get so annoyingly brittle.

So looking back, is it really so strange I’d gain so much weight and limited mass from HRT? Although I don’t know anyone else who gained as much weight – but not size – as I did, I now know how different our medical transitions could be. And knowing my weird tendency to fluctuate between sizes and weights so abruptly, it’s not without precedent. 

But so few people are willing to agree with me. It’s all about how calories as a unit of energy remains constant from the mouth to the expulsion, regardless of the food or the person. I can quickly point out several studies that suggest otherwise – that fatness is hereditary and different people really do retain weight differently – but my own history of fatness and HRT is enough to call it all into question.

And lets be clear; if I did indeed gain five pant sizes instead of two under HRT, it doesn’t change my worth as an individual, or my right to health and respect. But my reality is that I challenge the notion that fatness is something entirely controllable. 

We need to do better under our ability to recognize fatness as human diversity, and what fatness means to us.

between-stars-and-waves:

naamahdarling:

witchlockmonsterfox:

if anyone’s interested: the study my professor did was basically with children who were 2-3 years old.  they laid out toys for them to play with that were commonly associated with one gender or the other (action figures vs. dolls, a pink and therefore “girly” bike vs. a non-pink and “masculine” bike or w/e).  for a while they would observe them in the room and the children would be aware they were being watched by them.  during this period pretty much every child played with the “appropriate” toys

what they did next was then have everyone leave the room, but be watching behind one-way glass, and observe which toys the children would choose when they didn’t think they were being watched. a lot of children would play with any toy, regardless of which gender it was “meant” for.  they had no problem with it.  but they were aware of the fact that adults and other people had a problem with it.  they had already learned what they were “supposed” to do, despite the fact they didn’t seem to honestly care.  just as long as they thought they weren’t being watched and wouldn’t get in trouble for not playing with the “right” toys… which in itself says something

basically it supported the idea that children internalize gender roles at a young age, are aware of them, and it isn’t innately something a certain gender prefers over the other (or someone with one type of genitals innately prefers, as most people correlate gender with genitals, especially regarding a child. so it seems logical to assume it’s unrelated)

they’re just kind of arbitrary associations that seem to do more harm than good

So, basically, children too young to communicate effectively are being criticized and possibly punished for playing with the “wrong” toys.

Good job, parents.  Great fucking job.

The things we do to our kids

elodieunderglass:

gimmeagoodcoldbeer:

ronin134:

revengeofthemudbutt:

armedplatypus:

whiskey-weather:

stonerdoomandbeagles:

shoothikedrinkfuck:

blazepress:

This three-legged decorated war hero had one leg lost to surgery after taking four rounds from an AK-47.

Bad. Mother. Fucker.

Those eyes say “Pretend to throw the tennis ball. I dare you to only pretend.”

I think those eyes say a lot more than that. He’s seen more than I ever will, done more than I’ll ever do, and his war will never be over.

He’s got Ranger scrolls on his collar. That dog is a god damn hero.

I just noticed the Purple Heart and that Scroll.
Wow. Just wow. 
The picture alone, in all it’s detail says a lot of things. god damn.

I can’t not reblog this dog… his you
Eyes say so much

I’ve never seen a dog with such a face like that. Like an old man who went to war and if you ask him about he just stiffens up and face turns to stone. 

Layka is a lady dog. Let’s remember that.

Now, it’s an understandable problem – our socialization instantly encourages us to see this rugged, sleek, military animal as a male. Three-legged hero dog with military decorations and stern-appearing eyes? TOTALLY A DUDE DOG, JUST LOOK AT HIM. It’s a programmed response, and nothing to be ashamed of – let’s just be accurate and note that Layka’s a female.

I’ve highlighted all the reblogs above where Layka is described as a hero, an old man, with male pronouns – rather than the fierce, charming heroine she is. It’s kind of a teachable moment: how does an image of an animal, displaying absolutely no secondary sex characteristics, instantly give us these fictional headcanons about its gender and gender performance? It’s an impressive demonstration of our ability to translate body language.

The photographer who took this compelling shot noted that Layka’s playful, bouncy energy made it nearly impossible for him to get a shot with her mouth closed! He ended up having to stop using the tennis ball he was using to get her attention, because it made her too excited and smiley. Based on the photos below, I think she’d have quite a sense of humor about the “where’s the tennis ball?” game!

Layka is so smiley in person that the photographer struggled to get her to pose "seriously."

Of course, the photographer did end up connecting with a fundamental aspect of Layka’s nature in the cover photo; her serious, soldier side. But that’s not all the animal is. Does the dog in the unused shots still resemble an “old man?” Is the dog in the unused shots male or female? Is it still a hero with its tongue out? Is it still admirable without a “face like stone?”

This is what I mean when I say that we have to examine the lenses of culture and society that we are always, always looking through when we talk about science biology.

Click here to support Help Me Pay For My Medical Transition

Starting this fall, my college-provided insurance doesn’t apply to me anymore, because I am a part-time senior finishing up my Bachelor of Fine Arts degree instead of the usual full-time. 

Thanks to that, I found myself with two ill-timed bills of $1,309.14 total from a single early September visit to the doctor – it includes the required blood tests and hormone replacement therapy medication. 

There’s no chance of me applying for school insurance at this point, and I’m not eligible for list insurances that I can front the expenses now. My family and I have very little funds of our own. This sudden bill can put a serious dent in our near futures, especially in my chances of finishing my last year of education. I certainly don’t have the money to pay for it now, and I won’t by the time it’s due.

I ask for your help in clearing this bill. If I pay it off, I wouldn’t have to worry about my next hormone replacement therapy prescription for many months, which will give me time to find an insurance policy and secure a better future for me.

Click here to support Help Me Pay For My Medical Transition

I got told by someone being ace and trans are mental illnesses, but still ‘valid’, and that in order to get ‘diagnosed’ and ‘treated’ you have to not normalize them, especially around kids, and that you ‘cure’ both with hormone therapies. They also told me you can’t be trans if you don’t experience dysphoria bc that’s what the dsm says. It’s invalidating and insecurity inducing. There’s so much overlap in how trans and aspec ids are pathologized that’s hardly talked abt outside the communities

hawkmask101:

fuckyeahasexual:

YEP

i mean…. u cant be trans without dysphoria its medically impossible

say that to my second year on T