Spyke

Replies

Comment on

I wouldn't tell anyone... But there would be signs

You don't owe your coming out to anyone! It's a personal choice and if you want to just let people figure it out on their own, well that's more than okay. I actively came out to family and friends I'm close with, but I'm sure plenty of people wondered who this new Facebook friend was and sorted it out on their own from there. Or my mom called them to announce the news like I just got engaged or had a baby.

Comment on

*Permanently Deleted*

Reply in thread

Seriously, we got one line of support from Walz and Harris' offer to follow the law, which is a far cry from supporting trans rights when you consider the laws being passed in many states.

Democrats who were pressed on trans rights this election cycle consistently backed down and conceded and moved towards discriminatory Republican positions.

I wish Harris had won, I would feel much more comfortable with the future prospects of my rights the next 4 years. But anyone who views the Democratic party as truly supportive of trans rights, certainly in any kind of national sense, is sorely mistaken.

Comment on

Maine Gov. Janet Mills told Trump she’d see him in court over school meals and trans rights. She did and she won

Reply in thread

So true. Trans athletes are allowed to succeed, so it should not change anything even if they are, but broadly speaking, this is not what's happening. The state of Georgia just banned trans women from women's sports through high school, there are currently 0 known athletes who precipitated this ban. The Scottish FA just banned trans women from women's leagues, this affects 1 woman playing recreationally. The women's pro rugby union in the United States, WER, has (I'm pretty sure) only 1 trans woman athlete, her team is currently in last place and has yet to win a game.

Trans women are women, trans men are men. They come in all shapes and sizes and varieties and they deserve inclusion no matter their unique form.

Comment on

It seems that Transgender people are increasingly less of a focus to the far right.

Reply in thread

Is 185 not already high enough? It seems odd to characterize "anti trans (healthcare) bills stayed essentially stagnant at ~185" as anything other than "that's a shit ton of discriminatory legislature aimed squarely at trans people's access to healthcare." Also, unless I'm reading that website very wrong, that's only healthcare bills. The total targeting trans people is in the 600s for 2023 and 2024, with a 9% increase from 2023 to 2024.

Trump made headlines just yesterday for fresh comments promising anti trans executive actions on day one of his presidency. I truly can't figure out the logic behind this post. Anti trans legislation isn't going anywhere, it's increasing actually, and no one should think that Republicans are focusing any less on trans people today than they were a week or a month or a year ago.

I'm all for seeking sources of joy and optimism, but ignorance to reality isn't a viable path forward.

Comment on

Maine Gov. Janet Mills told Trump she’d see him in court over school meals and trans rights. She did and she won

Reply in thread

Well, the answer is no, transgender athletes are not dominating competitions. Even if they were, trans athletes are allowed to succeed, but there's no evidence to indicate that this is happening regardless.

I didn't downvote your comment, but I don't blame people for reading it as coming from a disingenuous place. Big "I'm just asking questions" vibes.

mtf

Comment on

Finally comfortable and confident with sex, only to now want HRT and I'm scared of "starting over"

You've gotten a few helpful replies, so I'm going to respond in a slightly different way. My favorite poem, by Alastair Reid, discovered long before I accepted my gender identity but which carries more weight every day I live in the present:

Curiosity

may have killed the cat; more likely the cat was just unlucky, or else curious to see what death was like, having no cause to go on licking paws, or fathering litter on litter of kittens, predictably.

Nevertheless, to be curious is dangerous enough. To distrust what is always said, what seems to ask odd questions, interfere in dreams, leave home, smell rats, have hunches do not endear cats to those doggy circles where well-smelt baskets, suitable wives, good lunches are the order of things, and where prevails much wagging of incurious heads and tails.

Face it. Curiosity will not cause us to die-- only lack of it will. Never to want to see the other side of the hill or that improbable country where living is an idyll (although a probable hell) would kill us all. Only the curious have, if they live, a tale worth telling at all.

Dogs say cats love too much, are irresponsible, are changeable, marry too many wives, desert their children, chill all dinner tables with tales of their nine lives. Well, they are lucky. Let them be nine-lived and contradictory, curious enough to change, prepared to pay the cat price, which is to die and die again and again, each time with no less pain. A cat minority of one is all that can be counted on to tell the truth. And what cats have to tell on each return from hell is this: that dying is what the living do, that dying is what the loving do, and that dead dogs are those who do not know that dying is what, to live, each has to do.

It's either worth it or it's not: sexual drive or physical appearance or anything else has nothing to do with it. And that fucking sucks, but it's true. For me, 3 years in at 30+ years old, there's no other choice. It's all worth it and I'm thrilled for every day I get to live as my truest self.

You reached the end