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Autogynephilia: Bad Science Revisited

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Part 3 of the "Gay" vs. "Straight" Crossdreamers Series.

In my two previous blog post I have documented that gay men and lesbian women may indeed crossdream (that is: get aroused by the idea of being the the opposite sex).

I have also  pointed out that there are trans women attracted to men out there who -- like XX women -- get excited by exploring their female sexuality.

Fixing the numbers

But if there are androphilic (man-loving) transsexual women out there who experience crossdreamer fantasies, should not researchers like Blanchard have found them?  According to his autogynephilia theory, men or trans women who love men cannot have crossdreamer fantasies.

I see diversity. Others feel an incessant need to sort people into neat piles.
Photo: Jacob Wackerhausen

Well, I have already told you about how Blanchard is capable of denying the existence of female to male crossdreamers, even if he has witnessed one first hand. 

Frans de Waal puts it this way in his fascinating book The Bonobo and the Atheist: In Search of Humanism Among the Primates.


"Scientists are human, and humans are driven what by psychologists call 'confirmation biases' (we love evidence that supports our view) and 'disconfirmation biases' (we disparage evidence that undermines our view)."

"Dogmatists have one advantage," de Waal concludes: "they are poor listeners". Blanchard does not listen at all, not even to his own research.

Blanchard has documented the existence of androphilic MTF crossdreamers

It turns out Blanchard's own studies, based on questionnaires given to patients at his clinic, does document that MTF androphilic trans women crossdream.

Indeed, many studies based on the typology of Blanchard reports that between 15 and 23 percent of the so-called "homosexual transsexuals" (a misleading term for heterosexual transsexual women) do report crossdreaming.

The number for Blanchard's 1985 study was 15 percent. The similar number for Blanchard-supporter Anne Lawrence's 2005 study was 18 percent.

The corresponding number for gynephilic and bisexual male to female trans people in these studies varies between 56 and 75 percent.

The difference between gynephilic and androphilic trans women is more than significant, and requires an explanation.  (More about that in my next post.)

The problem is, however,  that researchers like Blanchard and Lawrence are not really looking for an explanation. They already have one, and that explanations requires that androphilic crossdreamers do not crossdream.

Because of this they try to reclassify all crossdreaming trans women attracted to men as gynephilic. These trans women are not really attracted to men, Blanchard and Lawrence say; they are lying to themselves and/or the researcher.

Bad science

An neat trick is to redefine any MTF trans woman who reports attraction to men as "autogynephilic" if she has experienced crossdreaming fantasies and she has had sex with a woman, while living as a man. Implicitly this means that any male bodied person who has ever had sex with a woman is gynephilic ("non-homosexual" in their parlance).
"Hey you, sexy autogynephile!" Photo: Stockbyte

You would expect that they, in accordance with this principle, would count all male bodied persons who have ever had sex with men as androphilic. They do not, of course, as this would make mockery of  their theory.

Lawrence does not even check whether some of the presumably non-crossdreaming androphilic trans women have had sex with women, again because it would undermine her research.

It is quite common for both homosexual men and androphilic trans women to have had sex with women, as many of them go through phases were they try to adapt to the requirements of a homophobic society. Some also do this out of curiosity.

This makes the sex partner history of a person a completely unreliable indicator for sexual orientation. But Lawrence and Blanchard ignore this, as they need this dichotomy to "prove" their theory.

Blanchard-supporter Cloudy has made some amazing attempts at fixing the numbers which are well worth reading, but even she does not manage to eradicate the unpleasant fact that some androphilic trans women do indeed report sexual arousal while crossdressed.

And yes, that means that Blanchard's theory has been falsified -- by himself!

Gay men and androphilic trans women may crossdream. As may lesbians and gynephilic trans women.

Disregarding age

Madeline Wydzen has pointed out another interesting flaw in Blanchard's argument. He does not take age into consideration when interpreting his data.

In Blanchard's database gynephilic transwomen are -- on average -- older than the androphilic when they seek surgery. His does, after all, follow in the footsteps of many others who have pointed out that "late onset" transsexual women are more likely to be predominantly attracted to women.

Older people have, well, lived longer, which means that their chances of having experienced "autogynephilic" fantasies in one time in their lives is much larger. Because in Blanchard's universe one such fantasy is all it takes for you to become labelled  a perverted "autogynephile". Really! This is the same as saying that any man who has ever felt some attraction to another man is gay, and believe me: Most men have (including me).

I would argue that the age of the gynephilic respondents makes it more likely that they understand the question correctly. They have had time reflecting on their identity and sexuality and have heard it all before. They understand what Blanchard is aiming for and does nothing to hide the truth.

That is the problem: Not that they are lying, but that they tell the truth to people who want to harm them.

But why do not more androphilic trans women report arousal from imagining themselves as women before transitioning, and from being women after?

Ah, that is the topic of the final post in this series. Don't go away!

See also my post on Moser's critique of Blanchard and his autogynephilia theory.

This blog post is part of the following series:




  1. When men loving men crossdream
  2. On crossdreaming lesbians and sexy trans women
  3. Autogynephilia: Bad Science Revisited
  4. What explains the difference between the two types of MTF transgender?



What explains the difference between the two types of MTF transgender?

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Part 4 of the "Gay" vs. "Straight" Crossdreamers Series.

Photo: pixtawan
The the whole idea that woman-loving male to female crossdreamers (whether they are transsexual or not) are perverts, while male bodied trans people who love men are not, rests on the premise that the two groups are fundamentally different.

In the previous posts in this series I have documented that this is not so.

I have argued that the reason the majority of androphilic (i.e. man-loving)  trans women say that they have never experienced crossdreaming -- i.e. fantasies where they get aroused by the idea of being a woman --  is because they refuse to reduce their sexual feelings to one and one factor only.

Like other women the excitement they feel from being an attractive female  is blended in with a wide variety of other factors: their attraction to their lover, the desire their lover feel for them, the affirmation given by other men and women.

They live up to the model for accepted sexual behavior in women, being a woman attracted to men. They therefore -- correctly, in my opinion -- interpret their arousal as an effect of the interaction between her as a woman and he as a man.

The main reason for androphilic transwomen transitioning when young is most likely also found here. It is easier for them to live up to the archetypal gender model of women loving men.

The gynephilic trans woman, on the other hand, will most often find it much harder to do so. It is not that she is autoerotic and sexually attracted to herself as a woman  (at least no more so than other women). The problem is that she will find it so much harder to find a compatible  lover out there. She is normally not interested in straight men, and the lesbians most often prefer women born women.

Yes, MTF woman-loving crossdreamers may have  female partners, but these women are more likely than not heterosexual. This often means that the crossdreamer will try to adapt to the role of the heterosexual man, which in no way helps his "inner woman" (whatever causes "her" to appear).

This obviously also applies to male to female crossdressers and crossdreamers who are not gender dysphoric and who identify with their birth sex. They have an even strong motivation for protecting their "maleness" against feminine tendencies.

Because of this  their arousal from fantasizing about being a woman becomes much more apparent, and the male to female crossdreamer (transsexual or non-transsexual)  therefore truthfully answer "Yes, I have been aroused by imagining myself as a woman".

Context is everything. Blanchard and his autogynephilia followers ignore the context.

This means that even if we accept the premise that sexual orientation towards men, women or both are fixed traits that cannot be changed, it is impossible to use such orientation to define who are crossdreamers and who are not.

But it could be that our sexual orientation is not as fixed as many would like us to believe. Or maybe the same social and psychological processess that leads MTF crossdreamers to suppress the other side, also makes them suppress threatening sexual attractions.

Jaimie Veal's approach

Researcher Jaimie Veal has another interesting explanation for the difference between androphilic (man-loving) and gynephilic (woman-loving) trans people. She calls it the Identity-defense Model of Gender-Variance Development and it applies to transsexual as well as non-transsexual crossdreamers.

According to Veale the difference between the two types of gender variant male bodied persons is explained by the degree of gender variant identity developed and the defense mechanisms used to suppress this identity.

To put it simply: Some people are more likely to suppress or deny gender variant feelings than others. Veale has a long list of such factors. She notes, for instance, that introvert gender variant kids are more likely to try to follow the gender behavior expected by their parents, as introverts are more likely to be people pleasers:

"We believe that an introverted child is likely to have less confidence to express this  gender-variant identity, and it is also possible that children with greater impulse control, agreeableness, or conformity are more likely to cognitively avoid their gender-variance." (Veale, Lomax, Clarke 2010)

In Veale's thinking sexual orientation is not causing the difference between androphilic and gynephilic trans people. It is the other way around: Timid trans boys develop an attraction for women in an attempt to conform and please the people around them:

"Sexuality is strongly correlated with these outcomes. Those participants not  employing defence mechanisms (classical transsexuals and drag artists) are more likely to  develop a sexual attraction towards males... Those participants employing  defence mechanisms (non-classical transsexuals and cross-dressers) are more likely to  develop a sexual attraction to females and cross-gender eroticism."

So when some gynephilic male to female crossdreamers report fantasies where they are taken by faceless men, this is not proof of them being perverts unable to connect to real people. It is rather a sign of an underlying ambiguity as regards their sexual orientation.

This might also explain why some gynephilic trans women find that they are really bisexual post-op. Having become women in flesh as well as in spirit, they may now allow themselves to explore those feelings.

(See Julia Serano's latest book Excluded: Making Feminist and Queer Movements More Inclusivefor a good discussion about what this means for a transsexual woman.)

I am not sure what comes first: The sexual orientation or the degree of conformity. We could even be talking about some kind of complex feedback loops here.

What is certain, however, is that the simplistic ideas that people are either homosexual or heterosexual is pure nonsense. This means that the autogynephilia theory, which requires a strict division between hetero and gay,  is bad science, indeed!
.............

Jaimie F. Veale, Tess Lomax & Dave Clarke: "Defense Model of Gender-Variant Development" International Journal of Transgenderism, Volume 12, Issue 3, 2010You can read it here.

This blog post is part of the following series:

  1. When men loving men crossdream
  2. On crossdreaming lesbians and sexy trans women
  3. Autogynephilia: Bad Science Revisited
  4. What explains the difference between the two types of MTF transgender?



What Comic Book Hero Nemi Taught Me About Sex, Gender and Transgender

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Nemi violates your gender expectations.
On what the Norwegian comic strip Nemi can tell us about female sexuality.

The main reason for why people think ill of male to female crossdreamers and crossdressers is not found in people's understanding of men. It is found in how we look at women.

We have been taught to think of women as loving, emphatic, demure, quiet, peaceful and -- let's face  it -- far less sexually charged than men.

While women look for serious commitments in their love life, we say, men look for quick and dirty sex. The women want to raise and love kids. Men like to spread their seed to every corner of the world.

These are the implicit images that powers the world view underpinning the autogynephilia theory, conservative religious attacks on crossdressers, the rad fem persecution of crossdreamers, as well as the toxic gospel of the so-called "classical transsexuals".

Since male to female crossdreamers dream of having sex as women, they must be perverted men, they say, because only men dream about having sex, apparently. Women only fake it.

This mental map is obviously all wrong. Not only does research show that women can be as libidinous, promiscuous, aggressive, unfaithful and evil as men. Living in a country that must be the most gender equal in the world, I can also tell you that given the opportunity many of them behave very much in the same way as men are expected to behave.

That does not necessarily mean that the inborn female and male sexuality is exactly the same. There may still be variations, but these are not found in categories like promiscuity and aggression.

Our view of female sexuality is changing

Popular culture has caught up on this. As women get more and more liberated, and education, politics and contraceptives have set them free, the true variation of the female sex become more apparent.

I think the turning point in American television was Nancy Botwin in Weeds plundering her smoke detector for batteries to power her vibrator (see embedded video below). It became painfully clear that many women masturbate regularly, and therefore -- most likely -- are as horny as men. (Apparently 44 percent of US women between the age 18 and 60 have used a sex toy).


Turn me on, dammit! 
(Movie poster)
In Norway it might have been the book and movie Få meg på, for faen! about the sexual drives of a completely normal Norwegian teenage girl (-- translated as Turn Me On, Dammit! in English; the title actually means "Slide Me On, For Satan!" which is the kind of thing real girls might say in my Nordic corner of the world.)

And no, this reorientation is not caused by some sexist male conspiracy. Jenji Kohan, the creator of Weeds, is definitely female. The book Få meg på, for faen! was written by a woman and the movie was directed by a woman. And it is mostly women who kill the myths of chaste Norwegian girls who close their eyes and think of knitting.

Lise's heroine Nemi to the resuce

One of my favorite comics is Nemi, written and drawn by Lise Myhre. Lise continuously  forces the reader out of the narrow boxes of our minds by showing us how  people think and feel in the real world. She does so with love and humor.

Nemi is published in some of the major Norwegian newspapers.

Lise Myhre, creator of Nemi. Photo: Albin Olsson
Nemi is a tough and open minded Goth chick who loves science fiction, fantasy and black metal (which are -- interestingly -- passions she shares with many MTF crossdreamers).

I have taken the liberty of translating and republishing a few of her strips here to show you how a Norwegian woman's view of sex and gender breaks down the Puritan preconceptions shared by sexist scientists, previous popes, classical trans women and radical feminists.

Myth 1: Women are never sexually shallow

My girl friend told me once how she and her then teenage female friends used to  grade the bums of men passing.

If they had been men, of course, this would have been considered very sexist and demeaning. Since they were girls this was considered an act of liberation or something.

The fact, is of course, that treating men and women as sex objects comes naturally to both men and women. The crux of the matter is: Are you able to see the subject  behind the object? That is how you distinguish a sexist from  a compassionate human being.
Click on image to read!


Myth number 2: Women never look for causal sex

"MEN!" women sigh, and look at you with resignation. "Men only think about one thing."  This is, as any man who loves and protects his family and friends will tell you, a very sexist thing to say, but let us leave that for a moment.

Instead: Let us look at women looking for a one night stand:

Click on image to enlarge!

Myth number 3: Women never get horny (unless they are whores, who do not get aroused either, because they are exploited)

I have lost track of how often male to female crossdreamers tell me that women lack testosterone, and therefore they are less sexually charged than men. And if I tell them about female to male crossdreamers writing pornographic comics about  their male selves violating feminized men, they tell me that these women are perverts! You can't win, right?

No one has ever proved a connection between male versus female testosterone levels and libido. No one.

Regardless: The fact is that women, when given the chance and the social stigma is removed, may perfectly well want to go directly to what my American friends call "third base".

Click to enlarge. I have kept the original text, for obvious reasons.
Myth number 4: Women never get excited by the idea of being sexy

There is no autogynephilia among women, Blanchard says. Women do not get aroused by the idea of being sexy.

Yeah, right!

Click on image to enlarge.

Thank you Lise, for helping us free of our mental shackles!

For more Nemi strips in English, go to Nemicomics.com.

And for those who missed it. Here is the dildo sequence from Weeds. It is not office friendly, but who cares!



PS

Here is another paradox: The majority of the male to female crossdreamers I know, live up to the feminine stereotype. They are introvert, quiet, shy and would love nothing more than to take on the role of the patient and caring woman. Put them in a night club and they would look like helpless fish on land.

In other words: They are nothing like the emancipated Norwegian women presented by Lise Myhre. (Which, I guess, in a few years time will be used against them, as they are not behaving like proper emancipated women...)

In spite of this the image rad fems and sexist scientists have of crossdressers and crossdreamers is the boasting, aggressive and badly dressed man who forces his transgender views of everyone.

There are two reasons for this paradox:
Nazi caricature of the Negro Jew

The introvert crossdreamer/crossdresser is invisible, so the only one they have ever seen is the party crasher.

Secondly, the people attacking us have all adopted a stereotype of the ugly man in a frock because it fits their image of what a crossdreamers or a crossdresser should be.

In other words: The ugly crossdresser is like the child-molesting hunchbacked Jew with the crooked nose or the libidinous "negro" with the big lips and the big .....

It is fascinating to see that people who think of themselves as progressive, so easily becomes copies of the fascists they despise.

On the current attacks on girlfags

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It seems the tumblrverse have discovered girlfags (a lose term that includes non-trans women with a fascination for gay male culture, as well as FTM crossdreamers and trans-men).

It seems it is their sharing of gay male imagery that has pissed some homosexual readers off. Apparently any straight woman who find gay men attractive must be a perverted fetishist.

The fact that both gay men and lesbians may worship the human body as well as  a wide various of gender expressions is apparently completely unrelated to the girlfag's enthusiasm for gay men.

Yepp, this is old fashioned invalidation of your opponents by labeling them as sexual perverts all over again, but now some of the persecuted have decided to become the oppressors.

Another example of such attacks can be found over at the Facebook Girlfag and Guydyke group. 

In order to reach tumblr readers, I have posted two short blog posts on girlfags over there:

"Stop the harassment of girlfags!"

"Lou Sullivan, pioneer FTM trans-activist and girlfag"


The struggle of women, disabled, people of color and gay men and lesbians tells me that we have to be both patient and persistent, if we are to end this kind of persecution.

The anti-toxin is, as in the struggle against homophobia, to show the human face of those marginalized and make people understand that these are nothing more (and nothing less) than another variation of that wonderful thing called humanity.

Most reasonable gay and lesbian people will understand this, given their own life experience and their own suffering.  But we need to explain it to them.

I strongly recommend Julia Serano's new book Excluded, which provides an excellent analysis of this type of invalidation.

[Some minor edits Nov 25 at 15:51 CET]

A Creative Crossdreamer Vocabulary A - C

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Language is power. It can set you free. It can help you understand who you are. By coining new words or reinterpreting old ones we make the invisible visible.
Crossdreams. Photo: IT Stock

For crossdreamers -- that is men and women who fantasise about being the opposite sex -- this is extremely important, because there are no words to describe their lives. Or, if there are words and narratives, they do not capture their own experience.

The term "crossdreamer" has been my attempt to establish a new word untainted by the  attempts made by some sexologists and psychiatrists at turning our being into an illness, or the common sexist bigotry that says that any man or woman who imagine him or herself as the opposite sex must be a pervert. To a certain extent this strategy has worked well, even if we always have to relate ourselves to the prejudices of the day.

Most communities, strictly or loosely defined, develop a more nuanced vocabulary to help them describe their own struggles and victories. According to Ole Henrik Magga the Northern Sami people of Scandinavia have 1000 words for reindeer. I do not think we need 1000 words for crossdreaming, but maybe we could test a few?

Based on comments and posts made by crossdreamers over the last five years or so, I have made  list of terms that may help crossdreamers interpret their own lives. The point is not necessarily that we are to use these words in our everyday discussions. My hope is that they will get us thinking.

I am planning to turn this dictionary into an e-book.

What I would love to see from you are comments that describe a crossdreamer feeling, experience or idea that might help other crossdreamers understand who they are in a better way. And who knows?Mmaybe we can even get others to see crossdreaming in a clearer light.

Below I have included my first proposals to get us going. Entries marked by an asterisk  are coined by me.

Affirmation

A crossdreamer is affirmed when is or her crossdreaming is recognized. There are three levels of crossdreamer affirmation:

Level 1: You realize that you are not the only one having such feelings. At this point any recognition might help, even if it by someone who invalidates you.

Level 2: You meet people who accepts you for who you are, and who do not try to discredit you as some kind of freak. You realize that you are just another variation in the great wheel of Life, and that there are millions of crossdreamers out there: women and men, gay and straight, young and old.

Level 3: You manage to affirm your own being and to love yourself as the one you are.


Ambiviolence*

The fear of ambiguity leads to ambiviolence.
Photo: Robert van den Eijk
Sex identity, gender roles and sexual orientation are  fundamental parts of our belief systems, and they are policed by strong taboos and tough penalties for those who dare to challenge these beliefs.

Ironically, it is very often those that have doubts about their own sexuality and sex  identity who become the strongest upholders of orthodox beliefs. It is as if they want to control their own  ambiguity by forcing others into the pigeonholes of their narrow minds. This is, for instance, why you find so many gay preachers persecuting homosexuals.

Crossdreamers are often victims for this kind of ambiviolence. The male to female crossdreamers are harassed for being sissies in school. They are ridiculed for being sexual perverts when they grow up. They are penalized for not living up to the ideals of "the real man".  Moreover, they internalize the contempt of others, becoming their own tormentors.

The female to male crossdreamers may hide under the more positively loaded term "tomboy" when young, but even they may be scorned for their so-called  lack of femininity.

Creative crossdreaming 

The German resarcher Uli Meyer coined the term "creative transvestitism". I have adapted it as "creative crossdreaming" which means more or less the same.

Crossdreamers use their artistic creativity to express their crossdreamer self, to understand themselves and to engage in crossdreamer erotic fantasies. The Japanese female to male crossdreamer novelist Sakakibara Shihomi once said that her creative work is the only possibility of fulfilling her libido.

Among the female to male creative crossdreaming genres we find yaoi/boy's love and slash. Male to female crossdreamers may write short stories, TG captions and comics. Among other forms of creative crossdreaming we find online role playing and gaming, as well as cosplay.

Creative crossdreaming is also found among more well  known artists. Pedo Almodóvar's movie The Skin I Live In, can easily be interpreted as a crossdreamer fantasy. Ernest Hemingway was most certainly a crossdreamer.

Crossbonding* 

Most crossdreamers can tell you about the relief they felt when they understood they were not the only one having such feelings, and that there are -- in fact -- millions of crossdreamers out there.

In the Western hemisphere male to female crossdressers started formalised crossbonding by establishing newsletters and clubs from the 1950s onward. The organisations of the time were unfortunately often both  homophobic and transphobic. Later on some crossdreamers got engaged in the development of the LGBT movement (like the female to male crossdreamer Lou Sullivan).

In the early 21st century crossdreamers began finding each other online when searching for information about "autogynephilia". Lately there have been established blogs, sites and discussion forums for crossdreamers, this site being one of them.

Crossdreamer*

A person who gets aroused by the idea of being the other sex (relative to his or her birth sex). Crossdreamers is a subcategory under the wider umbrella term "transgender", which denotes a wide variety of gender varience, including crossdressers, drag queens, gender queer, and transsexuals.

Some crossdreamers identify with their birth sex, others with their target sex (i.e. the sex they dream of becoming). Some crossdreamers crossdress, others do not. Crossdreamers may be male bodied or female bodied. Their sexual orientation varies.

Crossdressing 

Many male to female crossdreamers crossdress. They put on female clothing in order to get some emotional and/or sexual release or to express a side of themselves that is forbidden their male persona. Some may even do so in public.

Female to male crossdreamers may also crossdress, and since they are allowed to wear "male" clothing, they more easily get away with it, i.e. people do not think of them as crossdressers.

To what extent all crossdressers crossdream (i.e. get aroused from the idea of being the opposite sex)  is a matter of debate. The argument is that "homosexual" crossdressers (i.e. those sexually attracted to people of their own assigned birth sex) are not sexually aroused by dressing up as their target sex. Hence drag queens and drag kings are not considered crossdreamers. I, however, fail to see how a butch lesbian going to a party packing will not -- in one way or the other -- be excited by her own manly appearance. Really!

Crossenacting

The act or fantasy of doing something regarded as feminine (in the case of men) and masculine (in the case of women). The act itself is  culturally defied, and will vary from culture to culture and from time period to time period.
At the moment you realize that the crossdresser or
crossenacter is actually trying to find a way of expressing
a side of his/her psyche, the similarities
between his/her  testing of gender expression, and
the ones of kids, teenagers and fashion conscious
adults become obvious. (Photo: LUNAMARINA)

In her book Excluded: Making Feminist and Queer Movements More Inclusive, Julia Serano points out that this kind of enacting is common among all people, trans or non-trans:

"It must be said that cissexuals [i.e. non-transsexuals] also emulate the behaviors of cissexual women and men. This is perhaps most obvious in children and teens who are in the process of learning how to act according to societal gender norms. Cissexual gender imitation also occurs in adults -- in fact, it's precisely what fashion trends and appearance-oriented advertisement rely upon."

Women oohing and aaahing over a pretty pink dress are considered normal, while  male to female crossdressera are called pervert for doing the same thing. People seem to find it hard to understand that at least parts of his psyche is similar to theirs. For trans women this should be obvious.

By the way, male to female crossdressers/crossenacters are often ridiculed for dressing up badly or acting out stereotypes. People fail to understand that while non-trans women get their gender expression experiments affirmed ("You are such a pretty princess!") and corrected ("Go easy on the mascara there, kiddo!"), the crossdresser gets nothing but negative feedback.

This is actually somewhat easier for female to male crossdressers (lesbian butch or androphilic girfags), as our culture has developed a loophole for women who want to wear masculine clothing. That does not mean that their lives are easy, though. Far from it!

Crossgrief*

A deep and intense feeling of grief and sorrow from that comes from the realization that your real life is  in some way misaligned with your inner life. Crossgrief often follow after soaring, i.e. the feeling of joy that follows from seeing the beauty of a woman (in the case of gynephilic, woman-loving, male to female crossdreamers) or a man (in the case of androphilic, man-loving, female to male ones).

Male to female crossdreamers often report that watching a beautiful woman make them painfully aware of the fact that they are not one.

Frequent bursts of crossgrief may be a sign of dysphoria.

Crossdresser (photo Discovod)

Crossmopolitan

The male to female crossmopolitan identifies as a man, and has a good relationship with his own male body. He thrives in the traditional assertive male role as well as the more feminine caring role. For him his feminization fantasies are sexual spice and a way of getting in touch with his feminine side. He will feel no desire to transition for real.

Similarly the female to male crossmopolitan may love a good yaoi comic where dominant gay men have sex effeminate gay men, but she feels no need to become either of them in real life.

Crossmoplitians must not be confused with false crossmopolitans, crossdreamers who suppress gender dysphoria.

Crosswaves* 

The intensity of a crossdreamers fantasies will vary over time. During the lulls they may feel close to "normal". The lulls always pass, however, to be replaced by surges.


To be continued...

A Creative Crossdreamer Vocabulary D - M

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Here is the second part of my new Crossdreamer Dictionary. You can read the first entry here!

Crossdreamers are men and women who get excited by the idea of being the other sex. In this series I try to present imaginary (and not so imaginary) terms that can help us understand what crossdreaming is about.

Dark crossdreamers*
Some crossdreamers have suppressed
their other side completely.
Photo: michele piacquadio

Dark crossdreamers are people who have managed to suppress their transgender side completely. They are not even aware of splitting (i.e. a mental compartmentalization of their other side).

The dark crossdreamers are as mysterious and invisible as dark matter, although some dark crossdreamers may have a breakthrough, as the suppressed side forces its way to the surface. This is why we know they exist.

The existence of dark crossdreamers makes it impossible to determine how large a proportion of the human population is actually crossdreamers.


Dysphoric

Dysphoric crossdreamers feel a strong sense of misalignment between their bodies and their minds. Quite often they will feel completely alienated from their own bodies and the gender role they are forced to play. They only manage to live the "normal" lives of someone assigned to their birth sex through great sacrifice. Many of them will end up transitioning.

In spite of what some  would like you to believe, most transsexual men and women have been crossdreamers.

Erotic dissonance

Crossdreaming or being turned on by something (song, movie scene, etc.) that is not meant to be sexual but simply funny, exciting, etc.

(Hat tip to Hagia Sofia)

Euphoria*

Euophoria is the intense sense of joy a crossdreamer may feel when he or she is able to express his or her hidden side. This may be male to female crossdresser's joy of wearing feminine attire, the female to male crossdressers mischievous sense of power from "packing", or it may be the emotional release that comes from writing a story, a caption or a comic that make perfect sense.

Euphoria is related to soaring.

Flash flood*

Overwhelmed (photo: Jochen Schönfeld)
An extremely strong and fast oncoming surge, where the desire to become the other sex overwhelms you. For some this experience may lead to madfear (i.e. an intense fear of going insane).

Forced feminization

A recurrent theme in male to female crossdreaming is forced feminization, where a man is changed into a woman against his will. The transformation may be complete or partial (crossdressing). Such fantasies may also include elements of forced sex. In this respect they are similar to the rape fantasies you often find among women.

In Almodovar's movie The Skin I Live In, the doctor
played by Antonio Banderas uses surgery and drugs
to turn Vincente into Vera. 
A common explanation for such fantasies among women as well as male bodies crossdreamers, is that the forced aspect relieves them of responsibility and guilt: "I am not to blame. I could not stop it!"

An archetypal forced feminization fantasy can be found in Pedro Almodóvar's movie The Skin I Live In, where the disturbed Dr. Robert Regard kidnaps Vicente and changes him into Vera.

Female to male crossdreamers rarely fantasise about forced masculinisation, most likely because masculinity is not associated with helplessness in our cultures. They may make up stories about feminizing men, however.

Gender Queer

Some crossdreamers do not seek to be the opposite sex in their fantasies and role playing. Or if they do, this is part of a process where they try to integrate their masculine and feminine side.

The gender queer refuse to be reduced to male or female only. Some of them use the word "androgynous" instead, which may be a bit misleading, as many of them do not necessarily appear androgynous. A similar term is "non-binary".

Genderstretch*

Genderstretch, also known as "gender impatience", is the feeling of frustration that comes from feeling stuck in between being male and female.

As Hagia Sofia over at Crossdream Life puts it: "Wishing your mind could, well, make up its damn mind and choose one or the other, dammit!"

Girlfag

Crossing borders. Photo: Hemera
Wide term encompassing both female to male crossdreamers and non-transgender women who feel an affinity for gay and feminine men. Crossdreaming girlfags often fantasize about being a man in a gay relationship.

A related Japanese term is Fujoshi, used about female fans of manga comics and novels that feature romantic relationships between men. Currenltly the most popular form for creative girlfag crossdreaming is found in yaoi comics, made by girlfags for girlfags.

Guydyke

Wide term encompassing both male to female crossdreamers and non-transgender men who feel an affinity for lesbian women.

Crossdreaming guydykes dream about being a lesbian woman.

Gynephilic and Androphilic

Crossdreamers dream about being the opposite sex. Some of them identify with their birth sex, while others (and especially transsexual crossdreamers)  identify with their target sex. Because of this the traditional terms for sexual orientation, homosexual or heterosexual,  are confusing. What do you mean when you say "heterosexual"? Are you referring to the birth sex or the target sex?

To avoid this confusion it helps to describe people who are predominantly attracted to men "androphilic" (meaning "loving men"), and those attracted to women "gynephilic" (meaning "loving women"). Bisexuals are bisexuals regardless of point of view.

Hypercorrection

Male to female crossdreamers may engage in hypercorrection, i.e. attempts at killing off their crossdreamer feelings by engaging in stereotypical manly activities.
Ernest Hemingway succeeded
in presenting himself as the
tough macho man, while
secretly writing about
crossdreaming.

Kristin Beck, born Chris, fought as a SEAL in Afghanistan, believing such hypermasculine activities would help her cope as a man. I would guess that Ernest Hemingway cultivated his macho man image, partly to handle his crossdreamer side.

Hypercorrection never works.

Hypercorrection seems to be less common among female to male crossdreamers, possible because women are given more leeway to use masculine clothing and gender expressions.

Ideofluster*

A crossdreamer gets ideoflustered when the words used to describe him or her cease to make sense. This can cause much confusion and uncertainty, and may lead to an identity crisis.

A typical example of ideofluster is found when some crossdreamers try to define themselves as men or women. Does the word refer to their bodies, their sense of self, their intellectual understanding of themselves, their gender typical interests, their temperament, how others see them or what?

Comments made by crossdreamers may also cause ideofluster in others. Dr. Ray Blanchard, the man who developed the infamous  "autogynephilia" theory, is know to have been extremely frustrated when some male to female crossdreamers told him they were attracted to women as men, but to men as women. Blanchard solved the problem by referring to their genitalia. Unfortunately, that did not resolve the issue for the crossdreamers.

Inner Woman/Inner Man

Inner Woman or Inner Man are shorthand for whatever it is that causes the need to crossdream or crossdress. A male to female crossdreamer does not have to identify with the opposite sex to have "an inner woman".

For the gender dysphoric crossdreamers this inner persona (often expressed as a ponyo) may be a better representation of their psyche as a whole than the face they normally show the world.

Madfear*

Photo: Stockbyte
Madfear is the feeling the crossdreamer experience when they face a flash flood -- i.e.  when a crossdreamer surge becomes too intense. This normally happens after the crossdreamer is starting to explore this side of his or her psyche consciously. Basically the crossdreamer is overwhelmed with suppressed psychic content and believes that he or she is going insane.

This panic normally subsides as the crossdreamer finds a way of conceptualizing these feelings. Crossbonding with other crossdreamers also helps.

Male lesbian

Some crossdreamers identify as male lesbians. There is no clear definition of the term. Dr. Gilmartin's love shy male lesbian's are apparently not crossdreaming. Guydykes may be understood as male lesbians. Some of them are crossdreamers, while others are non-trans men attracted to lesbians.
British comedian Eddie Izzard identifies
as a male lesbian

To make this even more complicated: Many male to female crossdreamers are clearly attracted to women, but may also imagine themselves as a woman having sex with a man. They may be latent bisexuals, it could be that they want what in our cultures is considered the ultimate affirmation as a woman. It could also be that they are wired to be mostly submissive in bed. 

I suspect the whole hetero/gay dichotomy is far  too simplistic.

Misaffirmation*

Normalian crossdreamers  (i.e. crossdreamers who have managed to live up to the requirements of their birth sex publicly), often find themselves objects of misaffirmation.

Basically, they have succeed so well in their attempts to blend in, that they are praised and rewarded for being -- in the case of male to female crossdreamers -- male pillars of society, and in the case of the feamle bodies ones: feminine and demure or whatever it is women are supposed to be in their local community.

As any psychologist can tell you, a sound and stable soul is built on affirmation from other people, and in the case of crossdreamers who are anchored firmly in the identity of their birth sex, this type of affirmation may work as intended. For those whose inner identity is not aligned with their birth sex, however, this affirmation only make their misalignment more visible to themselves and therefore harder to bear.


To be continued...

A Creative Crossdreamer Vocabulary N - R

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Here is the third part of my Crossdreamer Dictionary. You can read the first entries here!
Many crossdreamers are torn between the male and the female.
Photo: Vasiliy Yakobchuk


Are there any crossdreamer phenomena, feelings or ideas you think should be included? Please add them in  a comment!

I know, for instance, that some of you think my selection slants too much to the gender dysphoric side. That should not come as a surprise, given that I am using my own life experience when writing.  It would therefore  be particularly useful with input from non-dysphoric crossdressers.

It does not matter if the capital letter of your entry has been covered. I will make a follow up post. Moreover, I will add them all to the following ebook.

Negation

One efficient way of disciplining
crossdreamers is to invalidate
their sense of identity. Illustration: Elenarts
Many people seek comfort in strict  stereotypes, and they do their best to police others who do not share their prejudices.

A very efficient way of forcing others to adhere to whatever is considered "self-evident" in a society is to negate or invalidate the lives of those who fall outside these norms.These tactics are used against women, people from other cultures and different races, the disabled, homosexuals and  transgender.

As Julia Serano has pointed out in her book Excluded, there are many ways of invalidating people,  transgender and crossdreames included:
  • Claiming that you are mentally ill or incompetent.
  • Sexualizing. People of color are for instance often depicted as being exotic, promiscuous or sexually predatory.
  • Accusing you of being immoral, like in "homosexuals are out to deceive straight people".
  • Claiming that you are sick or contagious (Like in: "One drop of Jewish blood is enough to make you a dirty Jew!").
  • Arguing that some type of body or behavior is anomalous or even "unnatural". (Homosexuality is for instance often considered "unnatural", even if same-sex relationships are common in nature). 
  • You are accused of being inauthentic or fake (like in "You are not a woman. You are just a male rapist  in an ugly dress!")
  • Claiming that you and those who like you are suffering from a fetish (like in: "He does not really love you; he just has a fetish for fat people".)
Negation causes a tremendous amount of suffering among crossdreamers, as it makes it extremely hard for many of them to integrate this side of themselves into their sense of self.
Pretending (photo: Cameron Whitman)

Normailien*

Many crossdreamers become normaliens (or norm-aliens) when they try to adapt to the gender identity and the gender roles their friends, families and colleagues expect of them. This especially applies to crossdreamers of the introvert and sensitive personality types.

To all the people around them they appear to be "normal" (although somewhat socially awkward) men and women. On the inside, however, they are nothing like it. Many normaliens are splitters, i.e. they compartmentalize their mind into separate male and female parts.

Packing

Female to male crossdreamers may explore their male sexuality by wearing a strap-on dildo when going out.

Male to female crossdreamers may "pack" as well, normally wearing female underwear. The term originated in the lesbian subculture.


Pegging

A sexual technique where a woman uses a strap-on dildo to penetrate a man anally. This is more or less the same set-up as the one used by "top" butch lesbians on femme "bottoms" (to the extent the butch/femme distinction makes any sense to them at all). Couples with male to female crossdreamers may make use of pegging as a way of accommodating  the crossdreamer's wish to be the bottom.

Some more dominant female to male crossdreamers have been know to prefer this approach as well, one of them immortalized in episode 6 of season 2 of Weeds, where Andy Botwin is taken from behind by the female Dean of Admission at a rabbinical school.

This clip is not office friendly!


Play

Like all other human beings crossdreamers may engage in play, when allowed to. This may be everything from creating a room for exploring your other side in a safe setting (like in clubs and organizations for male to female crossdressers), in bed with someone you love and who accepts you back, or in public if you have dared to venture out of the closet.
F. Scott Fitzgerald in 1916, The left photo, from a
musical performance,  was published in the New York
Times (Vintage Everyday)

Male to female and female to male crossdreamers may also make use of cabarets, carnivals, cosplay-conventions and similar venues to express themselves.

Some argue that the fact that crossdreamers play proves that this is nothing but a "performance". For some this may be the case. For other crossdreamers this is a way of expressing the other side of their soul.

Ponyo* 

Many crossdreamers personify their inner man or inner woman in order to explore this side of their psyche. Typically male to female crossdreamers will find a female name and a female avatar to use in online forums or in virtual online worlds. Female to male crossdreamers may also present using male names and other symbols of masculinity.

The ponyo is often given the personality traits and urges that seem incompatible with the social role of the crossdreamer's birth sex.

Another term for ponyo is "mirror sister" (or "mirror brother").

Purges

For some crossdreamers a surge may be followed by a purge. This is often some kind of ritual cleansing, whereby the crossdreamer swears  to never give in to crossdreaming fantasies ever again.

The wives of male to female crossdreamers have been known to salvage their husband's female wardrobe after such a purge. Creative crossdreamers may delete their collection of crossdreamer erotica or close down their TG caption blog.

Purges are nearly always followed by new surges and the circle is repeated. Needless to say, if you had taken away the shame and the guilt and accept the crossdreamer for who she or he is, all this nonsense could have been avoided.

Rage Against the Machine

Crossdreamers are often denigrated, harassed and invalidated. Young male to female crossdreamers are called sissies, "girls!" (as if that was a bad thing), perverts and losers. Female to male crossdreamers may be forced to wear pink dresses and to avoid rough and tumble play. Not only are they told not be themselves; they are told that their own personality and their own dreams and desires are not real, but abnormal aberrations.
Bullying ruins the lives of many young crossdreamers.
Photo: Mikael Damkier

The normal and healthy human reaction to such abuse is anger. Rage is a tool given us to by nature to protect the very core of our being. Crossdreamers are most often denied this outlet, however, which is why many of them turn their rage against themselves. They start burning up from the inside.

If these crossdreamers are lucky, there comes a point where they start searching for answers, and if they starts searching for answers they will find others struggling like themselves. In the end they may come to understand that they are not freaks, but wonderful incarnations of the creativity of life.

I found this one over at the Misfit Boy blog.
MTF crossdreamers may interpret this
as some kind of dream scenario. It is, in
fact, the exact opposite: This is a trans boy
facing the expectations of a mother
wanting to help her daughter.
At that point their rage may become rage against the social and cultural machine that tried to kill their true selves in the first place. It becomes a rage against those who betrayed them: parents, "friends", teachers, bigoted health "professionals", priests and politicians. Some may be consumed by this anger. It destroys them. For others it becomes a vehicle for liberation.

Real life fantasies

Many crossdreamers report of real life fantasies from early childhood onward. These are elaborate fantasies or day dreams where they explore an alternative life being the opposite sex.

Such real life fantasies are also found in transgender fiction. In spite of what some seem to believe the majority of  transgender short stories are not primarily erotic in nature.

To be continued....

Trans woman speaks out about crossdreaming and transitioning

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There is a very interesting post over at the reddit Crossdreamer subedit written by transtwin about crossdreaming and the question of transitioning.
Gender questioning (photo: Vladimir Nikulin)

It is interesting because transtwin is a transsexual woman, and we do not often hear from crossdreamers after they have transitioned. (They are, for obvious reasons, moving on with their lives.)

Secondly it is helpful because she presents a very balanced and pragmatic approach to the decision gender dysphoric crossdreamers have to make.

She writes:

"Whether you like it or not, you have a type of sexuality that requires you to look carefully at yourself and take an account of your life and your future in a way that others don't have to. Here is what you need to ask yourself:

  • How do these feelings impact me on a daily basis, how have these feelings evolved over time? How do I anticipate these feeling impacting my ability to do my job, function as a member of society, and fulfill my potential? What do I see in my future in regards to these feelings?
  • How do these feelings impact my relationships with others? Do I feel that I am hiding a part of myself I wish I wasn't? In sexual relationships, do I feel like I am satisfied with who I get to be? Does my sexuality mesh/match well with my partner, really?
  • Will I grow older and always wonder 'what if?'
  • What are my reasons for hiding this side of myself from others? Do I find myself modifying my truths and doing my best to be what others want me to be instead of what I want to be myself?"
She does not say that dysphoric crossdreamers ought to transition. She does not say that transitioning is wrong. Instead she underlines the need for a process where you try to understand what all of this is and what it means for you:


"If all you ever do is all you ever did, don't ever expect any real answers. /u/wxhluyp, jack molay or anyone else will not reveal to you an answer about what is right for you or your future, only you can do that, and you can only do that through real action and honest exploration.

For some, it will lead to full transition, for others it won't at all. The real truth is that it doesn't matter, if you allow yourself the opportunity to explore yourself in the ways you have always wanted to, you will resolve the what ifs, and this will make all the difference. I promise."

Amen to that, sister!







Truscum and the Transgender War of Words

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While "classic" male to female transsexual women reject the word "transgender", the female to male transsexual separatists are claiming ownership. What is a crossdreamer to do?
Separatism divides and weakens us (photo: Ken Lloyd)


There are many wars on terminology going on in the spheres of gender and sexuality. The common denominator seems to be a need to uphold some kind of cultural and natural purity.

Accusations about appropriation and mislabeling are launched with varying precision, in gay as well as trans communities.

In the case of the transsexual separatists, this is a fight to end all doubts about them being real women or real men, as any association with crossdreamers and crossdressers is seen as a threat to their legitimacy.

The narrative of the classic transexual

The male to female transsexual separatists  argue that real  transsexual women suffer from a medical condition, and that they have nothing in common with crossdreamers, crossdressers, drag queens,  and gender queer, who  -- according to them -- are not suffering from such a medical condition.

Since they mistakenly believe the word "transgender" was coined by the infamous male to female crossdresser Virginia Prince(it wasn't!), they become insulted if you try to include them under this umbrella term for gender variant people.

According to them they have never been part of the Transgender Continent. Calling them "separatist" is therefore also insulting. They live on an island of their own.

The bizarre reversal of the female to male separatists

In my recent ventures into the female to male side of the Trans Continent, I have found the brother tribe of the MTF classical transsexual.  On tumblr, which has become an important arena for trans debate, they are know as "truscum".

(No, I have not been able to find the origin of the term truscum, although it seems clear that it was originally meant as a slur against the separatists.)

The truscum argue that transsexuality is a medical condition and that transsexuality is defined by the symptom of physical sex dysphoria (i.e. severe suffering from a misalignment between sex identity and body). They accuse non-transsexual people of "transtrending", i.e. appropriating real transsexual identities.

But here's the kicker: The FTM truscum trans men call themselves transgender! 


Not only do they embrace the term; they are actually trying to achieve a monopoly on using it. According to them only dysphoric transsexual people should be allowed to use the word  "trans", as well.

Imagine my surprise when I met  female to male trans teenagers on tumblr who explained to me that I am not allowed to call myself transgender, since I clearly am a crossdresser and not dysphoric. The fact that I am dysphoric and not a crossdresser, made no impression. I had been caught defending crossdreamers and girlfags. That was enough.

Transgender double bind

I am now finding myself in the bizarre position of having female to male transsexuals telling me that I cannot "appropriate" the term transgender, because I am a creepy male crossdresser.

At the same time there are female to male transsexuals who tell me that I am not to call them transgender, as this is offensive, again because I am a crossdresser.

On the word transgender

I am not going to repeat the debate with the male to female transsexual separatists here. You can read about how the crossdresser activist Virginia Prince helped generate the split here, and about the more extremist male to female separatists here.

This time I would like to focus on the truscum, and one thing is clear: The new generation of separatist trans men  have no right to claim exclusive ownership of the words trans or transgender. Both words have been commonly understood as all-embracing terms for gender variant people for several decades.

Cristan Williams has written a thorough historical review of the use of the transgender concept. She has found that the term was indeed used as a synonym for what we today would call transsexual in the early 1970s. Gradually however, the term transgender became the preferred  umbrella term for all gender variant people. In the 1990s this had become common usage.

In 1992, for instance,  the International Transgender Law Conference (ICLEPT) defined “transgender’ in the following way:

"Transgendered persons include transsexuals, transgenderists [a term referring to trans people living as their target sex, but choosing not to undergo genital surgery], and other crossdressers of both sexes, transitioning in either direction (male to female or female to male), of any sexual orientation, and of all races, creeds, religions, ages and degrees of physical impediment."

As regards the word "trans", Williams makes the following observation:

"The trans community had been using 'trans' as a simple umbrella term since the mid 1970s. Whether it called itself the 'gender community,' the 'TV/TS community,' the 'paraculture' or the 'transgender community' the intent has always been the same: the recognition of the various types of trans groups who share some common issues and who could work together for common cause. Examples of efforts to cultivate unity (not uniformity) abound throughout the 70s, 80s and 90s from practically all aspects of the trans community."

In other words: the truscum are free to embrace the words "transgender" and "trans", but they have no right to deny other gender variant people the right to use them.

The solution

There is a simple solution to all of this.

Keep the transgender term for all gender variant people, and use the word transsexual for those who identify  with their target sex, who suffer from gender dysphoria and who have transitioned or would like to transition.

Believe me, non-dysphoric crossdressers and crossdreamers are not going  to "appropriate" the term transsexual.

Clarification

I actually think the "classical" trans women and the truscum trans men are right about there being a biological component to the complex set of variables that make people dysphoric. I have no problem with that. In my view trans men and trans women are really the men and women they claim to be, no "buts" and no small print footnotes involved.

Nor do I think of transsexual people who  identify completely with their target sex as "traitors identifying with the binary". The poles of masculine and feminine are real to me. (But then again, so are the areas in between.)

Still, I do find the simplistic way separatist draw up borders between their condition and the gender variance of others to be misleading, to say the least.

In their search for gender purity the separatists have unfortunately ended up invalidating other transgender people who at heart are as transsexual as they are. Moreover, some of them have even ended up mislabeling other transgender people as perverts. That is unacceptable.

About crossdreamers and girlfags/guydykes

If you have never heard the word "crossdreamer" before: 

This is a term that refers to transgender people who get aroused by the idea of being their target sex. This is not a new tribe, it is not a separate syndrome, and it is not a pathological condition. It is simply a term used to describe  natural sexual fantasies of many transgender persons, transsexual or not transsexual.

For pre-op trans women and men it is very hard to have sexual fantasies without imagining yourself having the body of your target sex. For gender queer people, who may oscillate between male and female, imagining yourself as the other (or neither) sex is just another way of exploring your sexuality.

In other words: For me crossdreaming is only one of many ways a transgender personality can express itself. The only reason we need a separate term for this phenomenon, is that crossdreaming so often is used to invalidate the identities of transgender people, transsexual men and women included.

The terms girlfag and guydyke overlap with the terms female to male and male to female crossdreamers, but are not synonymous. Most girlfags feel a strong affinity for the feminine side of gay male culture, mainly because it presents a scenario where they may explore fantasies of being the male partner in a male same-sex relationship. Many, but not all, girlfags are  transgender, with a strong masculine identity. In many ways these girlfags are similar to lesbian butches, the main difference being the fact that they are attracted to feminine men instead of "femme" women. Some girlfags (also called transfags) are transsexual.

Further reading:

The "Real" Truscum (blog set up by an opponent of the truscum, documenting truscum posts and arguments)

Susan Schmitt: Checking Our Privilege, Working Together: Notes on Virtual Trans* Communities, Truscum Blogs, and the Politics of Transgender Health Care (Great post. Read it!)

Rant Against the Underminers (pro-truscum blog)

Hate Within The Community, Trans* vs Transsexual, and Truscum (videoblogpost by xymrn, FTM trans man)

Tracking Transgender: The Historical Truth (Cristan William's historical review of the use of the term)

On Crossdreamers.com:

From "transgenderist" to "transgender" - on Virginia Prince and crossdresser separatism

"You are not one of us!" said the separatist transsexual

On the Harry Benjamin Syndrome male to female transsexual separatist tribe.

The Yaoi Culture and the Female to Male Crossdreamers


This post has also been published over at tumblr.

What does transgender really mean? On Wikipedia's misleading article.

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The recent discussion on what a girlfag is or isn't has made me realize that there is a lot of confusion about the meaning of the word "transgender", and the main reason for this uncertainty is found in the current version of the relevant Wikipedia article.
Wikipedia is trying to amputate the transgender rainbow.
(Photo:  PinkSherbetPhotography)

The Wikipedia definition

The article starts out with the following sentence:

"Transgender is the state of one's gender identity (self-identification as woman, man, neither or both) not matching one's assigned sex."

No wonder many of my crossdreamer and girlfag/guydyke friends do not want to call themselves transgender! If they feel at home in their own bodies and/or identify with their birth sex this definition will not describe their sense of self.

This definition reflects, however, in no way the common usage of the term "transgender". You can find traces of this fact in the rest of the Wikipedia text.

The article states, for instance:

"While people self-identify as transgender, the transgender identity umbrella includes sometimes-overlapping categories. These include transsexual; transvestite or cross-dresser; genderqueer; androgyne; and bigender."

The inclusion of crossdressers alone is enough to undermine the first definition given above, given that many crossdressers identify with their birth sex.

So what does transgender really mean?


Julia Serano on transgender

In her book Whipping Girl, trans activist Julia Serano listss transsexuals, crossdressers, genderqueers, drag artists under the term. (p. 2) Her discussion is well worth reading:
Julia Serano

"While the word originally had a more narrow definition, since the 1990s it has been used primarily as an umbrella term to describe those who defy societal expectations and assumptions regarding femaleness and maleness; this includes people who are transsexual (those who live as members of the sex other than the one they were assigned at birth), intersex (those who are born with a reproductive or sexual anatomy that does not fit the typical definitions of female or male), and genderqueer (those whose identity outside of the male/female binary), as well as those whose gender expression differs from their anatomical or perceived sex (including crossdressers, drag performers, masculine women, feminine men, and so on)." (p. 25)

Julia Serano adds that she sometimes also use the synonymous term "gender-variant":

"...to describe all people who are considered by others to deviate from societal norms of femaleness and maleness."

Julia Serano does not hide the fact that the term transgender may be problematic, and that some of those included under the umbrella may distance themselves from it (this particularly applies to intersex people), but this is how she understands its common usage.

And yes, she knows the transgender movement quite well.

Susan Stryker and Transgender History

Professor Susan Stryker discusses the term thoroughly in her book Transgender History, which covers the historical development of the transgender movement. Her description of the term does in no way limit it to people who feel that their gender identity does not match their assigned sex:
Susan Stryker

"Because 'transgender' is a word that has come into widespread use only in the past couple of decades, its meanings are still under construction. I use it this book to refer to people who move away from the gender they were assigned at birth, people who cross over (trans-) the boundaries constructed by their culture to define and contain that gender. 

Some people move away from their birth-assigned gender because they feel strongly that they properly belong to another gender in which it would be better for them to live; others want to strike out towards some new location, some space not yet clearly defined or concretely occupied; still others simply feel the need to get away from the conventional expectations bound up with the gender that was initially put upon the. 

In any case, it is the movement across a socially imposed boundary away from an unchosen starting place -- rather than any particular destination or mode of transition -- that best characterizes the concept of 'transgender' that I want to develop here." (loc 50, her emphasis)

Cristan William's historical research

Transactivist Cristan Williams has done an enormous job tracking down the various usages of the term "transgender" throughout history.

Her own definition is the following:

"Anyone whose physical makeup, emotional, sexual and/or self-expression is in conflict with current cultural gender stereotypes."

Williams has documented that "transgender" was used as an umbrella term as early as in 1974, and that this became common usage during the 1990s.

Official definitions

The World Professional Association for Transgender Health, WPATH, often uses the phrase "transsexual, transgender and gender nonconforming people" when presenting their area of responsibility. The definition given of transgender in their Standards of Care is taken from Bockting 1999:

"Adjective to describe a diverse group of individuals who cross or transcend culturally defined categories of gender. The gender identity of transgender people differs to varying degrees from the sex they were assigned at birth"

I guess some would argue that this definition requires some kind of alternative gender identity, but I am not convinced. In any case this association, who has the word "transgender" in its name, also covers other "nonconforming" people.

Here is the American Medical Student Association:

“Transgender” is an umbrella term used by people in a number of different groups, including but not limited to cross-dressers (those who wear clothing of the other sex some of the time) to genderqueer people (those who feel that they belong to either both genders or neither gender) and transsexuals (an older term for people who take hormones and have sex-reassignment surgery (SRS) in order to transition to a different sex."

See also  the US National Center for Trangender Equality, which explicitly includes crossdressers and gender nonconforming people.

On my side of the Atlantic, the UK National Health Service (NHS) gives the following definition:

"Trans and transgender are terms that are used to describe people who don’t conform to the traditional division of male and female.

Trans embraces many different types of people and lifestyles, including:

  • People who cross-dress (transvestite people). These people sometimes wear the clothing of the opposite sex, but don't want to live full-time as a member of the opposite sex.
  • People who feel that they're both male and female, or neither male nor female.
  • Drag queens, drag kings and other people who don’t appear conventionally masculine or feminine.
  • Transsexual people. These are people who have a strong and constant desire to live and be accepted as a member of the opposite sex. Many transsexual people have gender reassignment treatment to make their appearance more consistent with their preferred gender. This often involves hormone therapy and surgery."

When Genny Beemyn and Sue Rankin refers to transgender people in their survey of American transgender, they include transsexuals, crossdressers, drag king and drag queens, genderqueers, bigenders and androgynes.

Dictionaries

What about the major dictionaries?

Merriam-Webster can be interpreted both ways, as it defines transgender as

"of, relating to, or being a person (as a transsexual or transvestite) who identifies with or expresses a gender identity that differs from the one which corresponds to the person's sex at birth."

But since it includes transvestites,and argues that it is enough to express (as opposed to "identify with") a different gender identity, it cannot be used to exclude non-transsexual gender variant people.

Oxford is equally inclusive:

"denoting or relating to a person whose self-identity does not conform unambiguously to conventional notions of male or female gender."

Conclusion

The most common usage of the term "transgender" today is as an umbrella term that includes a wide variety of gender variant people. The term does not require that you identify with another sex or gender than the one you were assigned at birth.

As the Wikipedia article now stands, it defines "transgender" in a way that makes people believe it means the same as transsexual. Maybe this is why some of the separatist female to male "truscum" trans men I wrote about in my previous post, believe the term transgender is theirs and theirs alone. That is unfortunate.

Let is see if we can do something about that Wikipedia article.

References

"Standards of Care for the Health of Transsexual, Transgender, and Gender-Nonconforming People, Version 7", International Journal of Transgenderism, 13:165–232, 2011

Susan Stryker: Transgender History, Seal Press 2008

Julia Serano: Whipping Girl: A Transsexual Woman on Sexism and the Scapegoating of Femininity, Seal Press 2007

Genny Beemyn  and Susan Rankin: The Lives of Transgender People, Columbia University Press, 2011

A Creative Crossdreamer Vocabulary S

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Here is the fourth part of my Crossdreamer Dictionary. You can read the first entries here!

Are there any crossdreamer phenomena, feelings or ideas you think is missing? Please add them as a comment!

And again: I am not suggesting that we are going to make use of all these words in our everyday conversations. Many of them are only meant to function as triggers for self-discovery.
Jupiterimages

Separatist

Separatists are transgender people who for some reason do not like to be associated with other transgender people, often -- but not always -- out of fear of contamination and negation.

I have identified at least four such tribes on the male to female side:

1. There are some organized male to female crossdressers, who insist that they are straight men with a feminine side only, and who would rather not see homosexual men or transsexual women at their meetings.
The operative phrase here is "We are heterosexual men".

2. Some crossdreamers believe their cross-gender erotic fantasies are purely fetishistic, and that they therefore have nothing in common with transsexual people. Alternatively: They believe all trans people are fetishists, and fetishists only.
The operative phrase here is "We are normal men/women with a sexual kink".

3. Then there are the "Classical Transsexuals" (CT) who argue that they have nothing in common with "fetishistic crossdressers" and "gay effeminate men".
The operative phrase here is "We are women, and they are not".

3. The Harry Benjamin Syndrome crowd (HBS) preaches an extremist version of the CT gospel, where even feminine looks and mannerisms are inborn.
The operative term here is "We are ladies, and they are perverted men".

4. The transkids have adopted Blanchard's and Bailey's theory using it to establish a difference between androphilic (man-loving) transwomen on the one side and gynephilic masculine "autogynephiliacs" on the other.
The operative phrase here is "We are naturally feminine, and they are not."

On the female to male side we find a tribe of trans men over at tumblr called truscum. Some of them make arguments similar to the ones of the classic transsexuals. Moreover, some lesbians may view female to male androphilic trans men with suspicion. Others, though, cannot seem to get enough of them. Recent developments on tumblr also indicate that some transgender people and feminists have not really grasped what a girlfag is. 

If you instead focus on the diversity of both humanity in general and gender variant people in particular, these distinctions  become less relevant. The fact that you will find crossdreaming in all these groups tell me that they have something in common. But the fact that they have something in common does not mean that a transsexual woman is the same as crossdresser who identifies as a man  or a lesbian who makes use of masculine expressions. This is basic set theory, really. A Norwegian is not the same as a German, even if they are both European.

Soaring*

A soarer  is a crossdreamer who is overwhelmed by beauty. Male to female crossdreamers may feel something akin to a mystical religious experience when watching a beautiful woman. Many male to female crossdreamers may be caught up in stereotypical feminine clothing, hair and make-up, but this is not always the case. This ecstatic experience may be followed by crossgrief.
Both MTF and FTM crossdreamers
are attracted to feminine aesthetics.

Some would probably expect that the female to male crossdreamers would feel soaring from watching stereotypical male attributes, i.e. an Arnold Schwarzenegger type brute of a Neanderthal. The fact is, however, that FTM crossdreamers, like the MTF ones, often (but not always!)  find feminine features much more pleasing to the eye. They are attracted to feminine looking men. All of this makes much more sense if you think about the teenage girls' love for Justin Bieber.

Soaring has been used as a tool for enlightenment in some philosophical and religious traditions, including Platonism. InThe SymposiumPlato lets Socrates argue that contemplation of the feminine beauty of young men and boys is the first step towards grasping the very Idea of Beauty in its ideal form. In Medieval Europe this was turned into a mystical meditation on the beauty of the feminine, and its ability to lead men towards the goal of unity with God (cp. the troubadours and the role of Beatrice in Dante'sDivine Comedy).

Sissyfication


Some male to female crossdreamers
explore sexist stereotypes in their
crossdreaming, being sissified
into a French Maid being one
such theme. (Photo: Hemera)
Even if crossdreaming in itself cannot be reduced to a fetish, crossdreamers -- like other people -- fetishize people, objects and clothing.

Some male to female and female to male crossdreamers fantasize about feminizing men and turning them into the stereotype sissy or bimbo, sexy but dumb. In some male to female erotica the man is turned into a sissy (by crossdressing or bodily change). In the more hard core variants of  the yaoi erotic comics for female to male crossdreamers, the protagonist feminize men or boys by force.

I guess that this is an example of hypercorrection: Forbidden sides of the psyche becomes overcharged in sexual fantasies of some crossdreamers. They make use of extreme stereotypes of sex and gender.

For the male to female crossdreamer the element of forced feminization also relieves the dreamer of guilt (I was forced to do it!), while the female to male crossdreamer may revel in a kind of power of dominance she has been brought up to think of as unfeminine.

There is to my knowledge no parallel term for female bodied persons who get turned on by the gender expressions of our society's male stereotype: the strong, aggressive, testosterone-driven brute. There is no "brutification", for the simple reason that our sexist societies only men seem to be in full control of their own lives.  You cannot force someone into becoming strong.

This does not stop some lesbians and girlfags from making use of masculine clothing, symbols and expressions, however. Some are, for instance,  clearly fetishizing  heavy boots, crew cuts and leather jackets. And no: There is nothing wrong in that!

Spark*

From the Japanese comic Ranma 1/2
The first impression that made a crossdreamer realize that he or she was different. This is often a presentation of sex or gender change in the arts or the media.

One male to female crossdreamer told me, for instance, about the excitement he (or she, rather) felt when reading the Japanese comic Ranma 1/2 for the first time. Ranma is the story about a 16 year old boy who becomes a girl when splashed with cold water.

The first spark often happens at an early age, before puberty.

(Hat tip to Flexor)


Splitter*

Splitters try to suppress their "other side"
(Jupiterimages)
Splitters are crossdreamers who manage to split their minds in two, leaving one part for the inner sex and one for the outer.

Extreme splitters are not aware of the split, and believe themselves to be perfectly normal. This does not mean that they are not aware of their crossdreaming fantasies; they just fail to connect these fantasies to other aspects of their psyche.

Moderate splitters are aware of the split. If the moderate splitter is a crossmopolitan, this does not lead to any significant mental suffering. If he or she is dysphoric, however, the split may cause intense pain. The extreme splitter may try to explain away this suffering as the result of something else ("depression", "stress", "bad childhood").

Spotlit*

The feeling of spotlit equals gender anxiety or the intense fear of being "found out." This can lead to repression or overcompensation.

Hagia Sofia over at Crossdream Life puts it this way: "For me, it leads to social anxiety when I'm feeling dysphoric in public."

One example of usage would be: "I felt intensely spotlit and had to leave the party."


Straight Gay*

In one way it makes sense to think of the gynephilic (woman-loving) male to female crossdreamers and the androphilic (man-loving) female to male crossdreamers as straight gay people. They are straight in the sense that they are predominantly attracted to people of the opposite sex (relative to their birth sex). If you relate this attraction to their target sex, however, they are predominantly homosexual.

The similarities between "regular" gay people and such crossdreamers are also found elsewhere. Many of them struggle with shame, guilt and continuous harassment. Many of them live their life "in the closet". And both gay men, lesbians, FTM crossdreamers and MTF crossdreamers may engage in crossdressing.

Some  may try to get you to believe that a lesbian butch dressing up as a man and packing a fake penis is not getting aroused by what she is doing. She is therefore fundamentally different from a male to female crossdresser wearing panties. I am sure some of them do not get aroused by the idea of having a male body, but anyone having read butch erotica knows that many of them do.


In the comic and movie Tonari no 801(Yaoi) Chan,
the main character Yaoi-Chan has her
crossdreaming surges expressed by a green monster.

Surge*

Crossdreamers will often experience that their desire to be the opposite sex, or to express part of the nature of the opposite sex, will vary in strength over time (see crosswaves). During a surge these feelings become much more intense, and the need to express them in some form becomes intolerable.

Among ways of letting out steam we find crossdressing and creative crossdreaming. In Japanese female to male yaoi comics the surge has been depicted as "the green monster".

*An asterix indicates terms that have been coined by me.

To be continued...

Facebook Crossdreamer Page Gains 1000 Followers

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In October last year we put up a page for crossdreamers over at Facebook. Yesterday the page had aggregated 1000 "likes" or followers.

Given that Facebook frown upon anonymous accounts, and many would hesitate to sign up for such a page publicly, that is actually quite an achievement. In any case, this proves that there is an interest for this topic out there.

In comparison this blog has some 8000 unique visitors every month.  I am also glad to say that the Crossdream Life forum is alive and thriving.

You can visit the Crossdreamer Facebook page here! It contains short entries on online content that may be of interest to the readers of this blog.

For more links to sites relevant to crossdreamers, see the Crossdreaming Portal. 

(Thanks to Cheryl for promoting the Facebook page in such an efficient way!)

New web site on girlfags and guydykes (+ the story about the blind men and the elephant)

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Activists trying to describe the transgender continuum.

Ili has put up a new web site for and about girlfags and guydykes.

The site is bilingual: In German and English. It is currently under construction, so watch out for scaffolding and fresh paint!

The goal is to gather new and previously published material that may throw light upon the lives and feelings of girlfags and guydykes (gfgd).

gfgd and crossdreamers

The girlfag/guydyke concept overlaps with the crossdreamer term, in the sense that some (but not all ) girlfags and guydykes are crossdreamers. That is: They fantasize about being the other sex (relative to their birth sex) in a sexual or romantic relationship.

Female bodied girlfags may write and read stories about gay male relationship, identifying with one of the male partners while doing so. Male bodied guydykes will often dream about being a woman in a lesbian relationship.

Note, however, that at the core of the gfgd concept you find a strong affinity with gay or lesbian culture. This is not always the case for crossdreamers.

Moreover, I do not think I am far off the mark if I say that the gfgd term is also defined by the person's sexual orientation. A girlfag is mainly attracted to men. A guydyke is mainly attracted to women. You will, for instance,  find that many girlfags have a lot in common with lesbian butch women, the main difference being their sexual orientation.

The more I learn about crossdreaming, the clearer it becomes that crossdreaming is not restricted to "heterosexual" men and women who are mainly attracted to people of the opposite sex (relative to their birth sex). Both gay men and lesbian women may engage in crossdreaming.

The gfgd concept and the crossdreamer term also overlap in the sense that some girlfags and gudykes are gender dysphoric  (they suffer severely from a misalignment between an inner sex and their body). The same applies to some (but not all) crossdreamers.

It is all the overlaps that have made me interested and engaged in the girlfag and guydyke cause.

The blind men and the elephant

I think it is important to keep in mind that both the girlfag/guydyke concept and the crossdreamer concept are attempts at describing overlapping realities. We are looking at related phenomena from different angles.

There is no clearly defined group of people out there that can be called "crossdreamers" and who are completely distinct from all other people. This term, as well as the gfgd concept, are man made words we make use of in our attempts to understand ourselves and others.

The Indian story of the elephant and the blind men comes to mind.

One version of the story says that six blind men were asked to determine what an elephant looked like by feeling different parts of the elephant's body. The blind man who feels a leg says the elephant is like a pillar; the one who feels the tail says the elephant is like a rope; the one who feels the trunk says the elephant is like a tree branch; the one who feels the ear says the elephant is like a hand fan; the one who feels the belly says the elephant is like a wall; and the one who feels the tusk says the elephant is like a solid pipe.

They were all right in a way, but none of them were able to comprehend the totality of the elephant.

I have met quite a few transgender people,  crossdreamers and girlfags included, that become frustrated by all the terms that pop up in the sex and gender debate. They want something measurable, definitive and clear cut. They want something "scientific". What they really want is to cut of the elephant's leg and present it as a completely separate phenomenon:

"See! This is what I am!  I am a crossdresser. I can be defined as 'something pillar like'. I have nothing in common with the 'rope people' over there!"

This need becomes especially urgent if they associate the "rope people" with something negative: "At least I am not homosexual!" As if being homosexual would be in any way more difficult than being a heterosexual crossdresser.

It is all such a waste of time and opportunities for learning.


The Rayka & Jack Dialogue on Crossdreaming 1

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Illustration  of Iranian woman, based on photo
by Harris Shiffman. This is not Rayka, but
she could have been.
Last year I had a very interesting email conversation with Rayka, a young Iranian girlfag and female to male crossdreamer.

She is inquisitive, she is intelligent, she asks hard questions and makes very helpful observations.

Because of my discussions with her I have expanded my own understanding of crossdreaming, crossdressing and  transgender issues. Most of all she has helped me map the similarities and differences between female bodied and male bodied crossdreamers.

The following is an edit of that conversation. I publish it here with Rayka's permission.

(About words: A crossdreamer is someone who gets aroused by the idea of being or becoming the other sex. Personally I believe crossdreaming is a symptom of  some sort of broader gender variance. A girlfag is female bodied person with a strong affinity to gay male culture. Girlfags may imagine themselves being a gay man with a gay man, and many -- but not all -- of them are crossdreamers).

Am I transgender?

RAYKA
I can say I'm a FTM  [female to male] crossdreamer but don't know what it all means; does it mean that I'm a transgender? I just mark both options when they ask about gender in a formal paper, I just feel like it but It's so confusing.

It's like you try to keep a hidden identity for yourself but you attempt to give up in the routine of everyday life.

JACK
I consider us transgender, as in "gender variant". We are outliers on the gender spectrum.
Some crossdreamers are truly transsexual, (i.e. with the inborn sex identity of the opposite sex), while others are not, and I am afraid you are the only one who decide for yourself. That might take time.

I guess that one way of finding out who you really are is to see if you suffer from gender dysphoria (i.e. deep unhappiness with one's biological sex and gender role).

If you do not feel distress because of your fantasies and you feel at home in your female body, I would say you are not transsexual. If you feel a deep longing for the life of a man, and this longing causes distress and unhappiness, you might be.

It seems to me you are troubled by it all.

As for myself, I do experience gender dysphoria, but for various reasons transitioning is not on the table.

On gender dysphoria

RAYKA
I'm reading the references you provided. about the dysphoria. Well, I would do anything if I could just cut off these irrelevant mounds of flesh on my chest. I really cant connect to them, they're stupid! I bind them all the time but they are still there! 

You know the image I have of myself  is of a a man with a flat chest, guy's wear and  short hair (just like me!). That person looks like a sweet boy but I'm not sure what's his gender!


Gender roles and alienation

Female roles always have seemed awkward and unfair to me, and I try my best to avoid them. All this makes me a masculine girl in people's eyes -- a girl who wear boy's clothes and is somehow weird! 

My behavior is just neutral -- sometimes masculine, sometimes feminine -- but that strange feeling that always sticks with me is feeling completely out of place most of the times. 

I don't FEEL anything, Life is like a movie passing in front of my eyes. 

Friends say I'm too calm and emotionless, but I just feel numb and barren inside and try to keep myself from releasing something unknown. I don't know where these emotions come from...

If I only could do a top surgery and live in a society which allows me to wear what I want outside and be open about it, it would all get better. 

I still know I'm not a male. Actually it's a case of gender fluidity. Sometimes I feel I'm totally OK with myself; that I'm just a masculine girl (not even so masculine actually) but other times I can't stand myself. I feel I'm not completely girl or boy, and then -- sometimes -- I feel too masculine! So...I can't decide. I'm 50-50 or 60-40, I dunno, I just know I'm incomplete! I would be happy to know your experience. I don't I over-think it Jack? Well, I can't help it!

JACK
I do not think you over-think it at all. We face a lot of problems, but one of the major ones is that the languages we are using (being that Norwegian, Persian or English) are based on the strict gender binary, which makes it so hard to express what we are feeling.

When I read you mail, for instance, I see frustration on at least two levels. One is cultural, you want to behave in a masculine manner, when you feel for it.

The other could  be at least partly biological. You feel anger towards those irrelevant mounds of flesh. This is about the body.

Living in a feminine country

I feel much of the same frustration. As for expressing feminine traits in my local cultural setting: Well, in Norway that is not too hard for a man to do so, as long as you stick to a male dress code. That is: To a certain extent a male bodied person may express stereotypical "feminine" ideals, emotional traits or interests.

In one survey Norway was counted as the second most "feminine" country in the world (after Sweden) which means that macho behavior among men is frowned upon, while culturally more feminine traits like listening, conflict-solving and child care are encouraged.

On the other hand, women are encouraged to express typical male interests. The two largest right wing parties of Norway are now run by women [they are now PM and Minister of Finance respectively], while the major top positions in the business and labor organisations are controlled by women. This changes the rules of the game.

Women may also get away with "crossdressing"  -- that is: using masculine style clothing -- although feminine attire is increasingly encouraged. It is as if the closer men and women get as regards political and social power, the stronger is the need to differentiate along other lines, in this case clothing.

As for the body frustration (or sex dysphoria), mine is the exact opposite of yours. I find my flat and hairy chest alien and ugly. I find men's pride in their manly bits down there weird and unfamiliar.

The third level of confusion is found in the fact that not all of our feelings fit the expected behavior or feelings of one or the other gender. One day we may feel like a woman, another like a man. The fact is that many non-trans people oscillate between the two poles, but since "normal" people are pretty well anchored in one sex, they do not experience this as confusing. Since we are trying to bridge the unbridgeable, this becomes a problem for us.

You say: "My behavior is just neutral, sometimes masculine, sometimes feminine, but that strange feeling that always sticks with me is feeling completely out of place most of the times."

It is this feeling of alienation that tells me that this about much more than cultural gender roles.

I like to say that it feels like I am living the life of another person, a stranger I do not really know, and that is extremely hard. I fear that I will go to my grave not having been myself for one single day.

This is not a trivial matter. I wish I had a solution ready, but I do not. What I have found, though, is that discussing this with other crossdreamers online has helped me come to terms with some of it.

Do you have friends or family members you can talk to about this? Are there any open minded sexologists available in Iran?

Man and woman

RAYKA
Persian is great in this matter, there's no difference between genders in any part of my language, you never know the sex of a third person and I love that. But they do call me miss or lady and it surprises me at times! What do you feel about it? I use another name in internet and can't stand being called she or lady sometimes. Really, what should we be called?!

I was always unsatisfied but didn't notice it before. I have an old journal in which I wrote my thoughts some years ago. While reviewing it, I noticed a note in the last sheet: I had written that I'm not satisfied with my gender, I'm 50-50! It was so interesting, cause I didn't know for how long I've been through this. I just knew I wasn't content about it, but didn't think I could be anything other than female. 

Here in Iran you almost never see any sign of LGBT [lesbian. gay, bisexual, transgender] anywhere, so I didn't know anything about everything! Then I started to search in English, and found an article on Wikipedia about transsexuals. I just read that a female to male transgender may be gay, and it hit me...so hard. 

I was shocked and depressed for some days after it and then started to read and read and read about it. I realized after a while that I'm not a transsexual, but It was so hard... it is so hard, living like this.

You can't decide on what you are and people keep saying: be yourself and enjoy it, you don't need labels. You know it irritates me, dunno why!

I used to wear more make up and wear girls clothes before, now I even can't look at the women section in shops! I'm curious to know about the journey of other transgenders, how did you figured yourself out?

It's true that Norway is a better place when it comes to gender roles, but here in Iran if a woman wants to be successful no one can prevent her, so yes, I agree that it is not just the roles.

Therapy

Yo ask: Have you talked to sexologists or psychologists about it? Don't they have any solution?

I'm not hopeful to find an open minded enough one to talk to. I just once talked to a psychologist here in my [...] and she told me: Forget about it good girl, you just couldn't accept your role because you have lost your father when you were a child. She even told me why I wear make up! Well, I just love eyeliner, does that make me a cis-woman [non-transgender woman]?!

I guess that  if transgender want to prove themselves here, they need to be so masculine or feminine: the damn binary again! I have my sister and some good friends that understand it but I still feel I'm hidden and lost, and don't know if my dreams ever will come true. Should they become true or would hiding them be a better idea?

Finding love looks impossible to me. I can't stand the guys who approach me and see me as a girl, I just can't handle it. It's frustrating, watching every one falling in and out of love all the time and all you got is yaoi! [Japanese style comics made by women for women depicting gay male relationships] and it (male gay stuff) makes me sad and happy at the same time.

What do you think about the term genderqueer? It's more known than crossdreamer.

More about language

JACK
There are several variants of Norwegian, Danish and Swedish (which are, linguistically, one language). In most variants there are three genders: masculine, feminine and neuter. However, what is classified as masculine, feminine or neuter may differ from dialect to dialect. Danish and some Norwegian dialects do not have the feminine gender!

In some Norwegian dialects the word girl is feminine (jenta), in others it is masculine (jenten). Unfortunately, this does not make much of a difference as regards people's attitudes to gender roles. In other words: Language does shape our understanding of what it means to be male and female, but it is not determined by the grammatical gender of nouns.

The  idea of anyone addressing me as Ms. is incomprehensible to me. I have been forcefully socialized into the role of a man. Moreover, I look very much like a man. Still, my voice is not very masculine, and on the phone I am mistaken for a woman all the time. I can still remember the embarrassment of a Korean colleague, when he realized he was addressing me, and not the person he presumed was my female secretary. That was kind of fun ;)

More on therapy

It took me years to realize what was really bothering me. I went in therapy -- which helped me much, by the way -- but my main conclusion was that i had been suppressing my "inner man" and needed to express male anger. I needed to express anger, all right, but there wasn't much male about it.

I actually managed to split my thinking in two. I compartmentalized my crossdreaming from my quest for self understanding. And it wasn't until some six to seven years ago I decided that enough was enough. I had to face this dragon. That is the main reason I started the blog.

Don't make up your mind about anything yet! This is a tough journey, and there have been others before you who gradually have realized that they were transsexual after all. Others have found that they are not. I will never call me transsexual, because I am never going to transition, but I havemuch in common with them.

Lou Sullivan, the founder of the American FTM movement, was an man-loving crossdreamer like you.

Finding out

You write: " I'm curious to know about the journey of other transgenders, how did you figured yourself out?"

Unfortunately, I am not a crossdresser. I would feel ridiculous dressed up as a woman, as this body of mine would completely ruin the illusion. I envy my crossdresser sisters who manage to live with that illusion or who have the looks to get away with it. I am certain their crossdressing helps them stay balanced mentally.

For me it was the crossdreaming that gave the game away. It just got stronger and stronger the older I got.

Childhood

Still, I can remember childhood crossdreaming as well. While my comrades dreamed about being cowboys and tough soldiers, I wanted to be Supergirl, female but strong. I am not there yet :)

You write: "I just once talked to a psychologist here in my university and she told me: forget about it good girl, you just couldn't accept your role because you have lost your father when you were a child."

I have looked closely at theories like the one she presented, and have come to the conclusion that not all crossdreamers have lost their father/mother, had an absent/dominating/weak/aggressive father and/or mother. We can all make up narratives like this one. Besides, if one sibling becomes a crossdreamer under such conditions, why not all of them?

No, I believe there is a biological component to all of this. That does not mean that childhood experiences and the culture surrounding us do not contribute to how the crossdreaming plays out. Indeed, maybe the same biological basis may play out differently under different circumstances: Some become crossdreamers, others do not.

Finding love

You say that finding love looks impossible.

If you search for girlfags on my blog you will find stories about girfags hooking up with guydykes and who actually make it work. But we have not come to the point where it is possible for us to find each other. The gay and lesbian cultures have all these subtle symbols and signs and meeting places that make love easier.

We have tried to set up a meeting place over at Crossdream Life, which has become an important meeting place for crossdreamers, but it is not really working as a dating place. There are too few female to male crossdreamers taking part at the moment.

On the positive side: there is much more variation out there than we tend to believe, and also a lot of understanding. It is amazing to see to what length some girl friends of crossdreamers are willing to go to make things work.

You might find a guy who is neither gay nor a crossdreamer, but who nevertheless accepts you for who you are. The best way of finding such a man is to be who you are.

On genderqueer

As for the word "genderqueer":

What I have learned from many crossdreamers is that they really dream about crossing the line between the genders. They want to be the other sex. The term "genderqueer" is often used by those who feel that they can bridge the sexes. Some of the ones using it are also post-structuralists, following a philosophy that denies any biological core to transgender conditions. Some even argue you can choose your gender!  I am not so sure about that.

Julia Serano, the trans activist, says that she went through a genderqueer phase on her way to a female gender identity. But she now identifies as a woman. (See Whipping Girl: A Transsexual Woman on Sexism and the Scapegoating of Femininity)

On the other hand, there are also male to female crossdreamers who do want achieve a balance between the masculine and the feminine. Others again, are very careful to distinguish between their sex identity (which may be male), and their interests, temperament and gender expressions (which may be feminine).

I guess a am "gender queer", but "sex woman", if you see what I mean.

(To be continued)

On Crossdreaming and Addiction to Pornography

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In this guest blog post  fmitsui argues that since many crossdreamers find it hard to live out their sexuality in real life, they end up exploring it in fantasies and pornography instead. Ironically, fmitsui argues, this may lead to an addiction that stops them from establishing the real life relationships they are longing for.

Guest blog post by  fmitsui
Illustration by Tijana87/photos.com 


I think I have stumbled across something in my experience that could help a lot of people. I can't provide any novel insight into crossdreaming, but I have made some connections in evolving neuroscience and porn addiction that I think are making it harder for many of us.

First of let me say that that I don't believe porn causes crossdreaming, or that crossdreaming can be 'cured'. Nor is this is an apologetic for the 'separatist' viewpoint.

Test questions

That said, have you:
  1. Experienced an unexplainable gradual intensification or even evolution of crossdreaming in your life?
  2. Or are you experiencing other sexual or relationship issues that you may attribute to crossdreaming that did not always exist?
  3. Have you heavily used internet porn/erotic material through your adolescence and have significant relationship sexual issues today?
If any of these ring true and you are a regular user of porn or erotic TG material you need to read this.

Fantasy needed  

Crossdreamers must resort to fantasy to fulfill their sexuality. Many crossdreamers enjoy common pornography and erotic TG art and entertainment to explore crossdreaming. Captions, comics, youtube, stories ect.. and spend time daily doing so.

 Moreover, many crossdreamers combat the depression and anxiety of crossdreaming, and life in general, by immersion and escape in this material.

Many crossdreamers masterbate during crossdream fantasies as the only apparent way to satisfy the crossdream urge. This has been my personal story and experience moreover since my own crossdreaming is expressed through the vehicle of the male libido which is hungry and more vulnerable to addiction.

Porn addiction

All this seems perfectly harmless and healthy until you weigh it against the growing understanding that pornography addiction does exist and is caused by hypersexualizing our brains with endless variety, novelty, and excitement.

 Daily PMO (porn masterbation and orgasm) over erotic material tends to align the limbic system to the material and away from being moved by real relationships with human beings. No real relationship can compete with the flood of novelty and erotic excitement that the internet can now feed us like a firehouse, and this is true regardless of sexuality or orientation.

 Aligning our brains to erotic fantasy destroys our ability to maintain a real relationship and replaces it with pixels.

The result of porn addiction can be the inability to be simulated sexually except through fantasy, erectile dysfunction, growing severity of existing fetish, depression, the inability to focus, confusion over sexual orientation, degradation of willpower, and even the acquisition of new fetishes.

The plastic brain

An understanding of neuroplasticity and the specific plasticity of sexuality needs to be permitted into our lexicon and into our understanding of ourselves.

The evolving science behind this and what to do about it is articulated very well at this site: http://www.yourbrainonporn.com.

The changes to our brains by this process is real and physical, but can be reversed. If anyone reading this can relate to part of what is written here you should go to that site and read up on the science behind porn addiction and what you can do to recover your brain and make it more receptive to a real relationship--assuming that is what you want in your life.

I blamed my sexual problems on crossdreaming for years while I ignored my exploding porn addiction. What I am re-learning is that crossdreaming need not be incompatible with the relationships that I need and want in my life.

 I can't be the only person who's crossdreaming has become a major problem only through hypersexualizing my brain with PMO. I hope this finds it way to others and helps them.

This post was originally posted over at Crossdream Life. You will also find comments over there.

A Creative Crossdreamer Vocabulary, from "Top/Bottom" to "Twilighter"

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Here is the fifth part of my Crossdreamer Dictionary. You can read the first entries here!
I found this photo by nensuria over
at Photos.com. It was tagged "Concept
of Domination and Authority." The fact that the
tie is immediately associated with
 dominance, says a lot about how
many read the roles of
men and women.

You may consider each of these entries a mini blog-post in its own right, all covering topics that should be of interest to crossdreamers and other transgender people.

Are there any crossdreamer phenomena, feelings or ideas you think is missing? Please add them as a comment!

Top and Bottom

More than 70 million copies have been sold of the "mommy porn" novel Fifty Shades of Grey,  not only proving that a significant proportion of women  find the idea of bondage and BDSM tantalizing, but also that most people find this phenomenon completely undramatic.

Fifty Shades of Grey echoes the preconceptions that there are two kind of people in the world: "tops" and "bottoms, "dominants" and "submissives".

Men are supposed to be on top, while women are supposed to give themselves passively to the man. You will find such  hierarchies among gay men and lesbian, as well, and even there being the penetrator may sometimes seem to be "better" than being the "penetree". The reason for this is most likely that sexual dominance is mixed up with social dominance.

Caption made by FTM crossdreamer showing a
submissive uke and a dominant seme (Japanese
terms from the Yaoi comic genre).
To make this clear: There is no correlation between your social power and bedside preferences. Really! Nor is the "bottom" always passive and reactive in bed. And yes, there are female tops and male bottoms, and many seem to thrive in both roles.

Although there is a lot of variation, there is reason to believe that many male to female crossdreamers are -- in fact -- "bottoms". They want to be at the receiving end in bed, and the closer they are to the gender dysphoric end of the spectrum, the less pleasure they take in being "the man" in bed.

Historical picture of Japanese
femme and butch. From flickr.
This causes obviously a lot of frustration for the MTF (male to female) crossdreamers who are attracted to women, as most women expect them to be the proactive one.  There are practical solutions to this, pegging being one of them, but not all heterosexual women are comfortable with this kind of role play.

As for the female to male crossdreamers, it seems a majority of those at the gender dysphoric end of the spectrum dream about being the dominant seme in the gay male relationship, and not the more submissive uke. However, I do not have sufficient data to confirm this.

Transfan

A transfan is someone who is attracted to trans people. Some male to female crossdreamers are drawn to  trans women who for various reasons have kept their male genitalia, most likely because these women seem to be able to solve one of their major dilemmas: The conflict between loving women and wanting to be the receptive bottom in bed. They may think that a trans woman with a penis may be able to solve this problem.
Some feel an attraction to a
combination of masculine and
feminine traits.
Photo: John Sommer 

Indeed, this might work, but in most cases transsexual women would prefer to be the receptive party themselves. Moreover, many of them -- if not most -- are  alienated from their male sex organ, and this is not the kind of affirmation they are looking for. Because of this male transfans are often ridiculed, not only by society at large, but also by trans women.

Other men are drawn to other constellations of gender ambiguity, including "tomboys",  lesbian women or female to male crossdreamers. These types of attractions are not easily classified.

There are also a lot of  female bodied trans fans. Female to male crossdreamers are often attracted to feminine looking men, being those feminine gay men or male to female crossdreamers.

In the lesbian community you will also find many transfans, in the sense that they are fascinated by masculine butches or female to male transsexual men. There is also much lesbian erotica that explores gender ambiguity and male role playing, including the use of strap-on dildos and other masculine paraphernalia.

The thriving "shemale"or "t-girl" porn industry,  as well as the abundance of trans man erotica for lesbian women tell me that there are a lot of transfans around, and that many feel an ambiguity as regards male and female sexual expressions.

I suspect there is much more gender and sexual orientation ambiguity out there than most people would like to admit. Most of this ambiguity is denied, however, or repressed, as the strict taboos that exist against such violations of common norms  lead to severe punishment, ridicule and ostracism.

Transgender

Some crossdreamers insist that they are not transgender. This reluctance is most often caused by a misunderstanding: They believe "transgender" means the same as "transsexual". Indeed, the word is sometimes used in this way.

So to be clear: Transgender is an umbrella term that embraces all types of gender variance, including crossdressers, crossdreamers, drag queens, gender queer and transsexuals.

You may perfectly well identify with your birth sex and still be transgender. Nor does anyone force you to believe in a specific model explaining how you came to be transgender if you call yourself transgender. (And no, this is not a definition Jack Molay is trying to force upon trans people. This has been common usage of the term since the early 1990s).

By the way, the confusion caused by the term "transgender" has caused many to coin new terms, "trans*" (with an asterisk)  and "gender variant" being the most popular right now.

Transsexual

A transsexual is someone  who  wants to transition, intends to transition or have transitioned, in this way becoming his or her target sex not only mentally, but also physically. Nearly all transsexuals have suffered  severely from a mismatch between their bodies and their experienced sex, i.e. they have been (or are) gender dysphoric.

When transitioning transsexuals undergo some kind of  sex realignment (also called reassignment) therapy. This treatment can include hormone replacement therapy to modify secondary sex characteristics, sex realignment "bottom" surgery to alter primary sex characteristics, as well as facial feminization surgery and permanent hair removal for trans women. Trans men will often have chest surgery. Trans men may also undergo genital reconstruction.

Transsexual people who transition usually change their social gender roles, legal names and legal sex designation. Needless to say, all of this means that they have a need for health care and social assistance that go beyond the needs of non-transsexual transgender people.

Transsexual men and women are as diverse as other people when it comes to temperaments, abilities, interests, and gender expressions. Most of them  (although not all) have one thing in common, though: At the time they are transitioning most of them  are deeply anchored in one, fairly distinct, sex identity. A trans woman's sense of self is female. She is a woman.

In this transsexual men and women are different from many other transgender people, some of whom may be more "gender fluid": These transgender persons may identify with their birth sex while at the same time exploring personality traits and expressions normally associated with the other sex, they may  identify with both or neither of the traditional two genders or they may be in the process of exploring their own identity.

I seems to me that most transsexuals have been crossdreamers, in the sense that they have had sexual fantasies about having sex as their target sex. There is simply no other way for them to fantasize about having sex. But note that not all crossdreamers are gender dysphoric. Moreover, not all gender dysphoric crossdreamers transition.

Tucking and chest binding

Crossdreamers may try to hide or camouflage their male or female attributes to look more like their target sex. Male to female crossdressers may  tape their male genitalia to their body, so that it looks like they have a smooth triangle in  front. Some also "tuck" their testicles back up into their body cavity. Some use tight panties or "gaffs" to keep it all in place.
Breast binder from T-kingdom

Female to male crossdreamers (as well as many butch and gender dysphoric female bodied lesbians) may bind their chest using bandages or special garments to make their breasts less apparent.

It seems to me that these are all attempts at realigning the outer body with a conflicting inner body image.

Twilighter* 

The twilighter gets his or her name from the twilight zone in between the crossmopolitan and the dysphoric. He or she is in the problematic position of being both male and female in close to equal proportions.

In the modern cultural context there is no role for the two-spirited, and they may find it extremely hard to make peace with themselves and the people around them. That being said, the female to male crossdreamer will normally experience more leeway in respect to unorthodox gender expressions.

Not all twilighters are androgynous. Much of the confusion felt by many twilighters is probably caused by the fact that we often mix up variables like sex identity, sexual orientation, romantic orientation, gender expression, masculinity/femininity and gender roles. Somehow, people expect all of these traits to line up on a masculine or feminine axis, while in the real world, they often don't.

A male to female twilighter may, for instance, have a male sex identity, but hate "masculine" rough and tumble play and love to express himself in a feminine manner. Other male to female twilighters may have a predominantly female sex identity, but find it hard to recognize it, as they have interests and personality traits that are not considered traditionally feminine.

To be continued....

*an asterisk marks a term coined by me.

Man or woman or both? (The Rayka & Jack Dialogue 2)

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Last year I had a very interesting email conversation with Rayka, a young Iranian girlfag and female to male crossdreamer. This is part two of our edit of that conversation. Part 1 can be found here.

If anyone have doubted the existence of female to male crossdreamers, this conversations should end that misconception.
Adam Lambert, girlfag icon.

In this part we discuss to what extent childhood experiences and hormones may shape our crossdreaming, and how to find word that can be used to describe who we are.

(Apropos words: A crossdreamer is someone who gets excited by the idea of being or becoming the other sex. A girlfag is female bodied person with a strong affinity to gay male culture and who may imagine herself being a gay man with a gay man).

What causes crossdreaming: Childhood, hormones?

RAYKA
I just wanted to know more about the theories about social and psychological causes of crossdreaming. I heard that getting raped at childhood might cause this condition. Well I experienced this! They say for a female, being raped may cause her hate her femininity so she wants to be a boy cause it feels more secure and less vulnerable! 

And there's also my hormonal problem. My body produce more testosterone than normal and causes some problems. Once my mom told the doctor that I'm so boyish and she said many girls with this problem are like that. As I read, it's also so common among FTM [female to male] transsexuals! 

I wonder whether this problem makes me boyish or me being boyish causes this problem! Something else: I have a butch lesbian sister! So many variations in a family, aren't there? But I have read somewhere that it actually makes sense, like, it's something in the family's genes!

Childhood crossdreaming

Illustration  of Iranian woman, based on photo
by Harris Shiffman. This is not Rayka, but
she could have been.
Childhood crossdreaming huh? Reading the trans people stories, I always see that they knew it in their childhood, but,well,I wasn't aware of this until about about [a couple of] years ago.

But I remember that I always (and right now) imagined the life of a boy (which I then realized was me!). I have  liked feminine boys since an early age, but don't remember if it was before that abuse incident or not.

Sex identity versus gender identity

You write: "I guess I am 'gender queer', but 'sex woman', if you see what I mean."

Exactly the same here (a male sex but an androgynous one); that's why I said I'm not transsexual. But, you know, I actually would like to transition to some extent. I always dream about it: top surgery and a low dose of hormones that gives me a deeper voice!

What irritates me the most is the idea that maybe my identification is not true; I just can’t be sure about anything…

Hey, seriously, why are FTMs  so much less visible than MTFs [male to female crossdreamers]?!


More on what causes crossdreaming

JACK
 I am truly sorry to hear that you have been through such a horrible ordeal. I cannot even begin to imagine what that does to you.

There are many psychologists that point to childhood abuse when trying to explain this.

My problem with this kind of thinking is that you can explain anything with everything. I had a dominating and abusive mother who hated men; ergo I try to please her by trying to become like her? I have also seen MTF crossdreamers explain their conditions by arguing that their abusive fathers made them want to be a woman (in order to escape his harsh upbringing).  Some have even argued that the young boy feels sorry for his mother's lack of a penis, and rectifies this by becoming a woman with a penis!!!

I guess some of this could be true, and that explanations like these may make sense to some of those involved, but there is no way for us to control the facts. Besides, most kids do not become crossdreamers, in spite of them having a dysfunctional childhood. Moreover, the diversity of crossdreamer life stories leads me to believe the cause is found somewhere else, although your personal life story will color the way you experience and express your crossdreaming.

I have heard of both chromosomal and hormonal factors causing gender variance, but if this is the case in your life, I guess the hormones comes first, and the crossdreaming after. I have not heard of crossdreaming causing hormonal disturbances. I did have my testosterone levels checked and they were a bit on the low side, but to be honest with you, I do not think this explains anything. There are too many MTF crossdreamers with normal hormone levels.

You have read my post on Jaimie Veale, and she has a readable summary of hormone/transgender research in her thesis. And on an aggregate level some researchers say they see patterns in the genetic relationship between parents, children and siblings. She also found that transpeople are more likely to have gender variant people in their families. Maybe you and your sister share the "butch" part of the gene set, but not the gynephilic [woman-loving]  one.

I have no close gay relatives. As for crossdreamers, I have no idea. They would never talk about it, anyway.

If you always imagined the life of a boy, you experienced childhood transgender fantasies. Children may experience sexual feelings, but I have not heard about childhood sexual crossdreaming. In my case the fantasies was more about being a girl.

No clear line between trans and transsexual

You write: "I said I'm not transsexual but you know I actually would like to transition to some extent, I always dream about it: top surgery and a low dose of hormones that give me a deeper voice!"

This is very similar to what I am experiencing. I think there is no line between transsexuals and other transgender. This is more like different shades of gray. But since I am not transitioning I see no point in claiming to be a woman.

The invisible FTM

As of the invisibility of female to male crossdreamers: I do not think there are fewer FTMs than MTFs. It was the wide dispersal of yaoi that convinced me of this.  [Yaoi is Japanese style comics about gay male relationships written by women for women].
Yaoi artwork. Yaoi is stories about gay  male relationship
written and drawn by women for women

Maybe they are less visible because they/you have been given a little bit more leeway than we have when it comes to playing the role of a man. You may put on jeans and a sweater and get away with it. Men will be ridiculed for carrying their girl friend´s hand bag!

I guess some of this is caused by our cultures considering women of lesser worth than men. Wishing to be a woman becomes incomprehensible. Female attire is more easily sexualized as well, and a man dreaming of taking the woman's place in bed is violating some of the strongest taboos.

In other words: Men are, even more than women, forced to hide this side of themselves.  This has led to the growth of the crossdressing culture with associated organizations. There are to my knowledge no FTM crossdressing associations. 

That being said, there was no online crossdreamer communities either when I started my blog. There has to be some kind of critical mass to get things going. There is some promising action on the Livjournal girlfag group and the Facebook girlfag/guydyke group.

Let us think some more about this, and see what we can do about it. Having a separate FTM section on crossdreamlife.com has not worked so far.

Do you know of any other FTM crossdreamers in Iran, on- or offline, and is there any online scene for that kind of thing?

Sex, beauty and power

RAYKA
I'm reading The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde, which was recommended by my professor and well...I was rewarded by a surprising male-male love in the book, so I feel I'm flying in the sky right now! I always wonder about the GREAT effect of the gay guys, relationships, pictures, films, porn, stories etc have on me, nothing is compared to it! I don't know about MTF CDs'  feelings toward lesbians, is it that strong?
Dorian Gray movie poster.

I think among those factors, one may be a little true: I somehow unconsciously assume femininity is related to degrading in every aspects: Women roles' in family and society, their clothing, even their shape of body looks weirdo to me!

Maybe it's my frustration of all I have endured till now or maybe it's the result of all those unfair attitudes toward women, even in western societies in my opinion. But I still feel proud when I encounter powerful or masculine women. God:  Power is so much more important than beauty, I wanna be the hunter not the prey!

Yes, I don't think friends would face our little sanctuary at crossdreamers any day soon! And they probably are not in the mood to read a full English website, you know!

Explaining your identity

Now my problem is  those friends who ask me where my breasts have gone! (cause I can't help not binding them all the time!). It's hard to explain, cause I'm still their girl-friend! I just say I've lost weight but it's still awkward! 

I frequently think that maybe I should try to consider me as a girl like the old days, try on more girly stuff, and maybe in the future some guy will make me feel more feminine! In the end; nothing is meaningful, what it means to be a girl or boy after all? It's just some kind of imitation or suggestion for someone in my situation; like when you are in the middle and you can't decide which side to lean but anyway, you have to get used to the confusion!

I know a girl from an Iranian Adam Lambert fan forum (you can understand my love for such guy I guess!) and she shared the same feelings towards him and gay men. I asked her about it and she said: "Maybe I'm a little masculine but am completely a girl with a girl's true emotions ( I actually don't know what the heck that is!) but I love men so much so, "more men= more pleasure!"

For me, I guess rather than the erotic side, there's some kind of affinity just like when I see the teenage or young boys, I would automatically repeat to myself: Hey, that's me!

However I have found a lot of Iranian transsexuals and lesbians on Facebook, but I'm neither a trans nor a lesbian, you can say; I'm just a crossdresser with a masculine side.

But the problem is, as you mentioned: There is no such thing as FTM crossdressing unless it's too obvious and it essentially should means that your either a lesbian or a trans! (tomboys are not considered to be that important and I'm not as masculine as a real tomboy!) So, there must be nothing wrong with me. 

I just always make a male avatar in sims [game] (I had invented a creative version of sims in my childhood too which reminds me of yaoi and manga characters!) and become happy when people call me mister, that's all, all the other girls do the same!!! (verbal irony or even irony of character!)

(to be continued)

How post-structuralist feminism has become a weapon used to invalidate transgender

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I have spent some time over at tumblr, lately, mostly discussing the lives of female to male crossdreamers and girlfags. Sometimes it feels like being back in the school yard, with bullies honing in on you from all directions. This is probably because so many of the participants are very young and have still not developed the necessary empathy and patience needed to treat others with respect.
Using the fetish theory of modern feminists, lesbians
are invalidating the lives of FTM girlfags and crossdreamers,
arguing that these persons have no male identity.

There are some patterns here, the most important being the use of modern "post-structuralist" feminist theory to invalidate girlfags in particular and trans people in general.

Lesbians attack girlfags for "fetishizing" gay men. Since most of my readers do not spend much time on tumblr, I will republish a couple of my entries here.

The following is a response to impostoradult, who gives a very good presentation of post-modern accounts of sex and gender in her response to my blog post om sex, gender, mind and body. You do not have to read the original posts to make sense of this one.

Dear impostoradult,

I have actually no problem in accepting most of what you write here, both as regards post-modernism and your understanding of understanding in itself.

I guess I am more of a 'philosophical hermeneutics' kind of person myself, but the basics remain the same: Our life word, the sum of our experiences, put limits to what it is possible to think.

And yes, categories like gay, girlfag and crossdreamer only exist in our mind. You will not find them 'out there', in the 'real world'. However, our sense of self and our bodies are anchored in the real world, so we do have some access to "the world in itself", if no through language.

My admittedly popularized and simplified presentation in this blog post was aimed at those that systematically use parts of post-modern theory to invalidate the experience and identity of girlfags, crossdreamers and other gender variant people. And in this respect reminding people of their animal nature makes very much sense.

The current atracks on girlfags and crossdreamers, reducing them to unreal 'fetishes' and body-less 'semiotics' have their roots in the thinking of the post-structuralist philosopher Judith Butler and her fans. Having read all the books written by the lady, I can confidently say that this is a woman who have left the physical world behind and is now living in a mirage of literary references.


Not all post-modernists or post-structuralists think like this. Michel Foucault did not, but many of the thinkers dominating women studies and queer studies most certainly do. You are right in the sense that they do not deny the existence of a real, physical, world "out there". They do not deny the fact that I have a body, but since their method stops them form saying anything meaningful about this body this makes no difference in practical terms.

I like to think of post-structuralism as a step by step retreat from any hope of understanding the world in itself. It started with Kant, who realized that we have no access to the world in itself ("Das Ding an sich"). That is: we have only access to the world as it represents itself to us in our minds. This led to the philosophy of phenomenology, which also collapsed, as the new dogma stated that the phenomena as they appear to us can only be understood via language and symbols (semiotics).

This is where post-structuralism is now, trapped in never-ending self-referring systems of words and symbols. The next step should have been some kind of Zen Buddhism, but I am afraid few of these thinkers have the religious heart needed for that kind of enlightenment.

All of this would have been fine, if these thinkers really accepted the limitations of their own method. If you have a tool for analyzing language and symbols, stick to analyzing texts. In practice, however, far too often these thinkers make statements about the world in itself.

To give an example. They move from the position that cultural gender is socially constructed to arguing that even sex (the body) is socially constructed. Yes, our interpretations of the physical body is interpreted through language. It has to be. But they go further. They now dismiss any argument to the effect that physiology, genes and hormones have an effect on gender development. Sex is nothing but a social construct.

(My cat smiles when I  tell him this. He knows better.)

It was my reading of [feminist, post-structuralist, philosopherJudith Butler's discussion of the John/Joan case and the treatment of David Reimer that made this clear to me. [More about Reimer here!]
Judith Butler (Photo: Jreberlein at en.wikipedia)

David had, as you probably know, his penis damaged after birth. Dr. Money decided it was best to raise him as a girl. David developed severe gender dysphoria, being convinced that he was in fact a boy, regardless of what his parents and his doctors told him. Intense conditioning and deliberate 'social construction' did not work. His sense of being male did not abate.

Butler's anaylysis of the medical brutality is brilliant, but her treatment of David is horrible. She pretends to respect what he says, while at the same time losing herself in endless unintelligible paragraphs aimed at undermining the same man's sense of self. In parts of the text she even uses the female pronoun when referring to him.

Why? Because accepting David's identity would open up for the possibility that sex is more than a social construct, that the body and its animalistic instincts and drivers may contribute to our feeling of being a man or a woman.

The political effects of this way of thinking is found in the transphobia of many radical feminists. Since gender is totally socially constructed, only persons raised as women can be women. Female to male trans men must therefore be traitors seeking male privilege, while male to female trans women have to be perverted men invading women's spaces. Currently rad femme bloggers like GallusMag and Dirt are combining the philosophy of Butler with the sexist theories of Ray Blanchard in order to persecute trans women. This is post-structuralism reduced to fascism.

The reason they are able to combine post-structuralism and the psychology of fetishes in this way is also found in Butler and her admirers.

Butler's main challenge is to explain why (given the enormous social pressure young girls and boys are put under to force them to adapt to the gender stereotypes) homosexuals and transgender people exist in the first place. Her solution to this problem is to make use of Freud, another thinker who ultimately left the body behind.

And this is where the fetishes enter the scene. She does not use the term fetish herself, but her she makes use of the same line of reasoning as Freud. Childhood experiences and imprints creates constellations of desires that makes the child go off course, so to speak.

Young people schooled in gender theory have now been given the ultimate weapon to invalidate gender variant people: The combination of social construction and psychologically constructed sexual preferences: fetishes. The gilfags and the crossdreamers are nothing but fetishists! There is no inner sex identity! Their sense of self is nothing but a mirage.

Anyone who have read [Michel] Foucault will understand what is happening. The Powers that Be, the dominant world view, the Patriarchy is now using post-structuralist radical feminism to keep those who threaten the status quo under control. And the social system does not give a damn about logical coherence.

This is why I this week had to wrestle with a lesbian who, full of indignation, reduced all girlfags to fetishists, not realizing that by the same logic she is one too.

The recent tumblr truscum debate, where FTM trans men try desperately to take over the 'transgender' term in order to cast out the crossdressers is another example. They are basically gender essentialists, [gender as an inborn phenomenon] and therefore Butler's opponents, but that does not stop them from using post-structuralist theory when it suits them. They, the truscum, are real men. The crossdressers and the crossdreamers are delusional fetishists.

On the male to female side I find both conservative 'classical transsexuals' and 'forced feminization fetishists' actively using post-structuralist thinking to dismiss the identity of those in the gender twilight zone.

The classical transsexual believe they are the only 'real women' around, while all those icky crossdressers and crossdreamers are fetishists. The forced feminization enthusiasts use the theory to calm any fear they might have of being transsexual. In this way they all help uphold the gender binary. The price is paid by all those who do not fit into this perfect scheme of things.

I am not a naive essentialist. I do not think there is a 'woman chip' in a woman's brain that contains everything from a desire to bake cakes to a fascination for Gucci handbags. While a lot of intersexed boys raised as girls have suffered from gender dysphoria, others seem to have adapted well to the lives of women.

If anything this tells me that our sex identity is the result of the interaction of an insane number of biological, psychological and cultural factors. But right now very few are looking at the whole picture, which is why both the social sciences and the natural sciences so easily can be used to invalidate the lives of the marginalized.

Ultimately we will never get to the objective truth of what shapes sex identity and gender. But by using our sense of self as a starting point and engaging in a discussion with both the social sciences and the natural sciences we may develop a kind of triangulation that makes sense to more of us.

I want us to look at biology and neurophysiology, and even those naive and sexist evolutionary psychologist, not because they are right, but because they at least try to understand the other side of our being. They are as caught up in the mental maps and the language games of our culture as everybody else, I know, but we have to start somewhere. Post-structuralist philosophy is an excellent tool for analyzing language, but is useless in the meeting with hormones and synapses. We need both approaches.

For an excellent review of the post-structuralist invalidation of trans, read Julia Serano's book Excluded.

Is Crossdreaming really Transphobic and Cissexist?

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I have been active over at tumblr lately, partly because of reports of harassment of girlfags and crossdreamers and partly because of so-called "truscum" (separatists FTM trans men) who are trying to throw crossdressers and gender queer people out of the transgender family.
Photo: Tomwang112

This has been a fascinating journey into a world of conspiracy theories and hazing, invalidation and marginalization.

But I have also learned to know many courageous, creative and intelligent crossdreamers and trans people, transsexual as well as non-transsexual, who stand up to the abuse, defending their right to define their own identity.

Weaponizing science and philosophy

What really fascinates me is the way some people are weaponizing philopsophy and science in order to put down people who threatens their point of view. In this post I am going to use  Mahō Shōjo Naomi's presentation of me and my Crossdreamer blog as an example.

This is an interesting attempt at developing a narrative aimed at undermining the legitimacy of your opponent, by presenting a clever mix of half truths and untruths.

I believe it is extremely important for gender variant people, including crossdreamers, crossdressers and genderqueer, to understand and see through these techniques.

I guess that the main reason for all this hurt is that most of us, consciously or unconsciously, have bought into the idea that there is something wrong with us, and that we are diseased, perverted or abnormal. This leads to a desperate scramble for a dry spot, where we at least appear a little bit more normal than all the other "freaks" out there. As one crossdreamer told me: "Thank God! At least I am not gay!" We had a loooong conversation about that one, believe me!

The messages I get from especially girlfags on tumblr, tells me that this quest for gender purity they can be extremely damaging to their self esteem and undermine their ability to explore their identity.

Define your opponent as transphobic from the start!

Mahō Shōjo Naomi calls herself a transfeminist. From what I can see from her blog, she and I are not really that far apart as regards our views of sex and gendeer. It is a bit hard to say, but she seems to believe in a broad and diverse family of transgender people, and like me she is a strong supporter of women's rights, as well as the rights of trans men and trans women. We also agree that there is a biological component to the transsexual identity, although I suspect I am a little bit more holistic than she is in this respect.

But she is also clearly one of those who have been hurt so much, that she is now lashing out angrily at a lot of people, rarely giving them the benefit of doubt, and mostly in order to redefine them as the enemy. I am clearly the enemy.

The blog post, with the telling headline "Crossdreaming: Its Transphobic Roots, and Current Transphobic, Cissexist Content" gets off to a promising start:



"Crossdreaming is a relatively new term created by Jack Molay. Jack Molay is person who was assigned male at birth, and currently identifies as a man who dreams about having a female body.
“There are men (like me) that fantasize about having a woman’s body and get sexually aroused by this.” [1]
"It is more than a little confusing, because — even if I cannot for my life think of having sex with a man as a man — my female self has no such scruples”"
So far so good, although the selection of quotes is a bit strange.

Define your opponent as a white, male, oppressor!

She continues:

"Jack Molay is a cisgender man. With the use of his website it is also easy enough to deduce that he is white, and heterosexual. To make this clear, he is a white cisgender heterosexual man who writes primarily about transgender, and transsexual issues. It is clear to any transsexual, or transgender woman that his narrative is different from our similar yet still varied backgrounds."

Some would probably argue that this is factual, as well. The totality of the text, however, makes me read this an an attempt at undermining my legitimacy as a spokesperson for any transgender man or woman.

First she calls me a cisgender (i.e. non-transgender) man, effectively denying me the right to call myself transgender. Indeed, she is negating my own sense of self by doing so. She also manages to associate me with the theory of male supremacy and male privilege, which does -- as we will see -- put me on the same side as those suppressing not only women, but also transsexual men and women.

My guess is that she does this more or less unconsciously. It is part of her ideological baggage. However, it can also be that she is doing so deliberately, in the hope of silencing me (due to the guilt I must feel from being a white man) or at least make me illegitimate in the eyes of anyone who knows anything about the suppression of women. The implicit message is: "You cannot take anyone this man says seriously, because he is part of the machinery of oppression."

Assigning me the role of the cis male also relieves her of any guilt she might have felt from attacking me. If she hurts my feelings, I probably deserve it.

I am Norwegian of Scandinavian decent. It is impossible to get much whiter than me. I am also presenting as a man in the richest country in the world, which probably makes me one of the most privileged persons in world history.

Unfortunately this does not change the fact that I am gender dysphoric and transgender. There are days when this fate is close to unbearable. I believe I have managed to turn this into something constructive, helping others like me in the process.  魔法少女ナオミ is not helping. And if such  attacks hurt me, I cannot even begin to imagine the effects they have on younger and more vulnerable trans persons.

Stick to the binary!

I suspect that she is one of those who believe that transsexual equals transgender, in spite of her praise of diversity. She manages to present the dichotmomy transgender and cisgender as a simple and clear cut binary, dismissing the possibility of a kind of ambiguity that leaves a space for people like me. By ambiguity I mean the fact that not all transgender are gender dysphoric and not all those gender dysphoric decide to transition.  This is a very efficient way of silencing the great majority of transgender people.

She then goes on to describe what she believes is the ideology of Jack Molay and the Crossdreamer blog, and this is where her analysis goes completely off the rails.

Associate your opponent with a toxic theory!

She writes:

"Now then, onto the theory.

Crossdreaming is based on Ray Blanchard’s theory of autogynephillia. Blanchard’s theory is a theory which forwards that late (after childhood) transitioners who are not attracted to men are not real transsexuals but men with a paraphillic mental disorder. If you need more information I suggest using Google to look up the term. It is not supported by the accepted standards of care for transsexual people, is rejected by the transgender community, and not accepted by both the American Psychiatric Association, and American Psychological Association. Many in the psychological community have discredited Blanchard’s work and his theory is regard as junk science.
Ray Blanchard, Photo: University of Toronto


Beyond Blanchard, Jack Molay likes to quote Anne Lawarance [sic], a supporter of Blanchard’s work, to describe autogynephillia. To see why this is a problem reference the above paragraph.
Julia Serano, in her The Case Against Autogynephilia, had this to say about the theory:
"…there were flaws in Blanchard’s original papers, including that they were conducted among overlapping populations primarily at the Clarke Institute in Toronto without nontranssexual controls, that the subtypes were not empirically derived but instead were "begging the question that transsexuals fall into subtypes based on their sexual orientation," and that further research had found that a non-deterministic correlation between cross-gender arousal and sexual orientation. She said that Blanchard did not discuss the idea that cross-gender arousal may be an effect, rather than a cause, of gender dysphoria, and that Blanchard assumed that correlation implied causation. Serano also stated that the wider idea of cross-gender arousal was affected by the prominence of sexual objectification of women, accounting for both a relative lack of cross-gender arousal in transsexual men and similar patterns of gynephilic arousal in non-transsexual women. [2]
Serano also criticised proponents of the theory, claiming that they dismiss non-autogynephilic, non-androphilic transsexuals as misreporting or lying while not questioning androphilic transsexuals, describing it as:
”tantamount to hand-picking which evidence counts and which does not based upon how well it conforms to the model” [2]
The article at Wikipedia also had this to say in an a summation of Serano’s criticism:
Further criticisms alleged that the theory undermined lived experience of transsexual women, contributed to pathologisation and sexualisation of transsexual women, and the literature itself fed into the stereotype of transsexuals as “purposefully deceptive”, which could be used to justify discrimination and violence against transsexuals. [3]
You can read the entire paper at provided citation. Suffice it to say that noted trans woman, and activist Julia Serano does not agree with the theory of autogynephillia."

Notice what she does here: She argues that crossdreaming is based on the theory of autogynephilia, clearly implying that I support the theory of Dr. Ray Blanchard. She then goes on to quote a prominent trans activist, Julia Serano, who debunks Blanchard's theory.

She has now proven that Jack Molay supports a theory that is stigmatizing for trans people. Right?

Wrong.

Anyone who has followed this blog knows that I am a strong opponent of Ray Blanchard. I believe there are very few trans bloggers who have spent more time than me at deconstructing and dismissing the explanation Blanchard gives for crossdreaming. I have even popularized Julia Serano's writings on the matter, because I agree completely with her analysis, as it is referred above.

The irony is that if there is one transsexual thinker I feel a strong ideological kinship to, it is Julia Serano. Indeed, without her book Excluded: Making Feminist and Queer Movements More Inclusive, I would probably not have been able to write this blog post, because she has taught me much  bout the techniques used to marginalize trans people.

To be fair, Mahō Shōjo Naomi has seen that I have argued against the autogynephilia theory. She writes:

"Originally Jack stated:
“Again: the reason I have found the term so useful, is because I recognize my own life in these descriptions. That does not mean that I necessarily [sic] will accept the theories that lies behind these terms.”
He later noted he no longer supports the term autogynephillia, but that has not deterred him from using it as the basis of his theory of crossdreamers. That’s correct his theory is rooted in a poorly regarded transphobic and cissexist theory."

She is basically covering her back here, admitting that I have criticized the theory, while sticking to her argument that I am Blanchard supporter. She manages to do this because  she is glossing over the difference between phenomenon/symptom of crossdreaming on the one hand, and what causes crossdreaming on the other.

I do not deny the existence of the people Blanchard is describing. I deny his explanation for why they feel what they feel.

Ignore the history of a blog!

When I started this blog at the end of 2008, "autogynephilia" was the only term that popped up when you researched male bodied persons who get aroused by the idea of being a woman. I hadn't read Julia Serano's Whipping Girl at the time, and did not know that there were trans women out there who had perfectly reasonable explanations for what caused this phenomenon.

Like for so many crossdreamers before and after me, it looked as if Blanchard was the only person who actually saw me and recognized me. Given that the term "autogynephilia" was also used in some of the science literature, I started using the term, because this was the term other crossdreamers would use if they wanted to find my blog. I wanted to find others like me. I wanted to learn from others like me. I wanted to help others like me.

The blog lay dormant for a few months, but in 2009 I came back, writing a series of blog posts attacking the bigotry of the autogynephila theory. See for instance "Autogynephilia as something normal,", "Autogynephilia: The Dark Side" (which Naomi has read, as she is quoting it), "Beyond the Perversion", "Beyond the binary" and "Trapped in a too narrow view of sexuality." I used the writings of Dr. Joan Roughgarden to suggest another narrative, a narrative that is much closer to the one of Naomi herself. By the way, Roughgarden is a trans woman.

Since then I have probably spent too much time debunking Blanchard, to the point where some of my readers got tired of it all and left.

Given good advice from  a helpful female trans activists I changed the name of the blog in 2010 to crossdreamers. I stopped using the term "autogynephile" or "autogynephiliac" when refering to crossdreamers, as it became abundantly clear that most people were not able to distinguish between the fact that there are people who get aroused by becoming their target sex and Blanchard's "erotic target location error" explanation. The word, after all, means "love of oneself as a woman". I now only use the word to refer to the theory, not the persons experiencing crossdreaming fantasies.

We are all OK, but not really!

Having established the fact that it is OK to ignore what Jack Molay actually means, Naomi now goes on to the obligatory "we are all OK" litany. You have heard the sound of it before: "I do not mind that you are gay/trans/black/diabled, honey, as long as you do not move into my neighborhood."

Here is Naomi:

"If Jack Molay wanted to solely claim this identity for himself and other men like himself who fantasize about having a woman’s body for the purposes of sex many of trans people and I would probably not care."

Notice how she indirectly defines her view of what I am. My condition is all about sexual desire, and nothing else.

You are not one of us! You are not one of us!

Then comes the coup de grâce:

"The issue is that he continually attempts to redefine transgender, and transsexual narratives from a cisgender and heterosexual perspective with a junk theory that has historically oppressed trans women."

Now we are getting close to the core of her frustration.

The problem is that I have the audacity to say that Naomi and I are related. Not that I say that we are the same, mind you, because I have never said that. I have been very clear about the fact that trans men and trans women are men and women respectively, and therefore not the same as a MTF crossdresser who identifies as male, a girlfag who feels at home in her female body or -- as in my case -- a gender dysphoric MTF transgender who is not going to transition.  But I do think that most, if not all, trans people have something in common.

So I am basically crashing her party, without -- apparently -- having the right social and cultural credentials needed to gain access to her tribe.

This becomes abundantly clear in the next section where she quotes some of my early blog posts in an attempt to prove that I do not know the tribal language of trans people and can therefor not be one of them. She reminds me of the mother of a childhood friend of me, who once told me that her family did not fraternize with the Olsens, because they, as she said,  "did not know how to eat with a knife and a fork."

Here is her list of complaints:

"All while simultaneously using problematic language such as:
transgendered
I find it hard to understand transgenderism without the sex.
the fact that transgendered men get sexually aroused by imagining themselves with a female body is pretty obvious
I mean, look at"genuine girls"biological women
most genuine XX girls (natal women)
why the idea that M2F transgendered fantasizing about being women
There is no denying that something has gone wrong in the lives of male to female transsexuals (also called “transwomen”), She is after all trapped in a man’s body, even if her personality may be sound. [3]
At this point it should be evident that Jack Molay is not in touch with the transgender community. He does not understand us, and does not understand what we find offensive. If it’s not apparent, let me break it down for you."

I stand guilty as charged.

I did use terms like "transgendered" (instead of "transgender"). I have even been guilty of writing  "transwoman" instead of "trans woman" a few times.

And what's more: I have left the original blog posts more or less alone, out of respect for the people who made comments at the time. Most of thee few changes I have made have been clearly visible, as is shown in the quotes included by Naomi. In addition I have added clearly marked disclaimers regarding the use of the word "autogynephilia" to some posts, for the benefit of new readers.

This has clearly had no positive effect, and given Naomi's use of my text,  I may have to reconsider this policy.

Accept no period of learning!

The reason I erred was very simple: I was new to the community. As so many other crossdreamers and trans people I had lived a life  in denial. I had suppressed my other self. I had done everything I could to live up to the role of the Big White Man, and failed miserably. I decided to reach out to the community, and made a few mistakes in the process. Still, I learned something important during this time: I learned to listen, to read, to be patient and understanding.

These days I am the one who helps crossdreamers with the pronouns, explaining to them that writing trans woman in one word (transwoman) may be interpreted as a negation of that woman's true identity.

Anyone who says there is sex in sex is sexist!

After this Naomi moves on to the sex, the most offensive part of the crossdreamer narrative. She quotes me as saying:

"I find it hard to understand transgenderism without the sex.
He can’t imagine being a trans person without sex. This shows a fundamental lack of understanding in how being trans is about far more than just sex."

Hm, that is not what I said, was it? I did not say that being trans is only about sex (as in sexual desire). Actually, some of my crossdreamer friends are slightly annoyed at me because I argue that crossdreaming is not a fetish, not a sexual perversion, and something more than getting horny from dressing up or reading transformation stories.

I have also argued some crossdreamers (but in no way all) are truly transsexual. Since only a minority of transsexual women and trans men are asexual, they have probably had sexual fantasies before transitioning. In those fantasies they must have imagined themselves as their target sex, and when doing so they will most likely have felt arousal.

I do indeed believe crossdreaming is natural and hard to avoid if you are trans. By saying this I am also in conflict with the autogynephilia theory which says that only heterosexual men (and by implication gynephilic trans women) can be crossdreamers. I have found a large number of female bodied crossdressers and crossdreamers, crossdreaming butches as well as male crossdreamers who love men. 

Use authorities to undermine your opponent!

Allow me to make use  of the "quote the legitimate authority game" of Naomi:

Julia Serano, who once identified as a closeted male crossdresser, wrote about crossdreaming in Whipping Girl, admittedly not using the word crossdreaming. She often uses the term "cross-gender arousal" to describe the same thing.

Notice how Serano makes an argument that is very close to mine:

"For quite a while, I thought of myself as a crossdresser and viewed my female subconscious sex as a 'feminine side' that was trying to get out. But after years of crossdressing, I eventually lost interest in it, realizing that my desire to be female had nothing to do with clothing or femininity per se. There was also a period of time when I embraced the word 'pervert' and viewed my desire to be female as some sort of sexual kink. But after exploring that path, it became obvious that explanation could not account for the vast majority of instances when I thought about being female in a nonsexual context. And after reading Kate Bornstein's and Leslie Feinberg's writings for the first time, I embraced the words 'transgender' and 'queer'. I began to think of myself as bigendered, viewing my female subconscious sex as being just as legitimate as my physical maleness. In the years just prior to my transition, I started to express my femaleness as much as possible within the context of having a male body; I became a very androgynous queer boy in the end of the world.... After twenty years of exploration and experimentation, I eventually reached the conclusion that my female subconscious sex had nothing to do with gender roles, femininity, or sexual expression -- it was about the personal relationship I had with my own body." (Whipping Girl: A Transsexual Woman on Sexism and the Scapegoating of Femininity, page 85)

Serano explored her own identity over time, coming gradually to the conclusion that she was, is and always had been a woman. This is definitely not the journey of all crossdreamers. Many male to female crossdreamers identify as men, and continue to do so for the rest of their lives. Others find that genderqueer is a term that fits them better.

In other words: Not only may the crossdreamer's understanding of self develop over time, there is also much diversity as regards their actual identity, that is the whole of their subconscuous and conscious selves.

If Naomi really had read Serano, as she implies, she would have seen that Serano, as well as many other trans women and activists, do not deny their crossdreamer past. They see it as a natural expression of their female selves.

Use language to split and conquer!

But Naomi won't have it. She continues to quote me, trying to find other ways of undermining my credibility, sticking hard-fast to my earliest blog posts, the ones where I were still were able to mess up the terminology.
"the fact that transgendered men get sexually aroused by imagining themselves with a female body is pretty obvious
Using the term 'transgendered men' to mean trans women should be obvious as to why it is offensive. Not to mention his reinforcement that our bodies are not somehow already female.
I mean, look at"genuine girls"biological women
most genuine XX girls (natal women)
Despite crossing out and having used scare quotes around genuine girls, biological women is hardly any better and still comes from a place of cissexism. The same goes for his use of XX, and “natal” women. To see a more in depth explanation on this please see this post of mine.
There is no denying that something has gone wrong in the lives of male to female transsexuals (also called “transwomen”), She is after all trapped in a man’s body, even if her personality may be sound."
Using MTF transsexual while using both scare quotes on an incorrect form of trans women is also mildly cissexist in that it fails to explicitly just call us women."

She is right, of course, about the error of using a phrase like "transgendered men" for describing "trans women". I was probably referring to male bodied crossdreamers who identified as men at the time, but that does not make the terminology less confusing.

I also struggled hard to find terms to describe the difference between trans and non-trans women at the time, failing miserably, as it is easy to see. I am still struggling, to tell the truth, as I find terms like "XX women" and "women born women", and "cis-women" problematic, as well.

But I am mostly communicating with people who are not familiar with transgender culture, and I have to use shorthand expressions to stop the blog posts from becoming too unwieldy. At the moment I mostly write "non-transgender women", hoping that this makes sense to most of my readers.

What Jack Molay really means

I have probably hoped that people read my texts in good faith. Yeah, that didn't work out, now, did it?

Maybe Naomi should study my blog a little bit more carefully, especially the more recent blog posts, and look for the intended message instead. It is not hard to find. She will find that in my opinion:
  • Transsexual women are women, 100 percent, no footnotes involved.
  • Transsexual men are men, 100 percents, no ambiguity implied.
  • Like Serano and Naomi I believe that trans men and women are born as men and women, even if their genitalia indicates the opposite. And like Serano I believe that strong social pressure and cultural conditioning may lead them to suppress that identity.
  • But not all trans people are clearly anchored in one sex or the other. 
  • I strongly oppose the recent attempts at changing the term transgender from being an umbrella term for all gender variant people to becoming a synonym for transsexual.
  • Moreover, there is a huge diversity of constellations of temperaments, abilities, interests and desires, and trying to put up clear cut rules for defining who are out and who are in, is not only a violation of reality; it is a violation of the identity of those that falls outside the sexist norms of society.
Crossdreamer imperialism

Naomi ends her litany by complaining that I am somehow trying to replace terms like transgender and transsexual with crossdreaming:

"Perhaps what angers me even more that his use offensive terminology is his coercive inclusion of trans people into this theory. At what point Jack Molay decided to make crossdreaming supersede identities under the transgender umbrella I do not know. However all of his recent blog posting include transsexuals and other transgender identities as a subset of crossdreamers or forces cisgender identities into transgender identities. This is both highly offensive and wrong."

I am a bit at loss here, as I have never argued that the diversity of transgender identity should be a subset of crossdreamers. In fact, I do not think of "crossdreamer" as an identity at all. For me "crossdreamer" is a descriptive term, describing one small part of the complex lives of a diverse group of transgender people.

It is my sincere hope that I live long enough to see a time where we do not need the term "crossdreamer" at all -- a time when people take it for granted that also trans people are sexual people with sexual desires, a time when transgender men and women -- transsexual or not transsexual -- are given the same leeway as cis people to explore their desires.

As it is now trans people are reduced to fetishists or perverts if they admit to having sexual fantasies beyond the cis-sexual normative of submissive girl meeting dominant man.

Naomi has, probably unwillingly, become part of the social machinery that forces trans people to adapt to a cis-normative society. They must either deny their transgender nature and pretend to be happy heterosexual "normal" people, or they must go all the way and transition, becoming -- again -- what appears to be normal  heterosexual cisgendered people.

I guess that she needs to reduced me to a perverted, fetishistic, man, as my very existence as transgender threatens her own dreams of normalcy. I am contagious.

She writes:

"His work continues to present itself in a cissexist manner and is an obvious appropriation of the transsexual and transgender narrative.Particularly the oppression of trans women. At best he is appropriating the theory of transgender activists for a cisgender fetish, and at worst he is appropriating to establish and monetize a theory of the behavior of cisgender and cissexual persons’ sexuality. Regardless crossdreaming is just as transphobic and cissexist as the theory that it is based."

If I had any common sense at all, I would probably left tumblr and closed down my blog over there. The amount of abuse girlfags, crossdreamers and trans people must take is mind boggling. But then I get message from trans people who says that they suffer tremendously from the same kind of abuse and who need someone to stand up for them. It is worth it.

And I have learned something important from this debacle. I will have to do something about the older blog posts, as they are clearly not interpreted in the way I intended.

Click here for Naomi's presentation of her own journey.

On Getting Your Identity Affirmed (The Rayka & Jack Crossdreaming Dialogue 3)

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Last year I had a very interesting email conversation with Rayka, a young Iranian girlfag and female to male crossdreamer. This is part three of our edit of that conversation. Part 1 can be found here.
How do you get accepted for who you
are, if there are no words to describe
who you are?
(Photo: Stockbyte)


In this part we discuss the difference between gender roles, gender traits and gender identity. We also look at what the lack of visibility, recognition and affirmation means for you mental health.

(About words: A crossdreamer is someone who gets excited by the idea of being or becoming the other sex. A girlfag is female bodied person with a strong affinity to gay male culture and who may imagine herself being a gay man with a gay man).

A difference between MTF and FTM crossdreamers

JACK
At first I believed that the main difference between MTF [male to female] and FTM [female to male] crossdreamers was the FTM focus on gay men and gay relationships. In MTF erotica the relationships are just as often male vs. female. It as if there has to be a male involved for many MTF crossdreamers to feel affirmed as woman in their fantasies. If you ask them, however, whether they are truly attracted to men, they will say no.

I have made myself "a sexual orientation test", asking selected MTF dreamers the following: "Go down the main street of your town. At the end list up the people you remember. If the majority is female, you are predominantly gynephilic [sexually attracted to women]."

This applies to me, as well. I am attracted to women and not to men. I do believe I have a preliminary solution to the puzzle, though, and I got it when I read a wonderful lesbian love story written by a MTF crossdreamer I know. The story is widely read by lesbians. I doubt very much if a man would be able to write such a story if he didn't have some kind of inner female identity. The point is that if you remove the erotic part, the crossdream that remains is the dream of a lesbian romantic relationship.

Maybe you can come up with an explanation for why FTM crossdreamers do not need to be a man with a woman in their fantasies to have their masculinity affirmed.

Words for what we are

I realize that it must be hard for you to even try explain what you are to your friends, given that the only terms are lesbian and trans. I have tried to use the term "straight gays" to explain this to non-trans friends. Sometimes it works, sometimes it causes even more confusion.

How it feels to be a girl

You wonder how it feels to be a girl with a girl´s emotions. I can completely relate to this. "How can you possible now how it feels to be a girl?"some people ask. My reply is much like yours: "Í have absolutely no idea how it feels to be a man!" But I do know what if feels to be human, and have found that most of what it means to be a man or a woman is something we have in common.


Still, whenever I am forced to play the role people expect from me, I feel uncomfortable. For instance, some of my male friends think hanging out in a pub, watching soccer is a wonderful idea. I cannot for the life of me understand what it is that they find so alluring. It has probably something to do with being in a place where they can be "themselves", not having to pose for women.

Anyway, I am lousy at being a "man", so I understand your struggle with playing the role of a regular girl.

Unlike you, I have never tried to adjust my clothing or body to appear more feminine. I guess the taboo is too strong. The negative conditioning has been too strong.  I would therefore be very grateful if you told me about the effect binding your chest has for you. I understand that it makes you appear more masculine  (in the same way some MTF crossdressers tuck away their manly bits), but does it make you feel more at ease? Stronger? More attractive? More in harmony with yourself?

No need for female affirmation

RAYKA
You ask: Why doesn't FTM crossdreamers  need to be a man with a woman in their fantasies to have their masculinity affirmed?

Well, I think being the top partner (and the brutal type!) with an effeminate boy does the job! You know; many girlfags are just regular girls with a love for gay men but there are also the tomboy kind and gender dysphoric kind. 

Illustration  of Iranian woman, based on photo
by Harris Shiffman. This is not Rayka, but
she could have been.
It seems like the erotic and love aspect between two men is more important for many girlfags than their own body/identity.  Many girlfags also say that they are androgynous boys or femme FTMs. They want to look like the pretty boys they are attracted to, male, but not of the extremely masculine kind. 

I'm not extremely masculine myself, I hate the male stereotypes as well as female ones. I would be like a stereotypical gay guy with make up and feminine features if I transition.

Crossdressing less important for FTM

Maybe the need to be masculine is not so important to girlfags because of the same reason  crossdressing is not that important to them. I guess MTF persons are so much more into feminine clothes and attributes because they are such taboos for men but masculine traits are not that strange on women, they are actually so common.

I met an Iranian MTF crossdreamer on Facebook and as I noticed he is so much of a woman, you can feel this through his way of writing/talking and he likes my tomboyish style, but you know I want a boy not a woman!!! Actually, I find my butch lesbian friends so much more desirable cause they look like pretty boys! I also read some posts on girlfags journal and they had the same feelings toward the girls who look like the boys who look like girls!!!!!!!! I guess we all are attracted to androgyny.

I also made some progress by posting on my FB timeline that I am 40% male; and guess what? No one was surprised!

A boy friend of mine told me afterwards that he likes to wear make up! Its so interesting but I don't think he get the same reactions if he writes that he's 40% female on his page! It is so unfair: Why should being like females be so degrading to people?

The need for chest binding
About the binding; I think, it's simply necessary. I remember how I was ashamed of my chest before starting to bind- I just can't bear those things! I tried to lose weight in hope of making them look smaller, but no matter what size, they were still there!

Binding really can hurt sometimes but I can't open it even when I'm alone and no one is there to see me, so I guess it makes me feel more at ease cause without doing it I feel so uncomfortable. Though they are still there and the shape is not ideal but it's better than nothing.

In one forum I posted something about feeling extremely sad while watching gay movies, porn etc. it's like I "remember" the dysphoria and the fact that I'm not one of those. One of the members said something like this: It shows the difference between a dysphoric girlfag and not a trans one.

On grief

JACK
Yes, the comment about sadness rings true to me. It took me along time to get down to that feeling, but I now realize that I have a strong feeling of sadness -- or maybe it is grief -- that follows crossdreamer fantasies. And that makes sense now. I guess I am grieving the fact that she has never really had a chance to live a real life -- and I guess she never will.

I hope acknowledging the grief will make it easier to bear. Maybe it is similar to the grief following the death of a loved one. It never disappears, but it fades over the year.

That being said, my inner woman is far from dead. She is with me every day. And that is also a good thing.

Transgender has many levels

RAYKA
Non-crossdreaming crossdressers...hmmm that's interesting. I think the female identification is there, they just don't focus so much on the body. Transgenderism has many levels.

So you know that kind of "grief". It's great to know that. At least it proves something about my identity!

On  being genderqueer in a society that does not understand

Jack, I have a question. It's not something new, I'm just confused. [Named girlfag] once said  that if she/he (I dunno!) was younger, she would consider transitioning and if she did that, she would identify as a transman but now she is -- and being read as -- a butch woman. 

She says she's not a fan of labels. I don't know how she does that but I thought maybe I should do it too. You know, I am living as a female in my society. I'm not sure if I can make a good male or not, but I have been raised and lived as a girl and I probably have to go on like this for the rest of my life. 

I know the male part would always be with me and I know that: to me it means genderqueer. But it's just something private. No one understand the concept of "genderqueerness" in my country. So "what am I living as" in my society?! 

You know, I'm a big fan of women's rights. But I have discovered that most of my problem was with the stereotype thing. People perceive me as a woman and they assume that I have a woman's common traits and it drives me crazy! I always have to remind people when they're talking about women that not all women are like that! 

I'm actually desperately trying to prove my existence. And they may say: "Oh you're just an exception," but as an "exception" I have no specific rights to live with. I have to live as a subcategory of the female category and hopelessly defend its rights. So am I being described as just a specific kind of female here? 

Of course I understand women in many (but not all) ways and I'm always the daughter of my mom! I just need to feel a solid ground under my feet Jack. "TO BE" something, a real thing! 

I know it's silly to say such things to non-binary people, I consider myself one, but in the reality of my life, I lose myself everyday! It's just so confusing to live as one thing and feel something weird else inside, "something" that is not even a thing, 

Drawing by Rayka

I'm not super masculine, and everyone can see this. It's like you want to be some "gray- without-any-shape" thing. and that thing even doesn't exist where I live, so do I have to choose the closest "thing"(my body sex) to live as?! What do you do about this gap?

The limits to gender tolerance

JACK
Gender tolerance is a kind of rubber band in most cultures, I think. In Medieval Norway men, were considered the head of the family -- him being "strong and wise" and all that crap. In practice, however, women wielded enormous power. She had the keys to the farm. She was the real CEO of that business enterprise. And if you read the sagas, you will also see their influence on politics. Some of them were shield maidens, i.e. warriors in their own right.

If I am not mistaken, men are considered the head of the Indian Hindu family. On the surface it looks that way in the Bollywood movies I have seen (this is not a very scientific exercise ;). That being said, the oldest woman of the family is extremely powerful, which is why we have all the tales about the mistreated daughter in law.

In Elizabethan Britain, men were considered natural leaders, but none of them questioned Queen Elizabeth's ability to rule. (Or if they did, she chopped their heads off :).

The first two examples tells us about the rubber band: As long as you do not explicitly question the rule of men, people may tolerate (some) ambition, aggressiveness and a will to power in women.

The Queen Elizabeth example is a variant of what you are facing: "powerful/aggressive/creative/spiritual etc. women as an outlier".

Your Self demands recognition as an proactive, independent human being. I suspect the fact that doing this by stealth is not enough is caused by your strong masculine sex identity, an identity that demands affirmation from others.

And I am afraid that frustration won't go away, even if you find a practical way of uniting your sense of independence with a life as a woman (let's say, as a popular lawyer, politician, doctor etc.)

My problem is not that I cannot express traditional feminine values in my country. Norway has been, as I mentioned,  named  "the second most feminine country" in the world, meaning that both men and women share values that are traditionally considered feminine and that there is only small differences between male and female values.

This does not solve the problem. I sense that my deeper self crave recognition as a woman, which it will never get.

Sex as more than gender

I am starting to suspect that the term "genderqueer" is of little use if your internal sex-identity is anchored in the identity of the opposite sex. Some people are truly genderqueer (in the sense of having no clear sex identity, trans or non-trans), and for them it makes sense to think of sex identity as something socially constructed from which you may liberate yourself. I no longer believe that that is all there is to sex identities.

I am working on a blog post on the identity seeking of Norwegian girls, right now, and it is relevant to what you are asking about.

Here is the paradox: The more egalitarian Norwegian society becomes, and the more real power women get, the more extreme becomes girl's and women's need to appear feminine. I am going to call the post "Gender identity in Barbie-land", because -- right now -- Norwegian girls are looking more and more like Barbie dolls on the outside. (On the inside they are fierce, independent and powerful warriors -- many of them).

This cannot be explained as a social construction. I believe that now that you can no longer get your "womanness" affirmed by motherhood, the role of a house wife or by choosing traditional female occupations, Norwegian girls are using the only thing left to get their sex identity affirmed: fashion.

If I am right about this, you may find ways of expressing your true nature by stealth, but you will not get the confirmation or affirmation you are looking for.

Crossdreamer spaces

Closeted Westerns MTF crossdressers have tried to solved this problem by becoming members of secret organisations where they meet and reaffirm the femininity of each other. Psychologically speaking, this seem to work quite well, but since I am not a crossdresser, this does not help me.

In your context I guess there is no organised FTM crossdressing culture. In some Arab cultures you will find the boyat culture (which I guess is partly lesbian and partly girfag), but I have not heard of Persian boyats, and even if there was such a subculture, I am not sure if it would fit your needs.

As for transitioning. We have talked about the ayatollahs' acceptance of androphilic [man loving] trans women once, but I don't know if that tolerance embraces female bodied persons as well. And even if transitioning is possible in theory, there is a heavy price to pay.

Darn! I am not really helping, am I?

Anyway, what you are saying is extremely important. Your psychological health requires some kind of confirmation, and it is better to get a little bit of affirmation than none at all.

This is not about Iranian gender roles

RAYKA
I have to say that my problem here is not about the gender roles of my society. Women can be leaders, aggressive etc.I  told you I'm a feminist, and I don't care what ignorant people think of women. No one can really prevent me from being successful but I'm not gonna be a lawyer or politician or doctor.

If I were a boy, I would be generally feminine, I guess. Of course I want to be proactive and independent but so do many women. These are just traits, not identity. 

What I'm saying is that while trying to be an independent powerful person (female or male is not important here), what is my identity? Am I a fairly masculine girl who should be proud of her independent self but wishes she were a boy from time to time?! I can see both women and men are proud of their identities and try to emphasize it in some ways and it makes me think: what is my part here? 

So should I be proud of my androgynous self?! Well I like it; androgyny is ideal for me but in reality I have to fight for my rights as a female. I don't think I'd ever live as a real male. Men and women can be whatever they want, regardless of their gender but I just don't know my part, I don't know what to be proud of, what to live as?!

The need for affirmation

JACK
You are pointing out something I have not been very good at communicating: The suffering that comes from not being able to present yourself as who you are, and be affirmed as such. Unfortunately "heterosexual" crossdreamers and crossdressers have become so good at adapting to the gender normative non-trans hetero society, that they have become completely invisible. Being a "fetishist" is not an identity, and leads to no affirmation of any sorts.

There are parts of the gay and lesbian culture that have been so much better at doing something about this. When some lesbians tried to explain drag and butch as "gender performance", butch ["masculine"] lesbians protested angrily. "Butch is a noun," they said. "Butch is an identity!" By being recognized as "butch" (regardless of how fluid and diverse such a term may be), they were seen and respected -- at least by some. Trans men are right when they demand to be seen as men. That is their identity. Not some kind of game.

Your regular MTF crossdresser, however, will try very hard to pretend he is a regular Joe with a kink or a strong "feminine side", simply because this makes it easier to placate wives and partners.

And since female to male crossdreamers and crossdreamers are considered non-existent by society as a whole, including some of the so-called "experts", it becomes very hard for you to find the recognition you deserve. I think crossdreamers and crossdressers have a lot to learn from the gay and lesbian communities and their endeavor to develop a language that makes their identities visible and comprehensible.

More to follow.
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