In this video Charlie (aka localterror on the tube) recounts a story of going to a wedding recently and the awkward situations that entails. I'm sure we can all have a similar "awkward social experience" we can relate to.
Resources & Information
- Transguys.com- The Internet's Premier Online Magazine for Transmen
- The Art of Transliness: Advice on Life for the Modern Transman
- Hudson's FTM Guide
- The Transitional Male
- T-Vox: Comprehensive Resources for the Trans Community
- Transbucket: Photosharing for the Trans Community
- Trans Health: Health & Fitness for Trans People
- FTM-trans Yahoo Group
- FTM Surgery Info Yahoo Group
- FTM: Scouting the Unknown
Sunday, October 24, 2010
Tuesday, October 19, 2010
Ignorant Questions & Comments about Being FTM.
Meet Joe, aka JoeLikesHisBro on the tube. He is 15 and from The Netherlands.
In this video Joe talks about the ignorant questions and comments all FTMs (and trans people in general) have to endure on sometimes a daily basis.
Some of the things I get asked most often are:
1. Do you have a penis or a vagina?
2. Have you had the surgery?
3. How does your family feel about your transition? Do they accept you?
All of the aforementioned questions are of a sensitive nature and not ones that are appropriate to bring up in most social settings, especially one in which two people have just met. I would never ask someone about their genitals or their family life the first time I met them. Or ever.
It is exasperating that when a non trans person meets a trans person they immediately start asking questions that are inappropriate and would not be asked in the first place had the person they had just become acquainted not had a transgender history.
In this video Joe talks about the ignorant questions and comments all FTMs (and trans people in general) have to endure on sometimes a daily basis.
Some of the things I get asked most often are:
1. Do you have a penis or a vagina?
2. Have you had the surgery?
3. How does your family feel about your transition? Do they accept you?
All of the aforementioned questions are of a sensitive nature and not ones that are appropriate to bring up in most social settings, especially one in which two people have just met. I would never ask someone about their genitals or their family life the first time I met them. Or ever.
It is exasperating that when a non trans person meets a trans person they immediately start asking questions that are inappropriate and would not be asked in the first place had the person they had just become acquainted not had a transgender history.
Long Island TDOR 2010.
The 7th Annual
Long Island Transgender Day of Remembrance
Sunday, November 21, 2010
7:30 PM
Temple Sinai of Roslyn
425 Roslyn Road
Roslyn Heights, New York
We will come together as a Community
to remember those who have lost
their lives due to senseless acts of violence.
Speakers...
Rusty Mae Moore
Chelsea Goodwin
Diane Freedman
Trans Voices
Performers...
Robert Urban
Chelsea Goodwin
Light Refreshments
The Transgender Day of Remembrance was set aside to memorialize those who were killed due to anti-transgender hatred or prejudice. The event is held in November to honor Rita Hester, whose murder on November 28th, 1998 kicked off the Remembering Our Dead web project and a San Francisco candlelight vigil in 1999. Rita Hester's murder like most anti-transgender murder cases has yet to be solved.
Long Island Transgender Day of Remembrance
Sunday, November 21, 2010
7:30 PM
Temple Sinai of Roslyn
425 Roslyn Road
Roslyn Heights, New York
We will come together as a Community
to remember those who have lost
their lives due to senseless acts of violence.
Speakers...
Rusty Mae Moore
Chelsea Goodwin
Diane Freedman
Trans Voices
Performers...
Robert Urban
Chelsea Goodwin
Light Refreshments
The Transgender Day of Remembrance was set aside to memorialize those who were killed due to anti-transgender hatred or prejudice. The event is held in November to honor Rita Hester, whose murder on November 28th, 1998 kicked off the Remembering Our Dead web project and a San Francisco candlelight vigil in 1999. Rita Hester's murder like most anti-transgender murder cases has yet to be solved.
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