📚 Megathread Trannies posting their L's Online - Heckin valid people posting their funny misfortunes on the internet

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sir!.webp
 
Pooner's really shouldn't be surprised by now that many in their community want nothing to do with women pretending to be "oppressors" aka men
Well, she’s not sure how she’s “queer,” so that’s a bad start. Then she complains about people saying that heckin’ valid dudes who present exactly like women are in fact just women. So basically she’s just another straight girl who wants a label.

I’ll laugh at troons with everyone else, but at least they’re prepared to actually walk the walk. I can’t stand these middle class white chicks looking for a minority.
Soap is against nature! :P


Any Trekkies here? :lit:

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Reddit -- Archive

Only 2 hours since posting and already 68 comments.
Lots of trans friendly fan theoretical discussion.
But also lots like this:
Really? Most Star Trek subreddits seem to be fine with it. I think this is that troon thing where they find a single person who disagrees and declare the whole place to be a Nazi stronghold.

I can't imagine how hard it is for them when half the adults around them are in on the tranny grift too. Adults are supposed to be the ones protecting them, instead they're the ones grooming them and punishing them when they push back on this bullshit.
Since when did kids want to do what adults tell them? You can tell kids not to do literally life-threatening stuff and they’ll do it for the sake of rebellion. It was naive of these people to think they’d somehow cracked the code to make the kids think they’re cool.
 
It's delicious watching them slowly realize their censored fascist utopia where wrongthink is quickly swept up and wrongthinkers banned doesn't actually reflect reality
Reminds me when twitter bots got purged and people suddenly realized of their 1000s of followers only a few remained, and they were just interacting with bots. Troons don't understand how sick people are of them, because they live in a manufactured world where any wrongspeak gets purged.
 
On the one hand ...
Really? Most Star Trek subreddits seem to be fine with it. I think this is that troon thing where they find a single person who disagrees and declare the whole place to be a Nazi stronghold.
Notice how many in the comments of that thread feel the same way.
Even ResetEra style moderation is not enough.
They want "safe spaces" where they can remain unaware of opposition. 8)

Oh, you just know that the Nerds are over what HRT did to their hobby.
Troons and fandoms, am I right? :P
 
Notice how many in the comments of that thread feel the same way.
Even ResetEra style moderation is not enough.
They want "safe spaces" where they can remain unaware of opposition. 8)
It's not enough for them to have their own hugboxes in the aforementioned trans subreddits. No, they have to shit up and infect everywhere they spread like a plague.
 
Even ResetEra style moderation is not enough.
They want "safe spaces" where they can remain unaware of opposition. 8)
I’m going to give credit to ReeesetEra because even if they ban people for ridiculous reasons, they are fully transparent about it. You can clearly see the reason someone got banned and how long. It allows us to laugh at their forum and the retarded bans.

Reddit mods could never do this, and they will ALWAYS make sure to erase all the heckin’ unwholesome messages so nobody can tell that they’re shutting down all opposition. In a sense, the beauty of ResetEra is the jannies are too retarded to not make it obvious what they are doing.
 
This one's a two-for-one special: a closeted troon confides in his brother allegedly "very obvious clues" about his impending transition and his brother, at first, says that he loves him no matter what (though gently tries to turn him away from joining the League of Ledge-Jumpers). Because his brother did not properly tongue his asshole deeply enough, OP decides to slowly excommunicate the brother, leading to a fiery confrontation over a video call that renders OP in fear of his life. I'll be keeping an eye on this story, because it sounds very histrionic and hysterical!
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Life Sucks

I keep getting more resentful and envious of cis women every day and it’s gotten to the point where people ask me things and I’m mute because I hate my voice so much, which makes me seem like the biggest asshole. I wish I were born a woman, but I also mask this by acting as a super stoic man that’s never emotional to anything and I don’t know what tf I am other than I’m miserable doing it. Two days ago, I also confessed very obvious clues to my cis older brother, but he’s so fucking oblivious and won’t take the hint, it’s so frustrating. Then he told me he’ll love me no matter what, yet was discouraging me to take HRT, since women have a lot of the traits I don’t like associated with men. I guess it’s my fault for not coming out raw since I’m a coward, but my issue is not cosmetic, I want to be a woman straight up. I wanted to do this since I’m approaching 20, but if my brother who is more empathetic than I am discourages me, I’m afraid I’ll never be on HRT, and I’ll be a dead and confused son/brother/man/dad whatever else.
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I’m scared out of my life rn

I am (20AMAB) and I am still closeted (MTF). I’m scared and don’t know what to do right now. This is my explanation. A month or two ago, I started dropping hints at my older brother that I want to be a woman, and he didn’t understand what I was talking about. For context, I made a previous post sharing this in detail https://www.reddit.com/r/MtF/s/pCdCrS5dc5. Long story short, he appeared slightly transphobic, and I realized that I should start cutting off from him more. Ever since, I’ve been happier in my life. Although I’m still closeted, I enjoy being myself the days that I’m alone, especially since we live in different cities. My mom doesn’t know about this, and she repeatedly tells me to talk to him, and I always tell her that I’ll get to it, but I don’t. Well today, she called me over and by surprise my brother was in a video-call with her, and I realized too late. He had a look of pure-hatred with red eyes, and looked like he wanted to kill me. I’ve never seen him so angry in my life. He was swearing at me for over a minute, and I only awkwardly told him, sorry, I’ve just been working on myself, and he told me to “eat shit”. Now I’m locked in my room not knowing what to do with him. Any ideas?
A teenage TiM's conversation with his mother doesn't go as he hopes it would because she's too well-versed in grooming materials to believe that he's anything but another victim of the trans menace. He somehow believes that the emotional highs of writing down "I am a girl" constitutes strong enough evidence to convince Ma and Pa to let him get the penile equivalent of a lobotomy, but they remain steadfast in believing scientific evidence over borderline religious delusion and refuse to participate in his own self-destruction.
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I talked with my mom /help/rant

So I was talking with my mom about my being trans and that was just a really invalidating conversation. She brought up every talking point in the book. She says she read most of the gender dysphoria bible but has also fundamentally misunderstood the point and now she thinks it's propaganda to make people think they're trans. And I brought up how I always had an interest in being perceived girly in various ways I just didn't know why yet and she just said it's not enough examples. And like. How I "might regret it" and a bunch of stories about people who transitioned and then found out they weren't trans. And like. Idk I just feel bad now cuz like. I'm trans. No cis person would feel the level of joy I do when writing down "I am a girl" But they aren't seeing it they think I rushed it. Or assumed I'm trans and just looked for evidence to prove it BUT I DIDNT!!! And I don't know what to do!! Because I want to transition and I want to look feminine and be femme and feel femme but makeup isn't gonna cut it. Worst case at 18 I'll go for it, But I want then to support me through the lows And be there for my highs But that can't happen if they won't accept that I am actually trans. And not just cherry picking. They want me to think about it more and I tried to explain to them that no matter how much I think about it it won't change my conclusion. I identify with the experiences of other trans people. I enjoy being seen as a girl. Being refered to as a girl makes me feel good. I did the stained glass women thing. But they think that isn't scientific enough but they won't see it. What do I do? Sorry for the rant tho.
After 10 years of putting up with her niece's gender bullshit, a based aunt pulls a Nancy Mace and repeats the wretched and dreadful ~T-slur!~ to mock a pooner, who takes it very personally despite the fact that she wasn't even directly in the firing line of such an insult. She ends her post with a wet-eyed declaration: "I don't feel like seeing her again"; she doesn't seem to realize this may have been Auntie's intention all along.
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My aunt said “she looks like a tranny” and it felt personal

Idk why I got so upset after that, but I did. We were casually talking about some stuff and my cousin showed her a picture of somebody and beside him there was this cis woman, she said “she looks like a tranny”, I said to her to not use this word, especially in a derogatory way, she replied with a smile and saying that she doesn’t care and said it again. Tbh after that I just left. It hurt me, a lot. I felt as if it was said to me. She never said anything about me or my transition and it’s been 10+ years, never had any problems with my name and pronouns. It just caught me completely off guard. I don’t feel like seeing her again.
Rev your engines, Kiwis, because a new slur for TiFs just dropped: "Teemies", which references the bullshit categorization of those who are 'transmisogyny exempt'/TME (i.e., females and normal men) and 'transmisogyny affected'/TMA (i.e., trannies). The teemie in question is deeply affronted by being boiled down to her body like this by misogynist crossdressers but still refuses to name rapist men for being rapist men, thus continuing to maintain the troonatic lockstep as is required by her tribe.
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why is hating on trans men so normalized in queer spaces?

there was a situation recently on tumblr where a blog run by a trans woman was reported by a terf, and immediately people started blaming transmasculine people for it?? calling us "teemies" (as in tme, transmisogyny exempt, reducing us to our genitals) and how sensitive we are and how we all hate trans women, but the transfem in question had her blog restored and theres tons of stuff about hating trans men and thinking we should all be forcibly femininized, and none of this is tagged as dysphoria inducing! what the fuck! i didnt choose to be born like this, and i didnt choose my identity. why is hating on people like us normalized now? they are trying to kill us actively!!
A good ol' boy tranner has a spat with his father, who sounds like a real sleaze and scumbag in his own right, over his transition goals. It's worth noting here that he hates his father moreso for being a transphobe than for cheating on his mother, who he describes as being his "number 1 fan and supporter." Another situation where an entire family tree could stand to be uprooted!
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So Its Been A Pretty Freaking Awful Day

So I started my transition journey not even a month or two ago. Had to have been a month when I came out.....vocal training just started for me. Thats already causing me some dysphoria cause I cant break thru the stupid nasally voice I have to make a proper sentence. Anyway, thats not my gripe. My "father" called up my grandfather today and was like "(deadname) doesnt wanna talk to me)" and I had to go over to his house to pick up some work supplies (we live on a big family farm, different day) and my grandfather asks, "why arent you talking to your dad" well let me tell you something reader, my grandfather is the ONLY PERSON we have all UNANIMOUSLY decided shouldnt know about my transition because of his heart and emotional conditions and advanced age. So I give it a pass in my book. I dont take offense I just let it slide JUST FOR HIM THOUGH. But, anyway. What was I supposed to tell him? "Oh yea Im trans and my "father" doesnt wanna be respectful of my true nature?" no....I cant do that. Again, dont want to unalive the ol' fella. So I do the worst thing possible I shrug my shoulders and get my stuff and walk out of the house EMBARESSED. For context, when I came out to my "father" he didnt contact me for nearly a month by the time I decided to block him completely. Mind you in the past 5 years hes already destroyed my mothers images of what love is. Cheated on her THEN told her he wanted the divorce and now that I have told him I am trans he wants to disrespect me. Well, frankly, Im sick of it. He demands respect from everyone wether verbally or not. Its like ingrained into his actions and words n stuff. What gets me though is the blatant OUTRIGHT IGNORANCE towards the Trans community. He will purposely misgender, deadname, and everything else AND THEN LAUGH ABOUT IT. But tonight he wants to contact me. I set up a strict set of terms and conditions and we have a small brief conversation. AT THE END OF THE CONVERSATION AFTER HAVING SAID THAT HE LOVES ME AND WANTS TO STAY CONNECTED TO ME ETC ETC ETC HE SAYS "I love you. Goodnight son.".........I have never felt so defeated, dysphoric, embarrassed and like 1000 other things. I should just left him blocked. I told my Momma (notice how theres no quotes? Yea shes like my number 1 fan and supporter) I should have just blocked him until the day he croaked and been nice enough to have attended the service and walked away without saying a word.......is that harsh? Maybe. Am I tired of being treated like crap......you betcha......
Sorry about the long run around there. I had to explain to get to the reason why I wish for my fist to be applied to his cranial region.
A MTF is upset that a gal pal on Facebook doesn't want to play handmaiden beyond leaving some supportive comments here and there, and his snide reaction is so off-putting that even other troons tell him he was in the wrong. For funzies, I'm including some of the snarky things that other dress-wearing Alices fired back at him, because I love me some cannibalism!
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Nothing nakes me feel more male than having trans supportive women treat me like a creep or perv when I was just trying to connect as ladies.

Messaged an old friend on facebook from back in high school days who had recently been basically a cheerleader on all my hrt progress selfies ("rocking that red girl") wanting to reconnect and swap updated phone numbers and they blocked me and messaged my friends trying to drive a wedge by warning them i was being "icky".
after a few "hi, how have things been..." messages i sent this:
I rarely use facebook. [Cell Number]. Text me sometime. I need lady friends. [Mutual Best friend] doesnt have a gender anymore so they dont really count.
Edit: for the record, im not solution oriented nor looking for advice, or for people to justify or make excuses for somebody treating me like a creepy male. If thats the kind of comment you want to leave please just downvote and sit this one out. Im looking for emotional support. Thats why i tagged this "venting"
[–] gramerjen
Can't talk for certain without knowing the full context, but saying "I need lady friends" does sound creepy when it's coming from someone you interact on a surface level
I dont think what you said in essence was wrong, but i think you need to work on your communication skills. Talk to your friends and explain the situation. If they are truly your friends, they would be understanding of the situation.

[OP] monarchmra
How the fuck can you read that as creepy without reading me as male?

[–] gramerjen
You're putting words in my mouth, I never said anything about only men being creepy in this situation.
You're reducing her to her gender by saying, "I want to be friends with you cause you're a woman," which is wrong on so many levels. You could have easily said something like, "Hey, it's been a long time since we last saw each other. How's everything going." And start from there to build a friendship, and then you can share contacts with each other later. At no point their gender be the conversation when you're trying to be friends with someone.
Your method was like a lite version of a chaser asking your number cause you're trans.

-

[–] artemis3030
Fwiw, the message you shared (on its face, without addl context) reads as kinda harsh. It reads as a bit demanding, which might come off as “male”, esp vis a vis positioning your “need” with an imperative (“text me”).
Compared with your writing in the post, your fb message reads as clipped, brusque, a little too cool for school. And that line about someone not having a gender and not counting?? So, I can understand why she might react poorly.
That said, she might also just be being shitty. A lot of people support trans women in the abstract but still treat the trans women they know as weirdo men.
Takeaways: could be worth going out of your way to express yourself with more generosity and obvious kindness, but also for some people it might not matter anyway

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[OP] monarchmra
Bonus points, coming into this subreddit and seeing people shit talk, generalize, and stereotype men and make excuses for being shitty towards men amabs, all highly upvoted while any equality minded people get downvoted for pushing back against it.
Like i needed to see essentialism in my safe space after dealing with that.
=/ fml
 
Always funny to see when these people get decent advice from other trannies or their supporters and immediately lash out at them. Really shows their narcissism well.
 
I can't imagine how hard it is for them when half the adults around them are in on the tranny grift too. Adults are supposed to be the ones protecting them, instead they're the ones grooming them and punishing them when they push back on this bullshit. Just look at what happened to those boys in Virginia who were having a PRIVATE conversation in a locker room about how weird it is that a girl is in there. It's total lunacy.
Aw man, this is my first time hearing about this one
 
Aw man, this is my first time hearing about this one
Fuck, I just read the article about that one and now I'm depressed:

"The incident is not the first to draw national on LCPS. It made national headlines in 2021 when a father was arrested and hauled out of a board meeting for speaking out about the sexual assault of his daughter by a trans student at a local school."

Someone in power there has a troon kid, I guarantee.
 
I think this is most troons actual problem. If these people actually looked like women, acted like women and sounded like women, there'd probably be a larger percent of the male population that would be interested in dating them in this current disgusting society. A lot of men would go and fuck a ladyboy in Thailand because apart from the voice, they do present themselves as more of a woman and act like a woman, but they never claim to be a woman. They believe they are ladyboys, a distinct "gender" that doesn't encroach on anyone else's lives to make it a misery.

It's not a transphobic or homosexual issue, it's because you're a fucking Frankenstein-esque monster. Maybe if you stopped gooning, learned how to do real makeup, cut off your legs, get jaw and shoulder surgery and lost all the weight, you'd be a much more datable man... ehhh "woman". Honestly, when does this nightmare end?
I think a big reason why it took so long to get pushback on trannies is because TV shows, they were always played by female actors. Law and Order, Med dramas, comedies, it was always a female actor. Really trying to sell the illusion of "they're just like women!!"

Does any remember that episode of SVU with the big twist being the female victim was actually a man and that's why he got assaulted. Stupid as it is, that was most normies exposure to trannies for the better part of a decade.


Only very recently have I seen some shows use actual men. But the damage is done the public is realising now "just like any other woman" couldn't be further from the case.
 
This particular quote from @Magic Pickle recent collection of tranny cope stuck out to me.
I did the stained glass women thing.
Naturally I looked up this up, and I found this tranny substack - Stained Glass Woman.
Sorting through the top articles lead me to this - How To Figure Out If You're Trans

So, you think you might, maybe, possibly be trans, huh?

Yeah. Yeah, that’s scary as hell, isn’t it?

When I was questioning, I told my wife that it felt like I was hurtling through space in a spacesuit with no visor, tumbling and completely out of control. No sense of up or down, left or right, no way to know where I was going, just a sense of incredible momentum.

I want to offer you a little help here. Maybe you’ve looked through some other guides to questioning your gender, and things just haven’t felt like a good fit to you… and yet, this question just won’t go away. That’s okay. I’m going to try to strip all the interfering stuff away, and keep things as simple as humanly possible. I’m also going to provide sources for everything I can, so you know it’s not just me saying things.

And hang in there. It’s going to be all right. You’re not going to be alone.

I promise.

How do you question your gender​

Many, many, many people get stuck in a rut questioning their gender for months or years, unable to come to an answer. Unfortunately, that happens because a lot of ways of questioning your gender don’t get at the heart of what it means to be trans, only some of the symbolic and stereotypical stuff.

Why? Because gender is weird and complicated. And that’s okay! But gender is everywhere, all around us, and that means there’s a lot of background noise that gets in the way. Most questioning strategies don’t really deal with any of that noise, so it muddies up the answers you get. They tell you to go put on a skirt and ask if you like it, or something like it. Not so helpful if you’ve been a crossdresser for years, is it?

To question your gender productively, you need to be systematic, and you need to clear out as much of that background noise as you can.

One last thing before we get to questioning​

This one’s going to be hard. Are you ready?

Right now, you need to accept—really accept, in your heart—the possibility that you could be transgender.

Anyone could be. It’s frankly pretty common. You’re no different, in this respect, from any other random person on the street that you might run into. Any one of them could be trans. Some of them are. I mean, roll a 20-sided die every time you see someone new. Every time a 20 comes up, that’s a trans person, statistically speaking.

Okay. What’s the question?​

The second spot people get hung up is that they try things, and those things don’t feel right to them. Say, someone who’s wondering if they might be a trans woman tries on a frilly, pink dress, looks in the mirror, and is disappointed. Does that mean they’re not trans? No. It probably just means they don’t like that particular dress. It could be because they’re not trans. It could also be because they’re a trans tomboy, and would much rather be kicking ass in Doc Martens and biker leathers than a dress of any kind. And yes, there are trans guys who love feminine clothes and makeup and all that jazz too.

It’s all just stuff. It doesn’t mean anything.

Author’s note: This section used to include a note about F1nn5ter as an example of a “femboy, cis man,” to quote the original content, who was confident in his gender but enjoyed presenting as a woman. On March 1, 2024, he came out as genderfluid, so that section has been removed.

So here’s the question that you need to answer:

Do you want to be the gender people thought you were when you were born?
Being trans means a person has something called gender incongruence, which is a medical way of saying that they want to be a gender that isn’t their gender assigned at birth. If you’re paying attention, that’s exactly the question I wrote just above. And we need to look for desire—what you want—because wanting to be a gender is what it actually means to be that gender. There’s no difference. They’re the same thing.

But… it’s not really helpful by itself, is it? Like, I knew that question, and it still took me over 35 years to start questioning my gender.

Why do we care about desire?​

Remember Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs? Looks a little something like this:

https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch...b49-4fd2-4b79-a394-dd4ff51e75e9_1371x943.jpeg
Needs are things that we require for our survival, so if it’s a thing on Maslow’s hierarchy, we generally need it to live. There are a few things that vary from person to person—reproduction, for instance, is essential for some of us and absolutely not for others—but these things are the hard requirements for life for the average person.

What you’ve probably learned about Maslow’s Hierarchy is that you can’t deal with stuff higher on the pyramid until you deal with stuff lower on the pyramid. Like, if you don’t have food or water, it doesn’t especially matter to you if you’re at risk for a heart attack. That understanding is correct, but it misses one really important asterisk: the needs higher up on the pyramid don’t just go away because you’re dealing with lower-order needs. They’re still there, eating away at you. Mostly, they’re causing stress to build up.

Stress isn’t just a feeling. Really, no feeling is “just a feeling”—they’re chemical, physiological reactions in your body—but stress in particular comes from the buildup of cortisol and some other chemicals in the tissues of your body. That’s good in a world of fight or flight, because it gets you ready to do those things, but unless the stress can be relieved it can very literally kill you. Stress needs to be flushed out by meeting those needs. And not doing so? It takes almost three years off of your lifespan, making it about 50% as bad for you as smoking, which is the worst possible thing you can do to shorten your lifespan.

So, yeah. It’s really bad. This is why hardworking people just drop dead of stress at fifty or sixty.

Desire is really important here because desire is how our body tells us that we’re not meeting a need. Think about the last time you were thirsty—you had an unmet need for water. You desired water. And if you didn’t get some, the desire just got stronger and stronger until you had to do something about it. Desire that doesn’t go away, in other words, is how our body tells us that we have a need that we’re not meeting.

You’re probably wondering right about now how all this relates to you maybe being trans, right? Well, check out the middle level of the pyramid—love and belonging. All of those specific needs fall under the umbrella of ‘authentic living,’ because living honestly and openly as yourself is the first, most important step to having deep friendships, intimate relationships, and stuff like that. You really can’t have those things if you’re living a lie, can you? Which means that a trans person who’s living in the closet, whether they know they’re living in the closet or not, can’t meet these needs. That’s why the question we talked about earlier—whether you want to be the gender people thought you were when you were born—is important. Cisgender people want to be their gender. They have a need, and it’s met.

This is why trans people come out, whether we transition or not. It’s not us trying to be special or brave or what have you. It’s us trying to meet the needs we need to meet in order to survive.

And if you’ve got this question, this desire, that just won’t go away? It might be you just trying to survive too.

Let’s science the shit out of this!​

The cool thing about all this is that if feelings and needs are real, physical, chemical reactions in your body, that all of this is science. Science is cool!

The cool thing about the question we’re trying to answer—whether or not you want to be the gender people thought you were when you were born—is that it’s an investigative question, which just means that it’s a testable, specific question with possible answers that don’t overlap. That means we’re already in the middle of the scientific method. So, that means that we can just follow the method through to find an answer.

https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch...14cc-960e-4661-bca8-a3baaa0be0b0_1024x973.png
We have our question. Let’s research the topic area and define our terms!

Defining our terms​

A lot of people get hung up in questioning their gender right here, because there are a near-infinite number of possible genders out there, from binary to nonbinary genders, and even within binary gender there’s a whole lot of possible variations. There’s so many options! How can you know which one you want to be, right?

This is where well-defined terms are really helpful.

Being cisgender means that your gender matches the gender you were assigned when you were born.

Being transgender means that your gender does not match the gender you were assigned when you were born.

The word “match” is really important here. It means equal to, corresponding to—in other words, a perfect fit. So, anyone is cisgender if they’re a 1:1 match to their gender assigned at birth, and anyone is transgender if that’s not the case.

Most people and most guides to questioning your gender get hung up trying to prove to the reader that their gender is this or that trans or nonbinary identity, but science doesn’t work that way, and that’s why so many people can’t make any progress that way. Science can’t prove that a thing is. It can only prove that a thing isn’t, or it can fail to do so. That’s called falsifiability—the ability to disprove a scientific hypothesis.

So, at this point, you’re probably thinking, “but I can’t disprove that I’m any of the almost-infinite varieties of transgender and nonbinary genders out there! There’s too many!”

And you’re right. You can’t.

But whether or not you’re cisgender is falsifiable. That’s just one gender.

Hypothetically speaking​

What we’ve just built here, as part of our research, is the backbone of what’s called a hypothesis. A hypothesis is just a testable, falsifiable assumption about something you’ve observed in the world—in this case, that you might be trans—and which you will attempt to disprove. If you are able to disprove it, then you know the hypothesis was untrue. If you can’t, then the hypothesis holds. And, since we can only falsify a hypothesis—we can’t disprove a negative (in this case, that you’re not cisgender)—the hypothesis we need to test is pretty easy to build:

Hypothesis: You, the reader, are cisgender.
That means that we need to try our best, systematically to show that that hypothesis isn’t true. Because—and again, this is why you needed to accept earlier that you might be trans—the hypothesis that you’re cis and the hypothesis that you’re trans are inherently equal. Neither one is the default. And, if you’re interested, there’s a very, very good essay about this exact thing that you might want to read, either now or later.

We’re not trying to disprove that you’re cis because that’s some kind of standard. We’re doing it because there’s just one thing to disprove.

Because, if your gender isn’t a 1:1 match to your gender assigned at birth, you’re transgender. What your gender is, at that point, is a question for another experiment, but no matter what, if we can falsify that hypothesis, you’re trans.

Designing a gender experiment​

The last area where people get stuck when questioning their gender is in experimentation. The typical advice for experimenting amounts to “go put on some clothes and see how you feel,” which is kind of not really helpful because, again, it’s just stuff. Doesn’t mean anything. And even if it did, “see how you feel” is kind of hopelessly vague, isn’t it?

Any experiment needs controls and variables. Basically, controls are things that are consistent, fixed, and unchanging, so they’re stuff that doesn’t interfere with the results of your experiment. Controls are good because they reduce the number of things you have to think about when you’re looking for results.

Variables? That’s what we’re measuring to find our answers. In this case, we’re going to be measuring your desire—what you want and why—and that has a very important impact on our controls.

When we’re measuring feelings, we’re doing something called qualitative research. You’re probably more familiar with quantitative research, which is all about numbers and values. It’s super useful, but qualitative research is very frequently used as a first form of research, before researchers can perform quantitative research, because qualitative research is really good at figuring out what’s there, as far as peoples’ feelings and perceptions are concerned.

Remember, this is science. We want to keep things focused and simple in each experiment. We can always come back later and do quantitative research to figure out how strong your feelings are once we know what they are.

The variable​

We’re measuring feelings with this experiment. What it means to be trans is that you want to be a gender that isn’t your gender assigned at birth. In turn, that means that whether you’re trans or not is a dependent variable—in other words, what it is depends on an independent variable. The independent variable is what we need to test for.

That independent variable is what you desire.

That means that our experiment needs to test for desire.

When we test for desire, we need to know two things:

  1. What you desire—and it can be multiple, conflicting things.
  2. Why you desire it—the source of the desire
We care about what you want for pretty obvious reasons—if you were assigned male at birth (AMAB) and want to be a girl, that’s a big ol’ clue. We care about why, however, for equally important reasons. Let’s say that you’re AMAB and you desperately don’t want to be trans… because you’re afraid that your parents will be upset if you are. Thing is, that doesn’t actually answer the question, because whether your parents approve of you being trans or not has nothing whatsoever to do with whether you are trans or not. In an experiment, we call that a false negative.

A false negative (or, oppositely, a false positive!) wouldn’t mean that you are or are not trans, just that the test got corrupted and the data’s no good either way. After all, a cis person could (and probably would!) desperately want to be not trans for the exact same reasons a trans person might wish the exact same thing.

Asking why to your what in qualitative research will tell you if the test result is telling you something useful.

Controls​

Since we’re measuring feelings here, and since there are lots of feelings out there, we’re going to get interference from feelings we’re not testing. We talked about one example of how fear can mess up test results a moment ago, but there’s a whole lot of other stuff that will give us bad results. If one or more of those things show up when you’re asking yourself why you’re feeling something, the data isn’t useful, and needs to be set aside.

To control for those interfering feelings, here’s what you need to ignore while you question your gender. They’re what are known as our exclusion criteria:

  1. Fear. Being transgender is neither good nor bad, just like being cisgender is neither good nor bad. Being afraid of being trans is being afraid of the consequences if you are. None of that matters if you aren’t, so it’s nothing but interference when you’re trying to get to a simple, yes-or-no answer as to whether you’re trans or not.
  2. Your feelings about what’s possible with transition, or how hard it is. It’s the same as with fear, in that none of this matters unless you are, but with the added (and incredibly important) part that not all trans people transition.
  3. Your obligations to your family, especially your partner. Just like with fear, this doesn’t and can’t matter until you have an answer to whether you’re trans or not. Besides, there’s a lot of good evidence that being trans is at least partially genetic, so if there’s one trans person in a family, there’s a really good chance that there’s another. Especially if you have kids.
  4. Your employment or living situation. Again, none of this matters until you have an answer.
  5. How you feel about stuff, be it dresses or jewelry or makeup or sports or cars or anything else that’s usually assigned “boy” or “girl.” We talked about this earlier with F1NN5TER—stuff doesn’t matter, in and of itself. There are a million ways to be any given gender.
  6. Your feelings about sex and kink. Yeah, that seemed to come out of nowhere, didn’t it? Don’t worry, we’ll circle back around at the end. The short version is that these don’t matter one way or the other either, and we’ll talk about why a little later on.
  7. Lust or envy. Envy can point really strongly toward a trans identity, but a lot of trans people say that they had a really hard time telling the difference between lust—which has nothing to do with anything—and envy—which does—before they realized they were trans. Since it’s often hard for people to tell the two apart, it’s better to ignore them both.
Just as importantly, there are a few emotions that we want to designate as our inclusion criteria. If a result meets an inclusion criteria, that means it’s pretty much automatically useful data. Here are our inclusion criteria:

  1. When there’s no obvious reason why you feel the way you feel. If you want something for completely inexplicable reasons, that means it’s an expression of pure desire, and pure desire is exactly what we’re measuring!
  2. Hope or longing. Hope is an expression of desire, just placed into the future. Longing is the same thing as hope—it’s just something we don’t believe we can have. Either way, they are expressions of pure desire, which is what we want to measure.
  3. Regret. Regret is desire for something that didn’t happen. If you regret something, it means you wanted, and still want, something different.
  4. Despair. Despair is desire for something we think is flatly impossible. If we feel despair over the belief that a thing is impossible, it means that we do desire it.
So, if we check the causes of our feelings and find an item in our exclusion criteria, we ignore it. If we check them and find one from our inclusion criteria, that’s a valid, useful result.

The test itself​

Go grab a pen and paper, or open a word processing program, so you can take notes.

So that we can have consistent, controlled-for results, I’m going to present you with three scenarios. I want you to imagine yourself in these scenarios. At the end of each scenario, I’m going to ask you a question. Jot down your immediate, emotional, gut-level answer to it, and then jot down why you feel how you feel, to the best of your ability. You can absolutely have multiple answers for each scenario, if you feel multiple things at once.

Once you’re done with all three scenarios, go check what you wrote against the list of inclusion and exclusion criteria. Cross out any answers that mention an exclusion criteria, and circle or highlight any that mention an inclusion criteria.

Afterwards, we’ll talk about understanding the results.

Test time!​

Scenario 1​

Scenario 1 has two versions, depending on whether you were assigned male or female at birth.

Scenario 1—If you were assigned female at birth​

You wake up tomorrow morning and you have the body of a typical guy. You check your ID, and it has a masculine name on it, and it says your gender is M. You closet is filled with a variety of guy’s clothes. You get dressed and head out.

You meet some friends, and they act like you’ve always been this way. You chat about some shared history, and they talk about a fishing trip you went on together in the past, as though that’s the way it’s always been. You hang out, play a little ball for fun, and then part ways.

On your way home, you swing by the grocery store to buy some milk and bread, because you’re running low. As you’re in the checkout line, a guy behind you sees that you’re wearing a jacket for the local sports team and asks if you saw the last game. You didn’t, and and he tells you about a play he things was particularly great. You buy your groceries and head home. Nobody bothers you or hassles you as you do.

When you get home, you find a small box with your feminine name on it. Inside is a note and a small, red button. The note reads:

Push this button to return to the universe where you have a feminine body.
The button’s not going anywhere. You can press it any time you choose, or not press it at all. There’s no hurry to make a choice, but if you press it, it’s a one-way ticket back to your original reality.

What do you do, and why?

Scenario 1—If you were assigned male at birth​

You wake up tomorrow morning and you have the body of a typical woman. You check your ID, and it has a feminine name on it, and it says your gender is F. You closet is filled with a variety of women’s clothes. You get dressed and head out.

You meet some friends, and they act like you’ve always been this way. You chat about some shared history, and they talk about a mutual friend’s recent roller derby game, as though that’s the way it’s always been. You hang out, gab for a while, and then hug and part ways.

On your way home, you swing by the grocery store to buy some milk and bread, because you’re running low. The lady running the checkout compliments your skirt, and you cheerfully tell her it has pockets. The two of you talk for a little bit about where you got it, and she wishes you well as you take your groceries and head home.

When you get home, you find a small box with your masculine name on it. Inside is a note and a small, red button. The note reads:

Push this button to return to the universe where you have a masculine body.
The button’s not going anywhere. You can press it any time you choose, or not press it at all. There’s no hurry to make a choice, but if you press it, it’s a one-way ticket back to your original reality.

What do you do, and why?

Scenario 2​

Scenario 2 has two versions, depending on whether you were assigned male or female at birth. Each should be repeated three times, once with each body type described in the bullet points.

Scenario 2—If you were assigned female at birth​

A magical fairy flies in through your window. She waves her magic wand and poof! You’ve suddenly got

  • a traditionally masculine body, with narrow hips, broad shoulders, and facial hair
  • an androgynous body, with no features that look particularly masculine or feminine
  • a body with a mix of features which are strongly masculine and feminine—maybe breasts and a beard, or curvy hips and a chiseled, flat chest, or any other combination you can imagine
“Oopsie doodle!” the magical fairy says. “You’re not my fairy godchild! I’m so sorry! Would you like me to change you back? Do please hurry, because I’ve got to be going!”

You’ve never seen a fairy before, so you’ll probably never see her again once she leaves. What do you tell her, and why?

Scenario 2—If you were assigned male at birth​

A magical fairy flies in through your window. She waves her magic wand and poof! You’ve suddenly got

  • a traditionally feminine body, with breasts, curvy hips, and no facial hair
  • an androgynous body, with no features that look particularly masculine or feminine
  • a body with a mix of features which are strongly masculine and feminine—maybe breasts and a beard, or curvy hips and a chiseled, flat chest, or any other combination you can imagine
“Oopsie doodle!” the magical fairy says. “You’re not my fairy godchild! I’m so sorry! Would you like me to change you back? Do please hurry, because I’ve got to be going!”

You’ve never seen a fairy before, so you’ll probably never see her again once she leaves. What do you tell her, and why?

Scenario 3​

You’re ninety-two and a half years old and are sitting on the front porch of your home in a rocking chair, cozily nestled underneath a warm blanket. Your partner passed away last year, peacefully, in their sleep. Your kids, if you have any, are all well off, living their own lives, with their kids. You wish they called more often than they do.

You’re watching the sun set and reflecting over the life you’ve lived. You got the job you were supposed to get, lived the life you were supposed to live. You never did anything about the feelings you always had about your gender, and those feelings, those questions never went away.

How does it make you feel that you felt this way your whole life but never did anything about it, and why?

Understanding your results​

Check your answers. If all of your answers got crossed out because of exclusion criteria, try the scenarios again, paying attention to other feelings you feel when you go through them, or design your own scenarios along these lines. If you circled any answers because they met inclusion criteria, focus on them first, and then on any answers that were neither circled nor crossed out.

I’m going to present the meaning of each scenario behind a hyperlinked button. The idea behind this is that, if you need to repeat a scenario, you won’t be at risk for reading the meaning before you redo it, and so that you can focus on each answer one at a time.

One last thing: ONLY YOU CAN KNOW YOUR GENDER. These experiments are meant to give you data so that you can sort through what you want, and why, but only you can know the truth of your heart. There’s no such thing as a definitive answer to any test for gender. Besides, If I, or anyone else, told you that you were, for sure, either cis or trans… would you believe me? Like any other question of identity, your answers need to come from inside you.

Before you click on any result, though, there’s one extra button. Only click on it if you’re hoping, right now, that your response to one or more of the scenarios means that you’re transgender, and that the reason why isn’t one of the exclusion criteria.

When you’re ready, click the meaning of the scenario you want to understand a little better.

I hope I'm trans

Scenario 1 Meanings

Scenario 2 Meanings

Scenario 3 Meanings

Post-test questions​

Why three scenarios when they get at the same sorts of things?​

Simply put? Because people respond differently, in emotional terms, to different situations. Some folks who are really caught up in the churning of the present day, for instance, might be able to see what they want more clearly in hindsight.

Why do so many of the answers amount to “you’re probably some version of trans?”​

Frankly? If you got far enough questioning your gender that you went looking for at least one, and maybe several, guides on how to do it and get an answer, you’re probably trans. The fact that you opened this article at all is, by itself, a pretty important sign that there’s probably something there.

Cis people don’t question their gender like that. For them, it’s kind of the same way you’d imagine what it might be like to be a lamppost: fleeting, and with rapidly-increasing horror if you were forced to really dwell on it.

Why can’t anyone just tell me whether I’m trans or not?​

Because nobody in the world knows you better than you do.

What if I’m not sure?​

That’s normal. Pretty much none of us are 100% sure, because the only way to have that much confidence is to be told when you’re little by someone you trust with all your heart. As soon as you realize—really accept—that a person’s gender assigned at birth doesn’t have to be their gender, you’ll never be 100% certain again, whether you’re trans or cis.

And that’s okay.

Why don’t you talk about gender dysphoria as part of questioning?​

It gives both false positives and false negatives. Not all trans people experience gender dysphoria, but more importantly, cisgender people can feel gender dysphoria too. When cisgender women has their breasts removed as part of breast cancer treatment, for instance, they often feel dysphoria at the absence of their breasts, which can only be alleviated by reconstructive breast augmentation.

This is what’s called a confounder, or an independent variable that we’re not measuring. Confounders can really mess with good data, so we have to exclude them from any well-designed experiment.

Wait, why did you exclude anything to do with sex or kink?​

That’s a really big question—and probably a whole article by itself, if I wanted to answer it completely. The shorter version is that sex and kink are confounders, just like dysphoria is.

You’ve heard of Rule 34, right? Anyone can develop a kink about anything, and one part of anything is fantasizing about being another gender. Gender play (don’t google that term if you’re at work or around kids!) is really common. And since anyone includes everyone, that means some people with gender play kinks will be trans. And that’s normal. Healthy, really, just like any consensual kink.

Some people have gender play kinks. Some people are trans. Some people are both trans and have gender play kinks. That means that a gender-y kink can definitely be a sign of a trans identity… or it can mean absolutely nothing. It’s something that each person has to figure out for themselves, and that has to come after they have an answer they know whether they’re trans or cis.

…what if I think I’m trans, after this experiment?​

If you tell me you’re trans, I will believe you.

You will be welcome in our spaces, and if you have questions that you need help finding answers to, or just want to talk to someone about it who’s been there, please do reach out.

You are the one and only expert on who you are.

I believe you.

I've not read more than the first few paragraphs, but it proports to be a scientific method to determine if you're trans. I know some Kiwi's are science nerds, figured you guys might get a laugh out of it.
 
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