Friday, May 4, 2018

Act Naturally

Whenever I recount my biography (like at outreach), I usually mention that as a youngster, I participated in sports (baseball and football) and played "boy games" (cowboys, war, spacemen, etc.). I felt that I was a typical boy and I enjoyed doing "boy things," unlike many of my trans sisters, who as children, hated "boy things" and preferred "girl things."

I also mention in my bio that despite my participation and enjoyment of those boy things, other boys called me names like "sissy," "fairy," "faggot," etc., which indicated to me that I was not necessarily all the boy I thought I was.

This was not just a case of bullies using random offensive names to raise my ire. Even a few of my friends told me that I was not acting like a boy at a 100% level and that I should do something about it.

I wondered if there was something in my mannerisms or speech that caused their reaction? I was not intentionally acting or speaking in an affected manner. Rather, I was speaking and acting in my natural manner, which I did not feel was feminine.

The fact that even friends told me that something was amiss indicated that something really was amiss, but I was clueless. I had no idea what I had to do differently to be more boy-like. So, I continued acting the same way I always acted and if someone called me a name, I hit them with my purse.

Even in high school, college, and law school, I occasionally ran into guys, who commented on my particular flavor of masculinity, but I just shrugged them off and kept on truckin'. By then, I was crossdressing in secret and only coming out en femme for Halloween including an appearance en femme at a Halloween party in law school.

I will never forget a friend of mine at that party telling me that he never realized how feminine my speaking and mannerisms were until he saw me dressed as a woman. He indicated that my female costume was a perfect fit for my normal mannerisms and speech.

After mentioning this story at outreach one time, one of the students confirmed that my mannerisms were feminine and that my friends and acquaintances had been in the ballpark in their estimation of me.

Yet, nothing has changed. I still do not affect a feminine persona. I still act naturally and no differently whether in boy mode or girl mode.

I admit that I do try to walk more like a woman when I am en femme and I talk more softly when I femulate, but most of what you get is the genuine me. And I am not changing a thing.




Source: Metrostyle
Wearing Metrostyle (Source: Metrostyle)




Willie Manders
Professional femulator Willie Manders poses for this postcard from the 1920's.

5 comments:

  1. I guess your singing voice might be a tenor or high baritone if you can speak convincingly like a woman by simply talking softly.

    I can wear men's clothes and still get ma'amed (long hair, DD chest mounds and wide hips). However my speaking voice pitch as a bass is an octave below than that of a mature, older woman so simply speaking softer I would not pass as a woman.

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    1. My singing voice is "Please stop!" LOL

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  2. Julie M ShawMay 04, 2018

    "And I am not changing a thing." And you don't have to, sister. You don't have to.

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    1. It's amusing that I am the only bass in the church choir with my feminine appearance. The other men who look like traditional men are tenors or high baritones.

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    2. As luck would have it...

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