Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Choices


We make choices everyday.

(Boxers, briefs, or panties? Yogurt or bagel? Bra or bra-less? Regular or decaf?)

Some choices are more important than others and some have long-term ramifications.

(Should I be a doctor, a lawyer or a fire chief? Should I marry her, him or it?)

Sometimes our choices backfire and sometimes our choices are just plain wrong and we suffer the consequences, but we are still free to choose whatever we want.

So why can't we choose our gender?

Despite all the scientific evidence to the contrary, the anti-transgender crowd claims that transgenders choose to be transgender just like the anti-gay crowd claims that gays choose to be gay. And according to those crowds, making those choices is wrong.

I am a feminine man. My speech and mannerisms are a bad fit in boy mode, but in girl mode, I am a perfect fit.

I could man up and never wear a dress again, but I chose not to do male drag. So, yes, I made a choice to live authentically and not fit in with the boys.

But what if I was not transgender?

What if I was a guy with no gender issues, who carefully weighed all the options and decided that living my life as a woman was preferable to living my life as a man. And as a result, I chose to live my life as a woman.

What's wrong with that?

I say, "Absolutely nothing."

It is just another choice. Admittedly, it is an big choice with a lot of long-term ramifications, but humans make important choices everyday. That's why God gave us intelligence and free will ― so that we can make choices  like choosing our gender.






Street style, New York City, April 2015
Street style, New York City, April 2015


Source: Pinterest
Charles Demetri

Tuesday, June 9, 2015

Looking in a Gift Horse's Mouth

I mentioned here yesterday that on weekends, I do housework that my ailing spouse is no longer able to do.

In the past, I also mentioned here that my spouse accepts Stana, but like many similar-situated spouses, would be just as happy if Stana never existed.

Out of the blue Saturday, my spouse gifted me a beautiful expensive necklace. It was actually a regift from long forgotten gifter.

When I asked her why she was giving it to me, she responded, "She did not like it and never wore it."
There is a short list of other women she could have gifted and has gifted in the past, so why did she gift me?

I did not pursue it, but I thought about it.

Was it in appreciation for being a weekend housewife?

Was it the Jenner Effect? All the positive publicity from Caitlyn Jenner's transition has caused my spouse to see things (me) differently.

I don't know, but I think it was a step in the right direction and I will cherish her gift and wear it as soon as I can.





Source: ShopBop
Wearing Nicholas







A photo from a recent womanless beauty pageant, note the family resemblance between the two girls on the right. Are they daughter and femulating father or sister and femulating brother?

Monday, June 8, 2015

More Questions

As I mentioned here last month that I participated in Trans*forming the Dialogue, Simmons College’s Online MSW Program’s campaign to promote an educational conversation about the transgender community. By participating, I offered my perspective on what TO ask and what NOT to ask trans*people.

To promote all of the responses the campaign has received so far, they published a list of direct links to each response in their First Voices Roundup

They will continue to add on to the roundup through June as more bloggers, experts, editors in the transcommunity weigh in, so please pass the questions & intro along to your contacts online! They want to hear from everyone!

Mondays, Mondays

Usually, I compose my Femulate posts the day before they are posted. Then I option Blogger to automatically publish the post shortly after midnight local time (while I am getting my beauty rest).

But lately, Monday's are different. Due to my spouse's worsening health, I have had to take on more of our home's housework. I spend most of my weekends in the housewife role doing the laundry, cleaning the house and buying the groceries in addition to the stuff I always did like maintaining the nest, fixing what's broke, cutting the lawn, etcetera, etcetera.

As a result, I have little time and/or I am too tired to compose Monday's post (or even answer emails) during the weekend. So I have been composing my Monday posts early Monday mornings before I start work. Instead of publishing posts around midnight, I publish them as soon as I am done; "Hot off the press," as they used to say, which can be anywhere between 8 and 10 AM Eastern time Monday. 

And so it goes!






Source: ShopBop
Wearing O'2nd






Actor Jeffrey Lico
Actor Jeffrey Licon (left) in a 2009 episode of television's The Closer

Friday, June 5, 2015

Breakthrough

By Monica M


Today's guest post by Monica can be considered a follow-up to the series of posts that began here in April 2014. 

I recently went to SF and then on to Denver to go to Art of Feminine Presence (AFP) Training.

This was my fourth time going to AFP. I am still amazed that our community has not taken to this; it really is the best way I have found for getting in touch with my feminine essence.

My companion for the training was my friend and well known voice coach Kathe Perez

I was surrounded for six days by loving caring and sympathetic cisgender woman who treated me as one of their own.

I have a theory, if you want to learn Japanese, you do not go to Japan and hang around with Americans. Similarly, if you want to get in touch with you feminine essence, hanging around with cisgender women is likely to be more productive than hanging around with transwomen. I am just saying! Get outside your comfort zone and you will be amazed at what you can achieve and learn!

Before my recent trip to SF and Denver, I was a nervous. Despite being out in public (a couple of times a year) for five years, I was always on the lookout for people watching me. I cringed internally when people looked at me a second time or gave me anything more than a cursory glance.

Being in my womb space (as we call it in AFP – power centre in Feminine Power, etc... I do a lot of these feminine courses… LOL!) lessened the discomfort, but did not eliminate it.

When in SF, I went for laser treatment on my beard and was in guy mode for that time. Going to and from the clinic, I noticed (for the first time – how dumb is that?) that people look at me and everybody else, no matter how they are presenting. People are curious and enjoy looking at others. Had I been in girl mode, I would have flinched and been upset. I realised then that it is my response that was causing the problem.

This led me to thinking that I was setting the bar too high for myself. I was setting being a cisgender woman as the target and when I failed, I was getting upset and depressed. The realisation struck me that no matter what, I cannot be a cisgender woman. My hands are too big, my feet are too big and my facial structure is wrong. In short, my anatomy and my history are wrong. Hence, the target is not really achievable: even with hormones and surgery I will still fall short.

I have to accept that I came to this place of the feminine through a different route than cisgender women. That does not make me any less of a woman, just a different sort of a woman. I am a transgender woman and need to accept that as my reality. Because no one person encompasses all of the feminine – the feminine being too big – my part of the feminine is as good as anybody else’s. I am different but equal!

I realised that the best I can be is a transgender woman. I have to accept that as the foundation of my existence. At this realisation, a huge weight fell off my shoulders – why has it taken me so long to see this?! I could now set my target as being the best transgender woman that I could be. This, at least, was an achievable target and I could get into just being myself and enjoying being a transgender woman. I love being the woman I am; I do not know why I am like this, but I know it feels like home to me.

 At the AFP event in Denver, I normally would plague my sisters for feedback on where I was falling short in my presentation as a cisgender woman. This time, I don’t believe I asked even one person.

When I went to the Denver art museum with my friend Leli, people looked at me, but it just did not bother me. I just enjoyed being the woman I am.

On the last night in Denver, when I came back to the hotel, the bar was surrounded by men – a fireman's convention! A couple of weeks ago, I would have turned tail and headed for my room. This time, I just got into my womb space, touched base with enjoying myself as the woman I am and strode confidently up to the bar and ordered a glass of pinot noir. The barman knew I was different as he had seen me there a few times before, I did not care. I did the best I could and enjoyed it. Nobody even looked at me! I took my wine back to my room and toasted my new found joy!

How this applies to my project of finding the gift of being transgender, I am not sure, but I will keep on looking!

I posted the above on my Facebook page and Don Hajicek, a professional photographer who has taken the best shots of me, the ones that really show my femininity commented, as follows:

I can tell you from my perspective, what makes a woman a woman has zero to do with facial hair or jawline or proficiency with makeup. The essence is never external, which is why I urge my clients to forgo professional hair and makeup before a session. The feminine simply cannot be painted on or curled and cut. I learned a valuable lesson from you, my friend, and that is that our gender isn't proclaimed by the doctor who delivers us. It's more essential even than that. It's the soul. It's what shows up when we stop pretending. That's the definition of authenticity and I honor and applaud you for your authenticity and for your immense courage. You are an exceptional human and an exceptional role model for every person who wishes to live in their truth and their power. It was honor to work with you last year, and it continues to be an honor to have you in the tribe. smile emoticon

He was the only male that responded. The other 13 replies were from my AFP sisters telling me how they supported me and how me, just being my female self, was a great inspiration to them.

What more could a transgender woman ask for? If I can do it. so can you. I am nothing special, I can assure you!





Source: HauteLook
Wearing Young, Fabulous & Broke





Source: Lorelei Erisis
Lorelei Erisis, professional transwoman, performer, filmmaker and former
Miss Trans New England, chatting with me at last year's True Colors Conference

Thursday, June 4, 2015

Shorts

On Caitlyn Jenner

Smile, Caitlyn, smile!

I have not seen many post-transition photos of Caitlyn, but I have yet to see one in which she is smiling. She's got the world on a string and she should show it by smiling like the lady on the right!

On Mike Huckabee

In case you missed it, the presidential wannabee said, "I wish that someone told me that when I was in high school that I could have felt like a woman when it came time to take showers in PE. I’m pretty sure that I would have found my feminine side and said, 'Coach, I think I'd rather shower with the girls today.'"

Yeah, that's the kind of ethical thinking we need in Washington!

But out of the mouth of boobs...

Huckabee's joke unintentionally reveals the real heart of the bathroom issue. It is not transwomen who are the problem, it's ciSgender men who are the problem.

On Fashion

I stock up on leggings, jeggings and skinny jeans, and now wide-leg pants are becoming fashionable again!

There is one advantage to being an old: I have been around long enough to see fashions come and go and come back again. And If I dig in my closet deep enough, I probably have something old that is new again.






Source: Boston Proper
Wearing Boston Proper






The Whitest Kids U' Know
Comedian Zach Cregger (right) in television's The Whitest Kids U' Know (2011)

Wednesday, June 3, 2015

March 1962

Source: Rhonda Williama
Rhonda Williama

By Rhonda Williams


Today's post is written by regular Femulate reader and occasional Femulate contributor, Rhonda Williams.

March 1962, was a time when an important awakening occurred for me. Although born a boy and a very normal 14 year-old acting boy, I knew that deep inside me I was different. I loved my mother’s beautiful shoes. I preferred the company of girls at a time when most boys called them icky. I would go to bed at night thinking how wonderful it would be to wake up the next morning a girl. I loved the woman’s section of the Sears’ catalog and studied it at every opportunity. I remember, oh so well, the beautiful red dress my cousin wore one Sunday singing in the church choir. Oh, what I would have given to look like she did – maybe be her. Yes, different, but I did not know the depth or that my feeling had a name.

Why March 1962?

I ran with a little older group of boys from my neighborhood and they knew about a magazine called Sexology. It pretended to be scientific with doctors contributing scholarly articles about sex. Remember these were the dark ages of sex education so this addressed notions not talked about in polite company or any company.

As we passed Sexology around the car and read it, I had my life-informing moment. In an article Dr. Virginia Prince wrote entitled “166 Men in Dresses,” she wrote about her Transvestia magazine and transvestism, a term I had never heard of, much less associate myself. I was not even sure how to pronounce it, but saw myself there. A great weight was lifted. I was not the only one – there was this man called Virginia and me! I felt this inclination was so odd that I had to be the only person on the planet that felt this way.

There was no Internet, no on-line bulletin boards, no AOL and sex was barely mentioned. Certainly, the concept of a boy/man wanting to present as a woman could not be discussed or even hinted. The magazine Sexology was sold from under the counter and how my friends knew about it, I do not know. But, wow! And double Wow!

I went about the process of growing up knowing that transvestism or as we know it now, being transgender, would need to be dealt with, but, that came later.

So we have come a long way, baby. Caitlyn Jenner is on the front cover of the mainstream publication, Vanity Fair.

Thank you Virginia for opening the door of enlightenment for me. We are yet to see how the Caitlyn Jenner reality circus will play out, but I hope this will be an awakening for many, as was my 1962 moment.

Transgender now has a face. A tentative “Thank you, Caitlyn.”





Source: Madeleine
Wearing Madeleine





Watching SNL reruns on VH1, my transradar went off during a commercial for an upcoming VH1 show featuring a variety of rock performers. As the announcer rattled off the performers who will appear, short video clips of those performers appeared on the screen and I noticed that one of the performers, Ezra Furman, was wearing a dress.

Using Google, I discovered that Ezra is a rock performer who occasionally wears female attire. Google turned up photos of Ezra performing on stage in a dress and also pointed to a music video for his song "Restless Year," where he really gets femmed up. 

Here is the link to the video  I think you will enjoy it.

Tuesday, June 2, 2015

Watch the Birdie!

Hey Stana,

Have you ever considered a segment on self-photography?  You do an awesome job!

Suz


I take photos of myself nearly every time I present as a woman. I do it for two reasons:
  • To feed this blog. (The blog is hungry for photos and it must be fed.)
  • To see if the outfit I am wearing is good, bad, or ugly. (Photos are more revealing than a mirror. What I see in the mirror often looks different in a photograph. Photographing my fashion faux pas allows me to make adjustments, for example, put on a girdle so I don’t look so fat.)
Self photography is an art. I probably discard 4 out of 5 of the self-photos I take because there is something technically wrong with them (usually related to focus, framing, lighting, or worse, because I look fat).

Lately, I have been using my iPhone 5 for most of my self-photography. The quality of the iPhone 5 photos is very good in my opinion (good enough for me) and it is hard to beat the convenience.

The only problem is that the Camera app bundled with the iPhone does not have a self-timer and girls like us can’t live without self-timers! So I obtained other camera apps (Top Camera and Camera+) that do include the self-timer function. The former costs $3, the latter $2. And to do a self-timed selfie right. I also bought a small tripod ($4) that is designed to hold the iPhone while I get ready for my close-up.

I also use  a Canon PowerShot SD940 IS digital camera. It is full-featured (including a self-timer), takes excellent photos, and I thought it was the cat's meow until I started taking photos with my iPhone. Comparing photos taken during the same photoshoot with the Canon and the iPhone, I'd say that the results compare favorably. However, since I always have the iPhone in my purse, it is my go-to camera.

That covers the hardware, but what about the software, that is, the model in my selfies?

I learned that my best photos are ones in which I smile.

Over the years, I have seen thousands of photos of transgirls and I can never understand why some girls look so unhappy in their photos. They are living their dream although sometimes only momentarily and they should be very happy about it, yet some of them look like they just downed a spoonful of castor oil!

So, smile and smile naturally, not in a forced manner. I used to have a forced smile in my photos, but I worked on it and now my smiles look natural and the results are much better!

I am also becoming more adept at posing for my photos.
  • I tilt my chin up slightly and extend my neck forward to avoid the double chin.
  • Instead of a straight-on shot, I turn my shoulders slightly to the left or right. And pose with one leg in front of the other, for example, by crossing my legs at the ankle.
  • With legs crossed, sometimes I will put one hand on my hip. This elbow jut pose results in a ladylike ballerina effect.
  • To accentuate my legs, I thrust one hip to the side, stretch out my opposing leg as far as it will go, and point my toes.
Taking selfies as you pose in a mirror is tricky.
  • For starters, shut off the flash, otherwise your selfie will be nothing but flash and that is not the result you want unless you are Barry Allen.
  • Take mirror selfies while looking at your reflection in the mirror rather than looking at the trigger button on your smart phone. This is simple with the iPhone, because you can shoot a photo by clicking one of the iPhone's volume buttons, which is a lot easier than trying to click the virtual trigger button on the iPhone's screen.
  • Before showing off your mirror selfies, use photo editing software to flip the image horizontally so that you look natural and not the opposite, which is what a mirror displays.
I am a work in progress and so is my self-photography, but practice, practice, practice and someday my photos will do justice to a complete woman.






Source: Boston Proper
Wearing Boston Proper






Comedian Darren Trumeter (right) in television's The Whitest Kids U' Know (circa 2010)

Monday, June 1, 2015

Making Water

"Transgender status has been all over the news lately. We (The National Law Review - ed.) have covered the various cases that have addressed transgender discrimination in lawsuits brought by the EEOC (Equal Employment Opportunity Commission - ed.) as well as individuals since late 2014."

"Now the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has decided to get in on the action by entering into an agreement with the National Center for Transgender Equality (NCTE) to 'provide NCTE affiliates and others with information and resources to help foster safer and more healthful American workplaces.' One of the primary focuses of the agreement is the question of restroom access for transgender workers."

Read the rest of the story from The National Law Review


Source: Dior
Wearing Dior







Singer Paul Dennis
Singer Paul Dennis femulating singer Karády Catherine Sztárban on Hungarian television.