Wearing Boston Proper |
Tracy Jordan femulates Star Jones on Saturday Night Live. |
I received a number of emails about a study that claims that wearing high heels may be good for you. According to the study, women and men who wore the heels the most became better, more efficient walkers.
Meg Winters kindly gifted us the Washington Post article so that non-subscribers can read the it, too. Click here to read it.
30 Million!
Monday morning, the visitor count for this blog hit 30,000,000! Wow!
Wearing Paige |
Frankie Thomas femulating as a nurse in the 1938 film Nancy Drew, Detective. |
• Going out solo among civilians to do outreach
• Going out solo among civilians to “safe” locations (gay bars, Pride events, etc.)
Wearing Elly Bazar |
Sally asked in a comment, “Stana, I have a question about your ‘Femulate Her’ section. How many of the girls in this section have actually been boys femulating? Any of them?”
My reply was “As far as I know, none of the girls in the Femulate Her section were femulating boys.”
I added, “The purpose of the Femulate Her section is to provide examples of cisgender women that boys can try to emulate/femulate.”
I am repeating this exchange here because not everybody reads the Comments especially since they may appear days or weeks after the original post. Also because if Sally asked, then there may be other readers who wondered the same thing.
Femulate Her is intended to serve as an inspiration for emulators like you and me. We will probably never come close to matching the images posted in the Femulate Her section, but we can try.
Wearing Ramy Brook |
Dwight Ewell femulating in the 2002 film The Guru. |
In my previous post, I discussed crossdressing fathers’ relationship with their sons. I do not have a son, so my thoughts on the matter were speculative. However, I do have a daughter, so I can write about daughters with some authority.
Peter Alexander femulating in the 1961 Austrian film Die Abenteuer des Grafen Bobby. |
When we were pregnant, I hoped our child would be female because I thought that since I was a feminine male, I would be a poor role model if our child was male.
As it turned out, our child was female, which was a big relief. (She also turned out to be my biggest supporter.)
If our child was male, I am sure that having a feminine father would have some effect on his life. How much of an effect, I’ll never know.
Would having a father who had feminine mannerisms cause the boy to have feminine mannerisms?
Are (my) feminine mannerisms natural or nurtured?
My father was not feminine, but he was not around much during my early years. However, my mother was very present during those years and if I was going to take after anyone, it seems that I would take after the parent who was present, not absent.
My theoretical son would have a double whammy – both his parents were feminine, so if nurturing was the source of femininity, then my son would potentially be even more feminine than I am.
Feminine mannerisms are one thing, but what would be the effect of having a father who was feminine and who also presented as a woman at the drop of a chapeau?
Goddess only knows.
And if my son turned out to be feminine – like father, like son – would it be the end of the world?
You girls out there who have sons are better able to answer these questions than I. So please have at it by leaving Comments to this post.
Wearing Boston Proper |
Dave Foley |