Holly crap I heard binding with an ace bandage is SO bad for your skin. I guess some people still kind of have to do it though, but it's highly discouraged unless you have no other options at the moment.
Unfortunately I have to live in Tennessee until I am at legal age to move out of my parent's house. I've had to live here all my life. There is quite a bit of hate and ignorance here compared to other places. I don't think it's the worst though I am a transman, and right now living in the closet it's almost impossibly hard. Thankfully I only have one and a half more years of high school (jumping through hoops in other words) to go. I want to move to Canada. I hear the people there are very nice.
@TheSnowyice You go, man! :D Rooting for you all the way. Tennessee sounds like a hard place to be for people like us. Personally, I'm a transwoman living in a state that is much more accepting. Actually have Trinidad around the corner. However, no matter where you go, there will always be people who don't understand us. Who simply think we are freaks because they can't possibly understand us.
Also, coming out of the closet is hard. But when you do, life becomes so much better. Being the same
@TheAlphaFish Yeah, there's always going to be a few jack asses you have to deal with, but that's life. Whether you're hetero, homo, trans, queer, ect. We all go through adversity. Everyone. You just have to do what's right for yourself, you know? It makes you stronger and better for it. :)
@TheSnowyice age, I can say easily that I know kind of how you feel with that part. Parents are hard to convince. Mine pretty much said to me every day after I told them that I wasn't transgender. But you will always find solace in other places. At least they know and won't have to find out over Thanksgiving dinner 3 years later.
I wish you luck in all of life. Keep your chin held high, man. Be strong!
@TheAlphaFish I feel VERY fortunate that my parents know and accept me, even though they don't say it a lot. I just know they do. Kind of like a telepathic kid to parent deal. ;D Pretty much my family knows, so I'm just waiting until after high school. I know I could come out at any time, but I just don't want to deal with all the high school drama you know? Like, it's just not that important to me anyway. Really it's far from the best time in most people's lives anyway. :]
@TheSnowyice You do have a good point. The high school drama would have been nice to avoid. However, sadly enough for me, high school is how I found out about my gender issues. I can't really run away from home. But yes, I'm glad for you. :) I wish I were the other way around like you. I have to ask, if your family knows, how are you so open to them? I always feel so weird talking to my family about it, but never my friends. Is it that you're just close to your family or what?
I'm from Murfreesboro, it was so strange to see it on youtube! Thanks for posting this up! I wish I would have reached out more to the other genderqueer people when I lived there.
This has been flagged as spam show
Congratulations on finally becoming natural woman!
They are exactly what society needs, if more men could grow some real balls and boldly follow these brave men, the world would be a better place!
What is most needed right now is more women, and turning men into women is the perfect way to feminize our planet!
I mean let's be honest, the notion of "man" is outdated and passe.
The stone age is over, the cities have been built, civilization is moving forward, society has no need for "man" anymore.
HardlineFeminist 2 days ago
nice tits LOL 1:09
GUNnut247 2 weeks ago
Holly crap I heard binding with an ace bandage is SO bad for your skin. I guess some people still kind of have to do it though, but it's highly discouraged unless you have no other options at the moment.
TheSnowyice 2 months ago
Unfortunately I have to live in Tennessee until I am at legal age to move out of my parent's house. I've had to live here all my life. There is quite a bit of hate and ignorance here compared to other places. I don't think it's the worst though I am a transman, and right now living in the closet it's almost impossibly hard. Thankfully I only have one and a half more years of high school (jumping through hoops in other words) to go. I want to move to Canada. I hear the people there are very nice.
TheSnowyice 3 months ago
@TheSnowyice You go, man! :D Rooting for you all the way. Tennessee sounds like a hard place to be for people like us. Personally, I'm a transwoman living in a state that is much more accepting. Actually have Trinidad around the corner. However, no matter where you go, there will always be people who don't understand us. Who simply think we are freaks because they can't possibly understand us.
Also, coming out of the closet is hard. But when you do, life becomes so much better. Being the same
TheAlphaFish 3 months ago
@TheAlphaFish Yeah, there's always going to be a few jack asses you have to deal with, but that's life. Whether you're hetero, homo, trans, queer, ect. We all go through adversity. Everyone. You just have to do what's right for yourself, you know? It makes you stronger and better for it. :)
TheSnowyice 2 months ago
@TheSnowyice age, I can say easily that I know kind of how you feel with that part. Parents are hard to convince. Mine pretty much said to me every day after I told them that I wasn't transgender. But you will always find solace in other places. At least they know and won't have to find out over Thanksgiving dinner 3 years later.
I wish you luck in all of life. Keep your chin held high, man. Be strong!
~Autumn
TheAlphaFish 3 months ago
@TheAlphaFish I feel VERY fortunate that my parents know and accept me, even though they don't say it a lot. I just know they do. Kind of like a telepathic kid to parent deal. ;D Pretty much my family knows, so I'm just waiting until after high school. I know I could come out at any time, but I just don't want to deal with all the high school drama you know? Like, it's just not that important to me anyway. Really it's far from the best time in most people's lives anyway. :]
TheSnowyice 2 months ago
@TheSnowyice You do have a good point. The high school drama would have been nice to avoid. However, sadly enough for me, high school is how I found out about my gender issues. I can't really run away from home. But yes, I'm glad for you. :) I wish I were the other way around like you. I have to ask, if your family knows, how are you so open to them? I always feel so weird talking to my family about it, but never my friends. Is it that you're just close to your family or what?
TheAlphaFish 2 months ago
*feels really nice to me, especially, considering that I am an ftm, and not just that but from a girl to a gay male.
thatcosplaykid 3 months ago
This documentary is amazing. It fee
thatcosplaykid 3 months ago
this is so sad
MrWesford 4 months ago
I'm from Murfreesboro, it was so strange to see it on youtube! Thanks for posting this up! I wish I would have reached out more to the other genderqueer people when I lived there.
Niennis 5 months ago
Thank you all so much! I hope you enjoyed it.
The song in the beginning is a loop on garageband. I found it was the easiest way to go since there was a limited budget.
Tiffanyg89 6 months ago
whats the song at the begginig?
jimeniuxxobo 6 months ago
Amazing! :) Keep up the good work, it's appreciated.
boricuazee 9 months ago
great! good work!
michotto 10 months ago
wow, that was amazing. Congrats on such a doco=)
purplemicky101 10 months ago