"I never had gender dysphoria. I didn't have any bad feelings about my body. Or at least nothing out of the norm for a teen girl. It was about the time I was coming to terms with being gay. I watched a vid of a lesbian talking about coming out..." 2/8
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"I can't remember exactly how but one vid led to another and I found myself watching stuff by trans guys talking about coming out. I started Googling trans guys and when I saw their before and after pics I was immediately enthralled..." 3/8
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"I didn't initially want facial hair or top surgery or anything like that, I wanted to be a "pretty boy." By 2014 I was convinced I was trans and suddenly, T and surgery seemed necessary. Like, viewing online trans stuff gave me dysphoria..." 4/8
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"I enjoyed the fantasy of being male, then I needed to make that fantasy a reality. Within 2 years I went from being a lesbian to being a gay trans boy who needed to transition or die. I started T When I was 22 and got top surgery at 23..." 5/8
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"I felt so happy at first, like I wanted to show people my chest and I liked what I saw when I looked in the mirror. My fantasy had become reality and it was exciting. So no, I don't think you need dysphoria to think transition is a good idea..." 6/8
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"Looking back, my issue was I wanted to be a pretty gay boy more than I wanted to be a Butch lesbian, but it turns out I've been an androgynous bi woman all along and I think that added to my confusion." 7/8
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If any trans or detrans folk wish to share their thoughts, but would rather not do so on your own feed, please DM me and I will share your story anonymously on my own. I will not share anything without your permission. I'm here if you need someone to vent to. 8/8
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Replying to @ImWatson91
this backs up your theory about social media playing a big role in dysphoria
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Replying to @YouPushedTooFar
To be fair, this particular person spoke more about her own internal fantasy world than she did about online influence (though it was certainly present).
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Replying to @ImWatson91
But when one sees their "peers" raving about it, it gets them thinking. Unless I misunderstood, the fantasy started when she immersed herself in it online.
1 reply 0 retweets 6 likes
Yes, which doesn't surprise me as many detrans people say the same. I've noted a cluster of detrans women in particular who had very active fantasy lives as kids (made their own stories/worlds at a young age) who partly blame their love of fantasising about being something else.
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