At 10/23/09 06:20 PM, 1Tyla1 wrote:
At 10/23/09 05:27 PM, gamer30hrplus wrote:
nothing wrong with it. mostly it means that you are Transgendered. there is nothing wrong with being that way. i have a friend that is. as far as what you want to be that is you choice.
Transgendered and crossdressing are different. You can be transgendered, a crossdresser and bisexual, but they only mean what they mean: Transgendered, "belonging to the other gender mentally", crossdressing, "wearing clothes worn by the opposite sex". Plus, I have heard that men with very bad gynecomestia wear bras for the same reason as women. But yeah, if you crossdress, it doesn't really matter. I mean, think about it, you may say "well you're stupid at that age", but how many people can honestly say they didn't have their share of crossdressing during childhood?
My bra size is unknown to the internet. And everything else.
I will not sit here and argue with a teenager that does not do her homework. Wherever you got you info it is misleading.
Transgender means
Transgender (pronounced /trænz%u02C8d%u0292%u025Bnd%u0259r/) is a general term applied to a variety of individuals, behaviors, and groups involving tendencies to diverge from the normative gender roles.
Transgender is the state of one's "gender identity" (self-identification as woman, man, or neither) not matching one's "assigned sex" (identification by others as male or female based on physical/genetic sex). "Transgender" does not imply any specific form of sexual orientation; transgender people may identify as heterosexual, homosexual, bisexual, pansexual, polysexual, or asexual; some may consider conventional sexual orientation labels inadequate or inapplicable to them. The precise definition for transgender remains in flux, but includes:
"Of, relating to, or designating a person whose identity does not conform unambiguously to conventional notions of male or female gender roles, but combines or moves between these."[1]
"People who were assigned a sex, usually at birth and based on their genitals, but who feel that this is a false or incomplete description of themselves."[2]
"Non-identification with, or non-presentation as, the sex (and assumed gender) one was assigned at birth."[3]
A transgender individual may have characteristics that are normally associated with a particular gender, identify elsewhere on the traditional gender continuum, or exist outside of it as "other," "agender," "Genderqueer," or "third gender". Transgender people may also identify as bigender, or along several places on either the traditional transgender continuum, or the more encompassing continuums which have been developed in response to the significantly more detailed studies done in recent years.[4
crossdressing is included in transgederism. I had to study transgender law. i have worked with transgenders and i still work with some. so yeah i pretty much know what i am talking about.