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gavinsaurusrex:

I guess this is my version of “transition is beautiful”. xD First picture was taken 5 years ago, when I was deeeeep in the closet and overcompensating like crazy. Second pic was 4 months on T, so a month old now. :D

This is the first time in a long time I’ve posted a picture of what I used to look like. Partially I don’t like doing it because people get the wrong idea and think I just recently “decided” I’m trans. I’m also afraid some might think I’m not “trans enough” because I didn’t have buzzed hair as a teen. But the feelings were there .. just well hidden.



Kye Allums, Division I Athlete, Tells Us How Being Transgender Feels

Haven’t heard of Kye Allums — formerly Kay-Kay — yet? You will soon.

The NCAA athlete, who is currently a junior shooting guard on the George Washington University women’s basketball team, recently decided to reveal that he is transgender.

In other words, Kye was born a girl, and a biological female, but has always identified as being male on the inside. Now he has come out to his team — and the world.

G.W. has been supportive, as have his team members. But because of his status as a Division I athlete, there are strict rules on what he can and can’t do about his transition from one gender to another. No testosterone therapy until he graduates, for example.

And please, he says, do call him “he.”

Kye’s is a precedent-setting admission, sure, but what we really wanted to know was this: How did he first know he was transgender? What does he wish people would understand about that? And where did he find the courage to come out?

After the jump, we chat with an athlete with serious courage.

Lemondrop: How did you first know you were transgender?
Kye Allums: I haven’t always known. It started after high school, my freshman year of college when I moved away from home, and I had to start thinking about myself and what I wanted.

Were there signs growing up that you were different from other girls?

Well, for me, I liked playing football — all the things that the guys would do. But I would also get teddy bears and I would make my sisters play house with me. I baked cookies with my mom. I never really thought I had to pick either/or.

What made you decide to break the news to your team now?
I was sick of feeling like I had to hide everything. It was getting to the point where it was affecting basketball, and I couldn’t focus. I needed to say, “This is me,” and I said it. I feel like the world is off of my shoulders now.

Who was the first person you told?
One of my good friends on the team. She thought it was a joke at first. Then, when I started to say, no, no — and to get serious about it, she got on board. Now she’s the first person to correct someone if they screw up.

Meaning calling you “she” instead of “he.” Do people do that a lot?
Yeah, it happens a lot. As long as people acknowledge that they made a mistake, then I’m fine with it. And people acknowledge it all the time!

How’s your family reacting?
My mom said that she still loved me, and she didn’t understand, but she’s going to try … My dad? That’s a different story, but he said he loves me. They’re supportive.

You’re going to keep playing for the women’s team until you graduate, but you can’t undergo hormone therapy until then. What are your long-term plans?
Long term, I plan on becoming a male 100 percent, with hormones and surgery and all that.

Read More About Kye Allums and Other Athletes Who’ve Broken the Mold


I definitely want to go to school for architecture and be a personal trainer and have a couple of businesses.

In other words, you’re a real slacker. What do you think are the biggest misconceptions people have about being transgender?
That maybe I have both body parts, from a male and a woman. Or that I am a man on a woman’s team. Or that I was born male. My sex is female, because I was born a biological female, and my gender is male.

Some people have alleged that it’s not fair that you’re playing on a women’s team. That maybe you should try out for the men’s team now. What do you say to them?
Of course it’s fair! I’m just saying how I feel. It doesn’t change who I am. If I said, “I feel tired today,” then should I not play on a women’s team?

How did you learn about what it means to be transgender?
I took a class [at G.W.] on gender in general. I wrote papers on transgender athletes. I wrote about a motocross athlete, male-to-female, who was competing and then she stopped competing because people said it wasn’t fair that she used to be a he, even though she didn’t take hormones or anything.

I wrote about the Olympics and how some players were competing without taking hormones — a male-to-female competing with other women — and they hadn’t done anything! There were no rules yet. And they wound up having to give their medals back because people said they were cheating.

And I went online and found support groups for people who felt the same things that I did.

What is it that you wish people would understand about how you feel?
Nobody chooses to feel a certain way. Just because my body is like this doesn’t mean that I don’t have the right to want to play against other people.

I feel like I want to compete with these people around me. Nobody should have the right to tell anybody that that’s not right.

Do you think you’ll keep competing in sports after college?
I love sports to death, but I’ll cross that bridge when I get to it.

What about dating? Once you’ve had the surgery, will you be a straight male, who dates girls?
I don’t like labels. I don’t like labeling myself. I’m just me.

 


Masculine of center (MOC) is a term, coined by B. Cole of the Brown Boi Project, that recognizes the breadth and depth of identity for lesbian/queer/ womyn who tilt toward the masculine side of the gender scale and includes a wide range of identities such as butch, stud, aggressive/AG, dom, macha, tomboi, trans-masculine etc.




An all encompassing or umbrella term for people whose anatomies and/or appearances do not conform to predominant gender roles. They have physical and/or behavioral characteristics that readily identify them as a non-conforming gender identity. Can be someone of any sexual orientation.



fuckyeahftms:

Balian Buschbaum - FTM olympic pole vaulter

fuckyeahftms:

Balian Buschbaum - FTM olympic pole vaulter

78 notes

Posted at 10:38pm
Reblogged (Photo reblogged from )
Tagged ftm transgender transman boi hot beauty trans equality genderqueer gender equality genderfuck

 


Billy Tipton (12.29.14 - 1.21.89)

Billy Tipton (12.29.14 - 1.21.89)



The Secret Life of Billy Tipton

Well, we were talking about Billy Tipton the other day and realized that a lot of people had no idea who we were talking about.  So I found this older posting on the web that gives a quick picture of an amazing figure in gender-variant history.  Go to this link for the original post:  http://www.straightdope.com/columns/read/1060/whats-the-story-on-the-female-jazz-musician-who-lived-as-a-man A Straight Dope Classic from Cecil’s Storehouse of Human Knowledge June 5, 1998

Dear Cecil:

There was a news story a few years back about a jazz musician who died and was found to be a woman after living her life as a man. She was married and had three grown children who refused to believe their father was a woman. No one I ask remembers this. Do you?

— SMENGI, via AOL

Cecil replies:

You think I could forget the story of Billy Tipton? Yes, she lived as a man from age 21 till the day she died at age 74. Yes, her three sons (all adopted) never suspected a thing. But that’s not the bizarre part. She lived with five women in succession, all of them attractive, a couple of them knockouts. She had intercourse with at least two of them and, who knows, maybe all five. But of the three we know about in detail, none tumbled to the fact that her husband was a woman (one figured it out later). At first you might think: man, I thought my spouse was oblivious. But the more charitable view is that they were taken in by one of the great performances of all time.

We know as much as we know about Billy thanks to a newly published biography by Diane Wood Middlebrook, Suits Me: The Double Life of Billy Tipton. Middlebrook reports that Dorothy Lucille Tipton decided to become Billy Tipton in 1935, ostensibly because it was the only way an aspiring jazz musician could get work in an almost exclusively male business. The transformation wasn’t all that tough. Billy’s face was boyish, and her figure was more Coke can than Coke bottle. (She had sizable breasts but no waist.) A sheet wrapped around her chest, men’s clothes, and a bit of padding in the crotch, and she easily passed. In fact Billy was positively handsome; women thought he was a doll. A talented pianist, horn player, and tenor, he quickly found a gig with a band.

At first Billy was strictly a cross-dresser, making no great effort to conceal her femaleness during her off hours. She lived with a woman with the unusual name of Non Earl Harrell, in what other musicians assumed was a lesbian relationship. Initially they were based in Oklahoma City, but by 1940 they had moved to Joplin, Missouri, then an entertainment center. There Billy began to masquerade as a male full-time, a pose he would adopt for the rest of his life.

Billy and Non Earl broke up in 1942. After a liaison of some years with a singer named June, Billy took up with Betty Cox, a pretty 19-year-old with a striking figure. The two stayed together for seven years, during which they had what Betty recalled as a passionate heterosexual relationship, including intercourse. She even thought she’d had a miscarriage once. How could you share a bed with someone for seven years and not realize he was a she? Breathtaking naivete had to be part of it, plus the fact that, as an accomplished entertainer who was 13 years Betty’s senior, Billy called the shots. They made love only in the dark. Billy never removed his underwear and wore a jockstrap that Betty later speculated was fitted with a “prosthesis.” He wore massive chest bindings at all times, supposedly for an old injury. He would not let himself be touched below the waist nor disturbed in the bathroom. Betty may also have been a bit distracted. Acquaintances said she went out with other men while she was with Billy, and while she appears to have been genuinely fond of him, in some ways this may have been a marriage of convenience for both.

A turning point in Billy’s life came in 1958. He had his own trio and a growing reputation, and a new hotel in Reno wanted to hire his group as its house band. He seemed on the verge of, if not the big time, at least a fairly high-profile career. But Billy declined. Instead he took a job as a booking agent in Spokane, Washington, playing music on the side. Middlebrook thinks he feared fame would lead to discovery and decided he’d gone as far as he dared.

At this point Billy was living with a sometime call girl, but in the early 60s he left her for a beautiful but troubled stripper named Kitty Kelly. She claimed she and Billy never had sex, but in other respects they lived a stereotypical suburban life. They adopted three boys, but neither could handle the kids during adolescence, and after a bitter quarrel in 1980 Billy moved into a trailer with his sons. From there it was all downhill. The boys split, his income dried up, and he spent his last years broke. Refusing to see a doctor despite failing health, he collapsed and died in 1989. The paramedics who were trying to revive him uncovered the truth. Death must have come as a relief; he had been on stage nearly 54 years.

— Cecil Adams

My thoughts on the article:  Now I plan to put the above-mentioned biography on my reading list, right after I finish The Danish Girl (more on this later).  I’m thinking that Billy died in 1989, not so very long ago.  I had graduated from college and was headed to graduate school, completely unaware of the tragic last years of Billy Tipton.  I’m wondering how many years will pass until people will be treated like people, celebrated for their differences and not forced to into the soul-sucking conformity that society expects?

(Source: genderrevolution.com)

 


Tilt Your Hats: The Flat Cap

Tilt Your Hats: The Flat Cap

When discussing lesbians and style, the use of hats cannot be overlooked. Since fashion choices are somewhat limited for boiz by the simplicity of masculine attire, hats are a good way to add a little extra style. Hats can also be considered a form of “peacocking,” or the use of an object to attract attention, much in the same way a peacock uses his feathers to attract a mate. Think about it. It just takes one, “I like your hat,” to get the conversation rolling. Hats are also a good way to add that extra cool factor, aloofness, and swagger that girls swear they don’t like, but always fall for anyway. Who knows exactly what it is that gives us that extra confidence when we put on a hat? Perhaps its because we can draw our hat over our eyes when we don’t want to interact, and peek out from under our brim when we do. Whatever it is, hats are another weapon in our fashion arsenal.

Unfortunately there are many ways hats can be done badly and immediately ruin any chances of getting any action. Therefore this is the SECOND in a series of posts about different types of hats popular in the lesbian community.  

 
 
The Flat Cap

  The flat cap, which can also be referred to as scally cap, golf cap, Irish Cap, Jeff cap, Windsor cap, or the driving cap, has seen a resurgence the last couple of years. You may have seen some of the today’s coolest men wearing them, including Brad Pitt and Justin Timberlake. Accordingly, many hot BOIZ have been spotted wearing them around town and at da clubs.


History

So what is a flat cap? A flat cap is a rounded hat with a small brim in front, and a somewhat stiff peak in the back. This style has been around since the 1400’s and but gained popularity in Britain and Ireland when an act of parliament passed an act to stimulate wool consumption. It decreed that all men of non-noble blood, over six years of age, had to wear a wool cap on Sundays and all holidays. Imagine that! That’s like congress passing a law forcing us to buy orange juice so the citrus farmers can make more money! Naturally, this style came to be associated with the working classes. It gained popularity once again in the 1920’s, this time by a more fashionable set of young men. Although the popularity of the flat cap comes and goes, it is nevertheless always a staple of men’s fashion.


Colors

Flat caps come in various colors and patterns, including plaid, stripes, checks, houndstooth, and herringbone. You can also find a variety of knitted styles. They also come with embroidered designs or pictures stitched onto them. To avoid looking too much like an Irish farmer, I’d stay away from the plaids.


Brim Styles

The brim styles on flat caps also vary. You may come across the Duckbill style (with no visible bill), the Cabby style (curved bill), Ascot style (rounded top), Ivy style (old style floppy), Newsboy style (floppy with button), and the original Irish style (wedge-shaped). I prefer the original Irish style, although the Cabby style would also work since it frames the face well.


Materials

One of the most important considerations when buying any hat is the material from which it is made. Luckily flat caps now come in a variety of fabrics and materials. The tweed, cotton, wool, leather, and corduroy are excellent materials for the fall and winter seasons. For the spring and summer, choose a lightweight material that breathes well, such as a light cotton, waxed cotton, or linen. You can also find less expensive versions in rayon.


How to Wear Your Flat Cap

The flat cap looks best when worn with casual clothing. Remember, this style has its roots in the working class. This style looks best with pants made out of denim, corduroy, cotton, and linen. This hat can really dress up an outfit when worn with a plain t-shirt or v-neck as well. It also works well with a fitted leather jacket. Avoid wearing this style hat with a suit or collared shirt. Once again, you don’t want to channel a “farmer coming into town” look. Another thing to avoid boiz, is wearing your flat cap backwards! Unless you are Samuel L. Jackson, most people cannot get away with this look. When worn properly, this hat can convey an understated and casual air while still appearing very stylish. 


Brands

One of the oldest and more reputable brands of flat caps is Kangol. In fact, in Britain another name for a flat cap is the Kangol Hat.  The Kangol Hat Another good place to start browsing for flat cap styles is on the online website Flat Cap Jack. They give a great overview of this popular hat. Flat Cap Jack

 Tell us, have you purchased a flat cap in recently? What’s your flat cap like?

(Source: boimeetsplay.com)

 

Posted at 8:08pm
Tagged hats boi style