Powertool said:
I have always been fascinated with transgendered people and I would love to ask a few questions!
do you primarily have male or female friends?
have you had any serious partners? if yes, were they trans gender too?
do you see hetero relationships as foreign? (that's how i see homosexual relations,not because i am prejudice, but because I could never see myself with another man)
does being transgenders make for incredibly awkward social situations?
Sorry for all the questions but I have never met a transsexual before.
I primarily have female friends, which is not only because I used to have an aversion towards males my age thanks to bullying, but also because the line of work I'm studying for is female-dominated. Out of 47 people who started studying the same time as I did, only nine were male, so yeah... I regret not having made more male friends while I was younger, because most of my old male classmates have proven to be nice and interesting people when I've met them later.
I haven't had serious partners and thanks to me being aromantic asexual, I'm not planning to get one. I try to remain open-minded though -- sexuality isn't a rigid thing so who knows what happens in the future. For example, one of my aunts met her first love at the ripe age of 52 and is currently a happily married 60-year-old...
As for hetero relationships, I guess they're pretty foreign to me in the sense that I observe them as an outsider. I mean, I know how they function, but I can't draw anything from personal experiences. I have never experienced attraction or lust so I can't really relate to any of my friends when they gush about the high points of their relationship, for example.
Awkwardness isn't an issue for me as it seems to be for people who I socialise with. Deep down I'm a chill, vulgar brute with no shame, so I usually have to hold myself back if I don't want to weird people out too much. I have learned to give off a sufficient air of normalcy when I know people are going to be inconvenienced or put off by me being a queer slob. Whatever works for my advantage.
In general, I get along with people just fine and I enjoy interacting with people. I especially like old people, which I guess is a bit odd considering that I'm aspiring to become a
youth worker.
EDIT:
Engarde said:
I am glad to see some people who have a more profound understanding of themselves than I do. I do struggle with some gender issues now and again, but I tend to blame society and its stereotypes. Much respect for you.
I'm sure things will work themselves out for you. Much like rest of the human body, a person's identity strives for self-sustenance and is constantly renewing parts of itself : )