masteroftheclaw said:
Just popping in to give my two cents on this part of your statement. You seem to be pretty darn accepting of trans stuff as is and it's perfectly normal to be unable to relate to some parts of it (or understand at all). As is, people who identify themselves as trans are probably less common than those calling themselves LGB.
Anyways, in regards to surgeries, there's a lot of reasons someone might choose not to have one on their genitals. First off, doesn't that seem like a really scary thing to do? Even if you are full of loathing over these parts surgeries are dangerous and some people might not be willing to risk it. Then of course is the fact that this stuff costs a load of money. Trans people might have enough money for hormone therapy, but not necessarily to get a pricey surgery/revisions. Also, while transwomen are able to get really fabulous surgical options, transmen are presented with much less than "100% functional and real" options. For some these options might be perfect, but for many others it is just not "good enough".
Oh, no, no. I understand that concept. I can certainly understand money and other things coming into play etc, I've seen some of the prices for the surgical aspect and it's equivalent to buying a new car and you'd be lucky to even get insurance to cover it. And yeah, the surgical options for FTM are pretty poor from what I've seen. As it is, sex itself isn't exactly something that happens all the time, so social role by default would be a lot more important anyway.
I more mean in the sense of if in a hypothetical situation, if people had easy access to a perfect method of creating ideal sexual organs which could function and look exactly like the real thing and even be capable of child birth, semen production, etc.
Basically it's just the small minority of transgendered people who according to them just straight up like the sex organs they were born with, even though they went through the effort of transitioning. I don't really get why someone would
enjoy that. It's not exactly super common, but I have heard of it and met people who say they identify with this concept, and I don't really get it at all.
masteroftheclaw said:
Then, finally, there are people who are happy with their current set of genitals even if they are not common for the gender they identify with. Different strokes for different folks.
This is generally the part that confuses me. The rest of it I can kind of understand.