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Transgender Teen Survival Guide

@transgenderteensurvivalguide / transgenderteensurvivalguide.com

We are a blog created for people of all ages who have questions concerning their gender identity. Read our FAQ here!
Transgender is an umbrella term that is inclusive of, but not limited to (nor forced upon), trans women, trans men, non-binary people, genderfluid people, genderqueer people, agender people, and anyone who doesn't identify as the gender assigned to them at birth.
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Anonymous asked:

do you have any tips for subtly looking more masculine? I can’t fully transition now because I’m a minor in a confirmed to be transphobic household, and if you have any suggestions that would be amazing

Lee says:

You can try starting slowly incorporating more masculine-styled women's clothing into your wardrobe. This is usually a gradual process anyway since it can take time to save up enough money to purchase enough new shirts/pants/shoes etc. to fully replace your current wardrobe, especially if you're working part-time as a babysitter, dog-walker, etc.

Clothes that are more structured or straight-cut, like button-down shirts or straight-leg pants, can help create a more traditionally masculine silhouette. Layering with hoodies or jackets can also be effective. You can sometimes find these things styled as "boyfriend" clothes, and you can tell your parents that it's the current trend/style. You can see our post on finding masculine clothing in the women's section here.

Another easy change is dropping the accessories. That means not wearing feminine necklaces/earrings/bracelets/hairbands, not painting your nails, etc. It's easy to say you want to keep things basic and sporty and that's why you're going without the accessories. Wearing a neutral watch or a smart watch is another accessory to consider instead of a thin-strapped "women's watch" if you wear watches at all that is.

You can see our post on purse alternatives here since bags are often the biggest practical change in the accessory category. Not carrying a purse when you hang out with your friends in the mall, go out on a trip, etc is obviously a high-impact change to make.

If possible, choose a haircut that's more typically masculine. Shorter haircuts, or styles that are longer on the top and shorter on the sides, can subtly change your appearance. If you use a female reference for your photo when you show your parents what you want they may not suspect anything. You can see our post on convincing your parents to let you get a haircut without coming out here.

If a haircut isn’t possible, consider styles like pulling your hair back in a low bun or wearing hats. If you're Black, cornrows, box braids, and locs are styles that can be gender neutral depending on how you wear them. There's a few links on that here.

There are also things you can do to come across as subtly more masculine without buying anything at all.

Sometimes, adopting a more traditionally masculine posture and body language can make a difference. This doesn't usually have a big impact on passing, but it can help you feel better about yourself and boost your self-confidence and reduce dysphoria, and it's something that your family may not notice because it's easy to alter when you're with them. You can see a post about masculine body language here.

Similarly, you can try voice training and practice speaking in a slightly lower tone or in a more monotone style, which is often perceived as more masculine. Be careful not to strain your voice, though, and maybe avoid doing it while you're with your family. You can see a post about voice training here.

Engaging in exercises that build upper body strength can also help in achieving a more masculine physique. Focus on workouts that target the shoulders, back, and arms. You can often do body weight workouts at home in your room without needing a gym membership or specialized exercise equipment.

Find a support system, whether it's friends, online communities, or a counselor/therapist, who understand and support your gender identity. This can provide a safe space to express yourself and explore your identity. It can help to have other friends who are also masculine to feel like you're not isolated.

Observing and adopting some masculine behavioral cues, like how men typically occupy space or interact in social settings, can also be a subtle way to express masculinity, but you want to be careful that you're not imitating toxic masculinity / obnoxious guys. Similarly, engaging in hobbies or interests that are stereotypically masculine can be a subtle way to align with male peers, but always choose activities that genuinely interest you and you can probably find other guys out there who are also interested in the things you already care about to be friends.

The above suggestions are all things that you can do without your parents necessarily noticing. Binding is something that may not be subtle depending on your chest size, so while it is possible to sometimes bind in front of family without them noticing (saying it's a sports bra, for example) I would recommend keeping your binder in your backpack and only changing into it at school in the bathroom / at a friend's house / in a public bathroom when you're out with friends but not family, etc. unless you really are wearing only a single well-fitting sports bra. You can see more about buying a binder and that whole process in this post.

It's harder to be seen as masculine or male when you're pre-medical transition and not passing which means people often have to "overcompensate" by being more masculine than they would otherwise choose to be, but as always, I'd like to note that it can be possible to pass as male / be masculine while doing any of the things I recommended changing!

So while I might advise someone who wants to come off as more masculine "don't paint your nails" for example, that is a general rule and doesn't mean that you have to follow those guidelines if you're really passionate about painting your nails. You can always choose whatever gender expression you're comfortable with. There are plenty of guys who wear nail polish and otherwise come across as masculine or who are recognized as men. It's important to remember that masculinity is diverse and there's no one right way to be masculine.

Followers, any other tips on performing subtle masculinity that won't make transphobic parents suspicious?

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Anonymous asked:

4 ryn: thnx so much for your beautifully worded explication of non binary transition. I’m about to start mine with the same concept of a goal of total androgyny in mind. I’m wondering what your experiences on low dose t gel was like? Did it move you toward an androgyny you liked? Did your relationship to your body and to gender change dramatically? Thnx!

Lee says:

I think you misunderstood the answer! Ryn hasn’t taken low-dose t gel. Ryn wrote “I consider myself non-binary trans feminine [...] an amab person, I am taking estrogen.”

However, I was on low-dose testosterone gel for about 10 months, so I can try to answer about T. Ryn will/might add on with their experience with E.

As far as how testosterone impacted my gender feels- I guess I went from feeling more transneutral to transmasculine, but I still don’t identify as male-aligned.

Low-dose testosterone didn’t change my body very much, and top surgery was a much bigger game changer for my relationship with my body.

Being on low-dose T didn’t change how often I passed very much, so it was more of a mental change for me. I don’t think that low-dose T changed my relationship to my body or my gender drastically- the biggest change was an improvement in my mental health due to a decrease in dysphoria, and an increase in confidence I guess.

I had originally wanted “confuse cis strangers on the street” androgyny, but it wasn’t exactly what I ended up getting. I had wanted people to not gender me at all, but instead I ended up getting gendered as male 50% of the time and gendered as female 50% of the time.

It’s really hard to pass as non-binary- I’ve found that strangers who can’t tell what gender you are sometimes refer to you with (maybe randomly chosen) gendered pronouns and gendered terms anyway because they’re stuck in a binary mindset and don’t know what else to do, or they become hostile and you find yourself getting shouted at when you enter the women’s locker room so you go to the men’s locker room and then they tell you to leave there too. 

I didn’t really like that- while being gendered as female and male in equal parts might be as close to androgyny as I could get, I was dysphoric when people saw me as a girl. Some people’s ideal presentation is being able to switch between passing as male or female, but it just wasn’t right for me.

In the end, I decided that I would rather be seen as male most of the time than get misgendered as a girl, even though in an ideal world I’d be able to have people automatically use gender neutral terms for me and pass as non-binary.

So I changed my dose from low-dose T to a “standard dose” after a little less than a year on low-dose T, and now I’ve been on T for about 2 years in total, one year on low-dose and one year on standard-dose. I’ve documented more on my medical transition here.

Now I’m getting gendered as male mostly, which isn’t euphoria-causing but it doesn’t make me dysphoric either. Strangers still gender me as female maybe a quarter of the time, give or take, but they also tend to give me the benefit of the doubt in men’s bathrooms now so I don’t get shouted at these days (knock on wood).

I know that right now, if I changed my presentation/gender expression (like growing out my hair, or even just wearing a pink women’s shirt) I’d be able to go back to being seen as a woman pretty easily despite my 2 years on (varying doses of) T.

Strangers now tend to see me as a feminine guy instead of as masculine woman, but being gendered as female bothers me less these days because I have less dysphoria now as a result of my medical transition.

Forgoing the ability to easily pass as a woman is kind of scary, and it sort of makes me feel like I’m giving something up or losing something that was a part of me.

It hasn’t happened yet, but as I continue on T, I think that doing something like wearing a dress is going to stop making strangers think I’m a cis woman and will start making them think I’m a man in a dress.

While I don’t regret taking T at all, this isn’t really what I anticipated happening when I started hormones. But I do feel much more comfortable in my own body now, and even though I’m often gendered as male I still see myself as androgynous when I look in the mirror.

Right now, I feel content with my body & where I’m going, but I don’t know if I’ll continue on T forever. I had a hysterectomy about a year ago, but I chose to keep my ovaries in case I decide to stop T at some point in the future.

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Ryn says:

Like Lee says, passing as non-binary is hard. I’m now taking a dose of estrogen that is in line with what most binary trans women are given. I was started on low dose in part because I was non-binary and in part because I was leaving the country for four months promptly after starting and couldn’t do any followup tests during that time. 

Honestly overall I haven’t moved so much towards “androgyny” per se. My body and presentation have feminized, and I tend to get gendered as a woman more often now, which I realized I was okay with and sometimes I kinda like.  Society does not like androgyny. They will shove you in a box as hard as they can. I realized being out and non-binary in the world is really hard, like Lee said above. Honestly, they explained a lot of things I feel really well. While I could be gendered equally as a man or as a woman, I don’t like being gendered as a man– it makes me very dysphoric.  My relationship to my body has changed. I’m not as dysphoric about it in general anymore. My transition of course is ongoing, as is my journey of self-discovery around my gender. I’ve been realizing more and more that I am, while not a woman, a very femme-aligned non-binary person.  Like I said in the original ask, as a nonbinary person, my transition is my own. My psychiatrist, who prescribes my estrogen, is very willing to work with me to adjust my doses if I need to achieve what I’m looking for. He recognizes that the trans journey is not a “one-size-fits-all” situation. I think your best options, as far as shooting for total androgyny, is to figure out once you start your transition what makes you the happiest, and shoot for that. That might change, and your presentation and hormone regimen can change with it. Keep up with your doctor and your therapist, and just keep sort of an eye on your own thoughts and feelings. Figure out what makes you feel what way. Figure out what presentation, what clothing, gets you gendered certain ways and how that makes you feel.  I wish you the best of luck.

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Anonymous asked:

theres... theres a nonbinary transition??

Ryn says:

Yes. There isn’t a set path for transition. Transitioning means something different to every trans person. For some, this is a process of changing from presenting as your assigned gender to presenting and passing as the other binary gender.  Transitioning can involve medical transitioning (hormones, surgeries, etc.), legal transitioning (gender markers, name changes), and social and societally  transitioning (pronoun and name usage day-to-day, changing wardrobes, using different bathrooms, etc.). Sometimes there’s an end goal in mind, sometimes there isn’t.  Non-binary people can and do transition. This transition may look similar to binary trans people’s transitions, but, like every binary trans person, is a deeply personal exercise and takes shape as that person chooses.  There is no one path for transition, or two paths, or three paths. While many doctors have in the past used a sort of set pathway for trans folks, and used essentially the same hormone regimen for everyone transitioning in a particular “direction,” but this is changing as doctors and psychologists realize that... well, trans people are individual people, with individual wants, needs, desires, and identities.  For some non-binary people, transitioning just involves a name change, different pronoun usage, and perhaps some changes to their wardrobe or everyday presentation. For some non-binary people it involves none of these things. For others, it involves medical elements.  For example, I consider myself non-binary trans feminine. This is the term I tend to use, when I’m forced to give myself a label. As an amab person, I am taking estrogen. Is my ultimate goal to “pass” as a woman? I don’t know. When I started taking hormones, I told my doctor that my ultimate goal was to be so androgynous that no one would be able to gender me walking by me on the street. I have since changed my wardrobe and presentation to try to be a bit more on the “feminine” side of presentation. Another non-binary friend of mine is on low-dose testosterone. Another non-binary person I know thought they were a trans guy for ages, and still presents relatively “masculine.” Another non-binary person I know hasn’t changed their wardrobe and is comfortable presenting mostly as their birth gender. They still changed their pronouns, which is part of their transition. Again, it’s something that is deeply personal.  I’m assuming what you meant above is “can non-binary people medically transition” and that you have seen transition only as a flip from one to the other binary gender. This is not the case- it is a personal journey from presentation as a gender you were assigned to presentation as a gender that you identify with. Someone non-binary people medically transition with a goal presenting in everyday life as a binary gender. Some non-binary people medically transition with a goal of androgyny. Some medically transition without either goal in mind.  Here is our page on non-binary medically transitioning. Here is our non-binary resources page.  5 myths on non-binary transitioning Transitioning while non-binary

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Anonymous asked:

Any tips to feel more masculine without having to go to the store or be social (a trigger of my anxiety and for the store I live with my parents so I can't really)?

Lee says:

Avoiding interacting with people or getting out of the house can lead to isolation, which can make depression and anxiety worse so I’d recommend getting a therapist and being in therapy. Making friends with people who support your identity is healthy and can provide you with support with outings so you don’t have to go to the store on your own if you’re too young to have your parents drop you off somewhere to shop for an hour. I also live with my parents, but I’m close enough to stores to walk to them, which you could try if you can’t get a ride.

You can also check our Dysphoria pageMental health page, and Transmasculine resources for something that might help you feel more masculine!

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Anonymous asked:

*urgentish* Hi, I'm going to an event TODAY and I NEED to present Like a guy (I'm NB AFAB) or at least really androgynous. (Out to mom, she's gonna present me as female anyway) Any tips? I've got medium thick brows but my face looks feminine.... I will wear baggy clothes but any advice...?

Emery says:

Baggy clothes are great. Binding if you can safely do so, or else sports bra to minimize chest. Jeans are nice and neutral. A t-shirt, non-shaped button down, or sweatshirt are all androgynous top choices. No makeup, speak in the lower part of your vocal range. Style hair so it looks short if it isn’t already. Good luck!

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Another tip for looking more masculine! Last time I posted a tst I had facial hair...just lightly use mascara on the tiny hairs on your face to make them darker and it looks real! I'm still practicing to get it perfect before I wear it publicly but everyone should definitely give it a go! Also, I have quite light hair so I use brown mascara because the black mascara is too dark for my skin tone and doesn't look as legitimate.

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Emery says:

Thanks for the advice! This tip actually works really well :)

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