traaaaaaannnnnnnnnns
Welcome to /c/traaaaaaannnnnnnnnns, an anti-capitalist meme community for transgender and gender diverse people.
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Hi everyone. I'm feeling a little better than yesterday.
cw:dysphoria
Anyway, does anyone else feel like boymodding doesn't give them much dysphoria? I mean I'm currently dressed like I'm an elder British/Australian "man" living in the outback. I'm wearing short loose shorts, flip flops and a safari vest for carrying things (yes, I'm known around my uni campus as "the one who wear flip flops" and people in the past when I was dressed even worse have tried to donate clothes to me thinking I was homeless).
Setting aside my sad af way of presenting myself in public and my occasional jealousy when I see cute women's clothes, I feel very comfortable in my clothes, and being comfortable in my own skin is kinda really the only thing I care about when it comes to transitioning.
In fact, my biggest source of dysphoria right now is my weight, which I believe is probably genetic because my entire family family tree including my grandparents (except my dad for some reason) is like this. Everytime I see a skinny person on the street (which is very often) I fantasise about getting liposuction or magic. "Best" part is that this dysphoria combines with my gender dysphoria in the worst ways.
spoiler
Girls can wear that fit too, Gen Z did a lot to make comfortable wear and even androgyny fashionable. You probably have some of the same outfits as Billie Eilish, not joking. If you wanted to femme it up I guess you could try a women's cut for vests or t shirts? If you wanted to explore why you feel comfortable in what you feel is boy clothes instead of what you think is the femme version of the same outfit, that's okay. Maybe its an anxiety thing over being perceived as trans? Then again that could totally not apply to you at all lol.Ive been obese and lost weight. I lost 60 lbs by cutting calories (and actually counting them). If you want to lose weight, there was no shortcut. The people in my family were also clinically obese and a few of them are on Ozempic now (and lost weight). Theres no genetic condition that Im aware of that can overcome calories in/calories out. There's generic predispositions towards maybe needing less calories than the average person or nurture stuff from a family that uses food as an emotional regulator (like mine), and I gotta say it was very awkward not eating as much around my family cause boy they tried to get me to eat more lol, but there's no "big bones/obese" gene per se where your weight gets set to some number no matter how much or little you eat. Losing weight was not easy and I gained some of it back because I never dealt with the emotional side of eating (so fun I get to lose some of the same weight twice ๐ ). You CAN be healthy with a bigger weight or healthy enough anyway, you CAN be beautiful at any weight, but if you want to lose weight for dysphoria reasons and health reasons thats valid too and I would suggest counting your calories and aiming to lose a pound a week (maybe 2 AT MOST) and see how you feel in a couple months. One pound of body fat is worth about 3500 kcal, so cutting 500 kcal a day from whatever your maintainance should make you lose some weight.
At work (I work in Trauma and Oncology) we get a lot of people who swear they are generically obese but the disease process and just breaking your arms and feeling nauseous makes even these people lose weight (too fast and malnutritionally, like they also decondition cause they lose muscle, actually its a fight to get them to eat enough tbh).
spoiler:weight issues
I know calories in and calories out makes sense thermodynamically. There's no point in making excuses, but eating definitely helps me regulate my emotions. I've tried fasting before and I can fast (I feel much better while fasting than when I'm not), but I just don't stick to any schedule for fasting that I've made.The worst part is that I have largely cut out all of the low hanging fruit in my diet. I drink sugar free sodas. I'm vegan. I barely even eat fast food because BDS killed all my options. And yet that belly fat doesn't budge. That's what's disheartening about this.
if youre interested in advice
Try counting, non judgementally, what you eat in a day. No pressure to decrease for the first bit, just count. Count the snacks and "just a bite" etc. You dont have to cut a lot to lose weight healthily but it is a big barrier if food is comfort and emotional.so I read A Physical Education by Casey Johnston
One thing that's kind of misleading about calories in/calories out is that the amount of calories your body uses at rest is variable, which can be based on a lot of factors but is mostly based on how much muscle mass you have. That's why blocking testosterone can cause weight gain, without T that muscle mass is harder to build and keep, so what was once a sustainable diet becomes unsustainable, weight creeps up easier and faster, etc etc.Building muscle mass isn't only dependent on hormones, though, and that's where exercise comes in. Rather than focusing on burning calories by working out, it can make more sense to ignore how many calories you're burning in favor of focusing on increasing your strength while getting enough protein for body recomposition. Your weight mostly stays the same, but you lose fat.
This isn't applicable advice for everyone, I just wanted to gush about the cool book I read.