MTF Butches |
This tumblr was inspired by the existence of other amazing tumblrs such as Fuck Yeah Cute Trans Chicks, Fuck Yeah FTMs, Femme FTM, as well as others. This page is meant to provide an additional empowering space for the multitude of trans* gender expressions. This is an inclusive space for the celebration of all butch, futch, butch-femme switches, grrls, genderqueer, genderfluid and other likewise MTF spectrum folk out there! Let's represent some butch trans women! Feel free to share your own pictures or videos! We need more shared media! |
I would say that butch does not necessarily imply manly, though I get where she is coming from and probably was sincere about her attraction to women like that, while still viewing them as women. I mean a lot of cis women fit into that category not because they intentionally try and look more masculine in a cultural sense (though there is certainly that), but because they just do for whatever reason. Facial/bone structure, body type, and even voice depth.
However, just saying “love your body” is unhelpful and condescending so I don’t want to come across like that, but I would say it is important to keep in mind body/sex/gender diversity in everyone, not just trans identified folk.
(Source: mtfconfessions)
Hey, I wear bow ties now. Bow ties are cool. [x]
[Image description: White trans woman with a medium length asymmetrical haircut wearing a fuchsia colored button up and a red bandana made into a bow tie.]
So inadvertent or not, misgendering will most likely happen to you more often then if you presented more gender normative. The other day I was hanging flayers up around campus which required me to interact with a lot of new people. I was wearing my usual duds, button up shirt with an over sweater (sometimes go for the vests ‘cause vests are awesome). It was almost comical how inconsistently I was gendered. The most striking was when two people, standing right next to each other, used different pronouns. I found it pretty hilarious after the fact because I’ve become so comfortable in my skin as a woman, in part because my friends and lovers are very affirming for me. However, it still can feel very uncomfortable, frustrating, and potentially triggering.
A positive aspect that is born out of negative social structures is that I tend to be more accepted in explicitly queer spaces than more femme presenting trans women I know. This is a fucked up manifestation of femmephobia. I guess it makes me queer enough to hang with the those cool queer kids? If I sound flippant to the queer community, I am. I’m calling out the bullshit. Also, the idea of butch trans women, like femme trans guys is often invisible in the wider trans community and the LGB community. So be prepared to be someone’s first encounter with the concept. Be prepared to get asked, “why didn’t you just stay as a straight man?” Saying: “but I never was” often falls flat to those who place the emphasis on sexuality and dismiss gender as a separate (but perhaps related) concept.
Personally, I’m not sure how gender-normative I have been in the past. Though I was a punk back in the day, combat boots and liberty spikes. I was the small framed kid who got tossed around in the pit but would just keep coming back for more (because I loved the bruises I got after; poking at them the morning after a good show). I was never had a very masculine presence aside from the punk persona. These things never were looked at as odd when it was a boy doing them. My best friend growing up was a total tomboy; we literally climbed trees and caught frogs together. She was side-eyed because of it while I was not. Fast-forward to my transition: I’ve gotten weird looks in the pit way more-so than before transition. Before they would humor this kid and throw me around like the rest of them. Now they look concerned and almost exasperated that they have to “tone it down.” I have to prove that I can tear up the dance floor and stomp around with the best of them.
On the other hand: I knit. I don’t knit often or very well but I do enjoy it. A friend taught me before I came out and I was treated like this weird novelty when I went into a knitting store. Now it’s just a mundane skill, no ticker tape parade.
Things you never had to fight for getting recognized as being able to do, you may have to, and things you used to be recognized for will fade away into obscurity. Transitioning provides you a very unique vantage point to observe the subtle intersections of misogyny and sexism in our culture, to what is valued and what is not in relation to your gender expression.
So the butch aspect of my transition is neither positive nor negative, it is an aspect which highlights certain aspects of the prevailing social order over others.
I hope this helps somewhat.
NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR OUR MARCH BENEFICIARY!!DEADLINE for March 9th beneficiary: Application due by Feb 26th @ midnight.
Beneficiary will be announced March 1st
- Door proceeds($500 to $1000) and a $2000 discount towards surgery from Dr. Kathy Rumer are given to the beneficiary chosen.
- You do not have to live in the Philadelphia Area, you just have to be able to attend our March 9th Event!
MixTape is a live performance event held at Tabu Lounge in Philadelphia, featuring queer, trans* and gender non-conforming performance artists.
This event is BLITZ, Gender Reel, and Dr Rumers way to give back to the trans* and gender non-conforming community in a very direct way by helping one individual per event raise funds for their much needed Gender Reassignment Surgery (GRS).
Download Application:
Application (word format)
Application (PDF format)
(via transqueery)
Meet KOKUMO, a Chicago trans community leader and artist:
“When it comes to trans youth of color, it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy—when you’re told you’ll fail or you have no worth, it becomes. I am here to create the world that I didn’t grow up in. I’m an artist that believes in creating music, film, stories–creating the world I didn’t have.”
KOKUMO is such an amazing person. I’m really happy she is getting the kind of attention she is. <3 -MtFB
(Source: transqueersxxx)
I tried what possibly approximates “a summer look.”
Another shot of the new haircut. I can’t get over how good I feel about how I look right now.
23 | MTF/GenderQueer | Pansexual
Submitted by Sophia/Jack, the model and photographer.
“Becoming a woman made me comfortable with my (very non-male) masculinity.”
- From Genderfork
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